Remember Our Heroes
Army Capt. Christopher S. Cash, 36, of Winterville, N.C.
Capt. Cash was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 120th Infantry, Army National Guard, Jacksonville, N.C.; killed June 24 when his Bradley Fighting Vehicle came under attack by small-arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades in Baqubah, Iraq.
By SETH HARKNESS, Portland Press Herald Writer
CAPT. CHRISTOPHER S. CASH , 36, North Carolina, North Carolina Army National Guard's 30th Heavy Separate Brigade, grew up in Old Orchard Beach, where his mother now lives, died June 24 in a small-arms attack in Baquba.
OLD ORCHARD BEACH — A 1985 Old Orchard Beach High School graduate remembered for his athletic excellence and dedication to the military died of head wounds in Iraq Thursday after being shot in an ambush. U.S. Army Capt. Christopher Cash, 36, was on patrol in Baqubah, a town 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, with fellow members of the North Carolina National Guard when Iraqi insurgents fired at their armored vehicle in the early morning attack. Another American soldier was killed and seven others were wounded in the skirmish.
Cash's mother and stepfather, Nancy and Robert Kelley of Old Orchard Beach, learned of Cash's death from friends in North Carolina shortly before an Army chaplain and a notification officer arrived at their door Thursday afternoon.
Cash and his unit, North Carolina's Army National Guard 30th Heavy Separate Brigade, went to Iraq in March to help train local police. Cash lived outside Fort Bragg, N.C., with his wife, Dawn, and their two sons, Christopher, 13, and Matthew, 11.
Nancy Kelley, her eyes red with grief as friends and family members offered support Friday afternoon, said she was comforted by the thought that her son lived the life he had envisioned.
"The only consolation we have right now is, he died doing what he wanted to do," she told U.S. Rep. Michael Michaud, D-Maine, one of several politicians who called to offer condolences.
Cash moved to Old Orchard Beach from Rhode Island when he was 8 years old and grew up in the two-story red house on Cascade Road where his mother and stepfather still live. On Friday, four American flags and a strip of red, white and blue bunting flapped in the breeze outside the home.
Cash excelled in track and field and cross-country at Old Orchard Beach High. He won several state titles in track events, and qualified for the Junior National Olympics in 1984.
A fellow runner from those days recalled his friend as a person with a powerful and contagious drive to excel.
"He was very competitive. He made us all better because we all tried to outdo one another," said Joe Kline, 37, a pharmaceuticals salesman and Army reservist from Old Orchard Beach.
Kline said he never pegged his high school buddy for a military career but, in retrospect, said Cash showed a talent for leadership among his high school peers that helped explain his rise from private to captain.
"He took charge of a situation and made it fun," Kline said. "He always came up with an idea."
Mark Snow, a former track coach, said Cash could have excelled at any sport.
"He was an outstanding student and he was an outstanding athlete," Snow said. "He excelled in whatever he did. He was nothing but a class act."
Just five days before Cash died, Snow got a letter from him describing how proud he was to be serving the country.
"He was one of the best of the best," said Snow. "He was a Ranger and he loved doing that."
Cash enlisted in the Army in 1987 while on vacation in Texas. If his entry into the military was somewhat impulsive, his commitment was not.
He completed four years in the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg as an Army Ranger and continued his 17-year military career in the Army National Guard.
After leaving active duty, Cash earned a bachelor's degree in fitness education and a master's degree in exercise physiology. He ran a large fitness facility in Greenville, N.C., and recently took up a new hobby that seemed ideal for someone with his energy and determination - running marathons.
In many ways his career mirrored that of his stepfather, who served in the Army in the late 1960s and managed health spas in California before starting a career as a food broker in Maine.
Kelley said she supported her son's decision to live a military life. She said Cash fully believed in what he was doing in Iraq. Kelley, who recently knitted red, white and blue scarves for her son's wife and other women at Fort Bragg, said she and her husband feel the same, despite the death of her only son.
"I'm just sad for his kids and sad for the wonderful life he would have lived, because he was only 36," she said.
Army Capt. Christopher S. Cash was killed in action on 06/24/04.
“Not for fame or reward, not lured by ambition or goaded by necessity, but in simple obedience to duty.”
"Each of these heroes stands in the unbroken line of patriots who have dared to die that freedom might live and grow and increase in its blessings."
--Inscription at Arlington Cemetary
-- Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Thursday, June 24, 2004
Monday, June 21, 2004
Marine Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras
Remember Our Heroes
Marine Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, 27, of Harris, Texas
LCpl Contreras was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed June 21, 2004 by hostile fire in Anbar province, Iraq.
Texas Marine killed in Iraq
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A 27-year-old Marine from the Houston area was killed by hostile fire in Iraq.
Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, who was from Harris County, died Monday in an attack in Ramadi, an insurgent stronghold 60 miles west of Baghdad, the Defense Department announced Tuesday. Officials did not say if Contreras was among the four U.S. Marines gunned down Monday by insurgents there.
Contreras was a rifleman assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Contreras joined the Marine Corps on May 7, 2001, and earned several honors, including the National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon.
The attack is under investigation.
Mourners recall fallen Marine’s devotion, service
HOUSTON — Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, who had hoped to return from Iraq by September, was remembered by mourners as a dedicated Marine and a devoted son.
Hundreds gathered at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church on Tuesday for services in honor of Contreras, 27, of Jacinto City. He died June 21 from wounds suffered in hostile fire in Anbar province, Iraq.
“We are going to miss him so much,” childhood friend Eli Aguilar told the Houston Chronicle after the service. “He was the light of the house. He cheered everyone up.”
Marines in dress-blue uniforms carried the fallen man’s coffin, draped with an American flag, into the church as relatives and friends watched silently.
“Pedro felt the call to serve,” said the Rev. Timothy Gray of Our Lady of Guadalupe, adding Contreras took his first Communion at the church and that he had volunteered as an altar server. “Not just his family or his neighborhood, but the entire nation.”
The Galena Park High School graduate was the 17th Houston-area soldier to be killed in the Iraq war. He was sent to Iraq in March.
After Communion for family members, one church member read a letter Contreras had written before he left for Iraq. The letter, written in Spanish and sent to his family, expressed Contreras’ gratitude to his parents for raising him.
Contreras wrote that if he returned from Iraq, they should thank God, but if he never came home, he said not to be sad because he would be in a better place.
He joined the Marine Corps on May 7, 2001, and was a rifleman assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Contreras earned several honors in his military career, including the National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, according to the Defense Department. Contreras’ mother was presented with his Purple Heart at Tuesday’s service.
Marine Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras was killed in action on 6/21/04.
Marine Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, 27, of Harris, Texas
LCpl Contreras was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, Calif.; killed June 21, 2004 by hostile fire in Anbar province, Iraq.
Texas Marine killed in Iraq
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A 27-year-old Marine from the Houston area was killed by hostile fire in Iraq.
Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, who was from Harris County, died Monday in an attack in Ramadi, an insurgent stronghold 60 miles west of Baghdad, the Defense Department announced Tuesday. Officials did not say if Contreras was among the four U.S. Marines gunned down Monday by insurgents there.
Contreras was a rifleman assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Contreras joined the Marine Corps on May 7, 2001, and earned several honors, including the National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon.
The attack is under investigation.
Mourners recall fallen Marine’s devotion, service
HOUSTON — Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras, who had hoped to return from Iraq by September, was remembered by mourners as a dedicated Marine and a devoted son.
Hundreds gathered at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church on Tuesday for services in honor of Contreras, 27, of Jacinto City. He died June 21 from wounds suffered in hostile fire in Anbar province, Iraq.
“We are going to miss him so much,” childhood friend Eli Aguilar told the Houston Chronicle after the service. “He was the light of the house. He cheered everyone up.”
Marines in dress-blue uniforms carried the fallen man’s coffin, draped with an American flag, into the church as relatives and friends watched silently.
“Pedro felt the call to serve,” said the Rev. Timothy Gray of Our Lady of Guadalupe, adding Contreras took his first Communion at the church and that he had volunteered as an altar server. “Not just his family or his neighborhood, but the entire nation.”
The Galena Park High School graduate was the 17th Houston-area soldier to be killed in the Iraq war. He was sent to Iraq in March.
After Communion for family members, one church member read a letter Contreras had written before he left for Iraq. The letter, written in Spanish and sent to his family, expressed Contreras’ gratitude to his parents for raising him.
Contreras wrote that if he returned from Iraq, they should thank God, but if he never came home, he said not to be sad because he would be in a better place.
He joined the Marine Corps on May 7, 2001, and was a rifleman assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, based at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Contreras earned several honors in his military career, including the National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon, according to the Defense Department. Contreras’ mother was presented with his Purple Heart at Tuesday’s service.
Marine Lance Cpl. Pedro Contreras was killed in action on 6/21/04.
Saturday, June 05, 2004
Army Sgt. Humberto F. Timoteo
Remember Our Heroes
Army Sgt. Humberto F. Timoteo, 25, of Newark, New Jersey.
Sgt Timoteo died in Baghdad, Iraq, when his vehicle hit an improvised explosive device. He was assigned to the Army National Guard's Battery A, 3rd Battalion, 112th Field Artillery, Morristown, New Jersey.
Timoteo’s wife, Army Sgt. Silvia Timoteo, said Tuesday that the risk of death is something anyone assumes on joining the military.
Though she said she is heartbroken, Silvia Timoteo said she believes in what her husband was doing. She is mother of a 3-year-old son and is getting an emergency transfer back to the U.S. from Korea, where she had been stationed.
“All these soldiers were dedicated to the service of their country and the state,” said Lt. Col. Robert Schofield, commander of the battalion.
Newark Mayor Sharpe James told The Star-Ledger of Newark that Timoteo had emigrated with his family from Portugal and grew up in the city’s Ironbound section.
“He served and fought to protect our liberties and values and he sacrificed his life for them,” James told the newspaper. “He is a hero in every sense of the word.”
Timoteo joined the military in 1996 and trained as a field artilleryman at Fort Sill, Okla., according to DoD records.
Army Sgt Humberto F. Timoteo was killed in action on 06/05/04.
Army Sgt. Humberto F. Timoteo, 25, of Newark, New Jersey.
Sgt Timoteo died in Baghdad, Iraq, when his vehicle hit an improvised explosive device. He was assigned to the Army National Guard's Battery A, 3rd Battalion, 112th Field Artillery, Morristown, New Jersey.
Timoteo’s wife, Army Sgt. Silvia Timoteo, said Tuesday that the risk of death is something anyone assumes on joining the military.
Though she said she is heartbroken, Silvia Timoteo said she believes in what her husband was doing. She is mother of a 3-year-old son and is getting an emergency transfer back to the U.S. from Korea, where she had been stationed.
“All these soldiers were dedicated to the service of their country and the state,” said Lt. Col. Robert Schofield, commander of the battalion.
Newark Mayor Sharpe James told The Star-Ledger of Newark that Timoteo had emigrated with his family from Portugal and grew up in the city’s Ironbound section.
“He served and fought to protect our liberties and values and he sacrificed his life for them,” James told the newspaper. “He is a hero in every sense of the word.”
Timoteo joined the military in 1996 and trained as a field artilleryman at Fort Sill, Okla., according to DoD records.
Army Sgt Humberto F. Timoteo was killed in action on 06/05/04.
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