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Capt.
Darrell Lewis- August 2009 Shipment Honoree
Email from Liz
Lewis--Thank you for honoring my husband as the August 2009
honoree. I will be posting a blog on my Myspace as
well as a link on my Facebook to your site for remember my
wonderful & loving husband.
Thank you for
your kind actions.
God bless
D.C. soldier
killed in Afghanistan
The
Associated Press
Army Capt. Darrell
C. Lewis was raised in an area known for drugs and violence.
But his family described him as a natural leader who used an
inquisitive mind to chase his dreams.
He showed no fear
when walking down dangerous streets, and from an early age he
rode buses across town to schools outside the neighborhood.
“He knew there was
more to life,” said Trina Lewis, a cousin.
Lewis, 31, of
Washington, D.C., died June 23 in Vashir City, Afghanistan,
after his unit came under attack. He was assigned to Fort
Riley, Kan.
“You can’t express
it in words it was in his face,” said his mother, Hannah
Lewis. “Being in the military was the happiest I’ve ever seen
my child.”
At Wittenberg
University, Lewis learned Japanese and Chinese.
After joining the
Army, he served in Georgia and Washington state, then
completed a two-year tour in South Korea.
Hannah Lewis
recalled embracing her son for what would be the last time at
his wedding reception in San Antonio in December. “I knew he
was going away, and I just remembered the hug,” she said.
He also is survived
by his wife, Elizabeth, and infant son, Rashawn. Lewis also
had a 7-year-old daughter, Taylor.
D.C. Army
Captain Dies In Attack

By
Clarence Williams
Washington Post
Staff Writer
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Darrell C. Lewis
had long astounded his family. He navigated one of Southeast
Washington's toughest neighborhoods before earning a
scholarship to a private high school and another for college.
After graduating
from Wittenberg University, he joined the Army as an officer,
rising to Captain. From the start, his mother knew he had made
the right choice.
"You can't express
it in words; it was in his face," Hannah Lewis said last
night. "Being in the military was the happiest I've ever seen
my child."
Lewis, 31, was
killed Saturday in Vashir City, Afghanistan, when his unit was
attacked by insurgents using rocket-propelled grenades,
mortars and small arms, the Department of Defense said
yesterday. He had been in Afghanistan since February.
Lewis was raised in
the Linda Pollin housing complex in Southeast, in an area
known for drugs and violence. But his family described a
natural leader who used an inquisitive mind to chase his
dreams.
He showed no fear
when walking down dangerous streets, and from an early age he
rode buses across town to schools outside the neighborhood,
his family said.
"He knew there was
more to life," said Trina Lewis, a cousin.
Lewis was awarded a
scholarship to Washington Ethical High School, where he
excelled in track. He moved in with Trina Lewis to be closer
to school and to enlist her help in preparing for college.
She recalled a
teenager who attracted people from all walks of life,
especially the young girls who called the house and forced her
to install a second phone line.
"Everybody is just
sad and shocked," Trina Lewis said. "This was not his destiny,
to die in a desert in Afghanistan. . . . He just accomplished
so much, and he had more to accomplish."
At college, Lewis
learned Japanese and Chinese. After joining the Army, he
served in Georgia and Washington state, then completed a
two-year tour in South Korea.
In Afghanistan,
Lewis called home Sundays, often connecting his D.C. relatives
with his new wife, Elizabeth, and infant son, Rashawn, who
live in San Antonio. Lewis also had a 7-year-old daughter,
Taylor.
Last night, Hannah
Lewis recalled her son's wedding reception in San Antonio in
December. Shortly before midnight, she embraced her son for
what would be the last time.
"I knew he was
going away, and I just remembered the hug," she said. "He
loved being in the military. He was doing a lot with his
life."
Lewis, who was
assigned to the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division out of Fort
Riley, Kansas, is also survived by his father, Stanley Isiah
Lewis, and his older brother, Stanley Jr.
Lewis will be
buried next to his grandfather and great-uncle at Arlington
National Cemetery on July 11, his family said.
Promising
Journey Ends for D.C. Soldier
Relatives and
Friends Remember Army Captain From SE as Natural Leader
By Mark Berman
Washington Post
Staff Writer
Thursday, July 12, 2007
The journey of
Darrell C. Lewis took him from Southeast Washington across the
United States and around the world to South Korea and
Afghanistan. The journey ended
yesterday at Arlington National Cemetery, across the Potomac
River from where he was raised.
Captain
Lewis, 31, was killed June 23 in Vashir City, Afghanistan,
when insurgents attacked his unit with rocket-propelled
grenades, mortars and small-arms fire, according to the
Department of Defense. He had been in Afghanistan since
February.
Yesterday,
more than 90 mourners braved the stifling heat to follow the
horse-drawn caisson that carried Lewis's flag-draped coffin to
his final resting place. He was buried near a grandfather and
a great-uncle. He was the 54th service member killed in
Operation Enduring Freedom to be laid to rest at Arlington.
Lewis was a
member of the 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, based at
Fort Riley, Kan. Services for Lewis were held Tuesday at the
John T. Rhines Funeral Home in the District.
"Everybody
is just sad and shocked," his cousin Trina Lewis told The
Washington Post in June. "This was not his destiny, to die in
a desert in Afghanistan. . . . He just accomplished so much,
and he had more to accomplish."
Family and
friends described Lewis, who was raised in a tough
neighborhood in Southeast, as a natural leader with an
inquisitive mind. He was awarded a scholarship to Washington
Ethical High School, where he excelled in track.
He went on
to win a scholarship to Wittenberg University in Springfield,
Ohio, where he learned Japanese and Chinese. After graduating
from Wittenberg, he joined the Army and was commissioned as an
officer.
His military
service took him across the country, from Georgia to
Washington state, and included a two-year tour in South Korea.
"You can't
express it in words; it was in his face," his mother, Hannah
Lewis, told The Post shortly after his death. "Being in the
military was the happiest I've ever seen my child."
At the
funeral, folded American flags were presented to Lewis's
mother; his father, Stanley Lewis; and his widow, Elizabeth,
whom he wed in December in San Antonio. He is also survived by
an infant son, Rashawn; a 7-year-old daughter, Taylor; and an
older brother, Stanley Lewis Jr.
"He loved
being in the military," Hannah Lewis said. "He was doing a lot
with his life."
On her
MySpace page, Elizabeth Lewis posted a tribute to her husband
titled, "Darrell Your Love Shines Down." "DARRELL YOU ARE MY
HERO," she wrote.
After the military
service, friends and relatives remained at the grave site,
where there was a poster-size picture of Lewis, for another
ceremony. When it was over, three white birds were released
into the sky.
Additional
Websites:
http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/dclewis-afghanistan.htm
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