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Boston Stronger: City Marks One Year Since Marathon Bombings

One year after the Boston Marathon bombings, families of the victims, including relatives of Martin Richard, attended a wreath-laying ceremony on Boylston Street along with Mayor Martin Walsh (left) and Cardinal Sean Patrick O'Malley (right).
Jared Wickerham Getty Images
One year after the Boston Marathon bombings, families of the victims, including relatives of Martin Richard, attended a wreath-laying ceremony on Boylston Street along with Mayor Martin Walsh (left) and Cardinal Sean Patrick O'Malley (right).

On this April 15, Americans are thinking about the Boston Marathon bombings that occurred one year ago.

After the bombings at last year's Boston Marathon, a group of San Diego runners organized a run to show support. They called it "Boston Strong San Diego" and hundreds of runners turned out to collectively cover 3,000 miles, the distance from San Diego to Boston. Now, they're doing it again.

In and around Boston, people are also looking back on a year of healing. The day's events will culminate in a moment of silence at 2:49 p.m., the time of the first explosion. Vice President Joe Biden will join officials in a tribute near the race's finish line.

A large crowd is expected Tuesday along Boylston Street, the scene of the cruel attack that police say was carried out by two brothers. One was later killed; the other awaits trial. On Monday, 200 people affected by the attack gathered on the finish line for a mass portrait by The Boston Globe.

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Today's memorial service will begin at noon, ET, with Biden attending with Gov. Deval Patrick, Boston Mayor Martin Walsh and former Mayor Thomas Menino at the Hynes Convention Center. Afterwards, a flag-raising ceremony will take place at the finish line, between 2:30 and 3 p.m.

"I'm really excited because I love being with the other survivors," attack survivor Jeff Bauman tells USA Today of today's events. "I hope there's a lot of first responders there. I want to say thank you to everybody."

Three people were killed a year ago: Krystle Campbell (29), Martin Richard (8), and Lu Lingzi (23). Police officer Sean Collier died days later as authorities pursued the suspects. Hundreds more were injured, some severely.

Lingzi's parents, Jun Lu and Ling Meng, will be at today's ceremony, having traveled thousands of miles from China to be in Boston.

"We cherish everything that Lingzi was a part of," Jun Lu tells The Boston Globe through an interpreter. "Even though last year's Marathon [was tragic], we want to be there to witness something good come out of it."

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The victims' families attended a wreath-laying ceremony this morning, as Gov. Patrick and other officials joined with police and fire department officers to commemorate them. And in Newton, Mass., which was under a partial lockdown one year ago, police tweeted a defiant message, saying the city had gone "from Boston Strong to Boston Stronger!"

We'll feature tributes and remembrances here today, updating this post as events progress.

Member station WBUR in Boston describes what happens after today's tributes:

"From there, the city and race organizers must turn their attention to Monday, when a million spectators are expected to line the 26.2 mile course from Hopkinton to Boston to cheer on the second-largest field of runners in the race's 118-year history."

Eight runners who are entered in the 2014 Boston Marathon have been documenting their training and personal stories for NPR in a Tumblr blog. Some of them ran in last year's race; others were inspired to enter this year's race to honor the victims. Running the race this year also brings a chance for healing and closure.

NPR's Wright Bryan recently spoke to one of those runners — Demi Clark, who was among the last group to finish last year's race before homemade bombs wreaked havoc in Boston.

Clark now lives in Charleston, S.C., a move she says was brought on by a new willingness to change.

As Clark recently wrote, "That has been a theme this year. I don't allow myself to say 'no' to things that are potential 'no second chances.' I hug my children tighter at bedtime (and I don't miss a chance to tuck them in — EVER — something I used to do)."

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