ABOUT NICK
Nick was a fireman with the elite rescue company located on Staten Island,
Rescue 5. Nick along with his fellow firefighters from that company answered
the call to the World Trade Center on 9/11/01. He had just finished a
tour and was getting ready to go home when the call came in. Nevertheless,
he jumped on the truck with the rest of the men and rushed to the towers.
Nick and the rest of those valiant young men never returned home that
evening. Nick gave his life while saving others. He was 35.
Nick
was born in the wee hours of the morning on 5/26/66. He was our firstborn,
but our family quickly grew, and before long he had a sister and two brothers.
He was always an adventurous, energetic, never idle person. He played
sandlot football as a young boy and then played football for Port Richmond
High School, taking his involvement in that program very seriously. He
inspired his younger brothers and they too got involved and played football
for Port Richmond. They both went on to become football coaches and in
turn have inspired others. Nick just didn’t go to the gym to work out
and build muscle, he became a
bodybuilder and entered competitions. He loved fast cars and had a few.
He loved speed and the excitement of it. He went on to own a motorcycle
and a jet ski. He played roller hockey and ice hockey, and even taught
ice hockey to young children in his spare time. Because he was so good
looking and had a winning personality to match, he was certainly an attraction
to the opposite sex, which affectionately earned him the nickname, “Nicky
Love”. He became involved in Karate and it was his relationship with his
Sen Sei and his dojo brothers that was to have an extremely positive impact
on him. After graduating from High School, Nick went to work for
Brooklyn
Union Gas Company. However, he wanted a job that allotted him a more creative
outlet, he joined the Carpenter’s Union and began to use his God-given
talent and his hands to make a living. A short while later, he actually
struck out on his own, starting his own home improvement business and
called it Rosso’s Home Improvements. Nick had hands of gold, and you will
find his craftsmanship shining in many homes belonging to his clients,
and to his family and friends. His life-long dream was to be married,
have a family, and to do what he did in everyone else’s home in a home
of his own. Having a business of his own was great for Nick because he
loved the independence, but he craved more financial stability in his
life, so he applied to the New York City Fire Department. He passed the
written test and the physical with flying colors. He was accepted into
the Fire Academy. Nick graduated the academy and began his career with
the Fire Department in February, 1996. The rest is history.
Even though Nick’s life was short, it was a constant work in progress.
The road
was not always smooth for him, but during the years just prior
to his death, he seemed to have found peace and contentment. Nick faced
many adversities, growing up for the most part in a single-parent home.
He created challenges and set goals for himself. He loved the high and
the feeling of satisfaction he felt when he conquered the challenge and
achieved the goal. He lived life with enthusiasm and fully respected each
day that he had here on earth. It was the way Nick learned to live his
life that created that person who ran into those towers that day.
Because of his courageous act on September 11, 2001, Nick was awarded the most prestigious "Medal of Valor".