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9/11 firefighter dies of cancer that family claims was caused by ground zero fumes

Thick smoke billows into the New York sky on Sept. 11, 2001. Daniel Hulshizer/AP

A former ferry captain who helped evacuate hundreds of people from Manhattan after the Sept. 11 terror attacks has died.

Thomas Phelan was 45 and had cancer.

READ MORE: Airlines to pay $95-million settlement over security lapses that led to 9/11 hijack

Phelan was a Statue of Liberty ferry captain in 2001. He helped evacuate Lower Manhattan and ferried rescue workers and supplies.

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Two years after the attacks he became a firefighter assigned to a marine unit on Staten Island.

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Family and friends told the New York Daily News they believe Phelan got cancer from toxic fumes at ground zero.

READ MORE: 9/11 victim’s remains identified by DNA testing, 16 years after attacks

Scientific evidence linking the attacks to cancer is still unsettled.

Researchers studying illnesses among people exposed to the 9-11 dust cloud have found an unusual number of deaths from brain malignancies and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, but fewer deaths than expected from other types of cancer.

Phelan was remembered by several on Twitter, including New York Mayor Bill de Blasio.

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“We will never forget his service and his sacrifice,” de Blasio tweeted Sunday.

— With a file from Global News reporter Maham Abedi

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