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Garrett
C. Knoll—Febuary 2009
Shipment Honoree
Military
Times:
Michigan
soldier killed in Iraq was athletic, popular
The Associated
Press
VERONA TOWNSHIP,
Mich. — A 23-year-old Army medic from Michigan’s Thumb who was
killed in Iraq attended a rural one-room school through eighth
grade but jumped right into the social whirl and sports scene
at Bad Axe High School, his former principal says.
Garrett Knoll of
Huron County’s Verona Township was killed when a truck bomb
exploded next to his patrol base near Baghdad, grandmother
Ruth Knoll told WLEW-AM in Bad Axe.
Nine members of the
82nd Airborne Division were killed and 20 were wounded April
23. It was the single greatest loss of life for American
ground forces in Iraq since Dec. 1, 2005, when a roadside bomb
killed 10 Marines and wounded 11 in an abandoned building near
Fallujah.
The soldiers were
members of the 5th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, 3rd
Brigade Combat Team, at Fort Bragg, N.C. A civilian
interpreter also was wounded.
Knoll, a 2001
graduate of Bad Axe High, lived with his grandparents near
Verona, about 100 miles north of Detroit. He had been serving
as a medic in Iraq for two months.
Ruth Knoll said
military officials notified her April 24. The Pentagon had not
yet announced his death by midmorning April 25.
Knoll attended the
one-room Verona Mills school from kindergarten through eighth
grade, said Bad Axe High Principal Wayne Brady.
Knoll “fit right
in” when he moved on to the high school, Brady told The
Saginaw News. The freshman joined the cross country, track and
wrestling teams.
“He was a
happy-go-lucky kid,” Brady said. “He was very friendly. One
thing I remember is his sense of humor. He was very sharp,
very witty. And he had a nice circle of friends.”
Lee Kahler, Knoll’s
track and cross country coach and his biology teacher,
described him as “happy, joyful, enthusiastic, eager, always
adventuresome.”
“He was a guy who
was always full of energy,” Kahler told the Huron Daily
Tribune of Bad Axe. “He was a really neat kid.”
“Our thoughts and
sympathies go out to his family, and we will honor his, and
their, sacrifice,” said Bad Axe Mayor Herbert Williams. “As a
community, we will do whatever we can to help them heal.”
Army Pfc. Garrett C. Knoll
Remember Our Heroes
Army Pfc. Garrett
C. Knoll, 23, of Bad Axe, Mich.
Pfc. Knoll was
assigned to the 5th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, 3rd
Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, Fort Bragg, N.C.;
died April 23 in Sadah, Iraq, of wounds suffered when an
improvised explosive device detonated near his location. Also
killed were Spc. Michael J. Rodriguez, Spc. Jerry R. King,
Sgt. Michael L. Vaughan, Sgt. Brice A. Pearson, Sgt. Randell
T. Marshall, 1st Lt. Kevin J. Gaspers, Staff Sgt. Kenneth E.
Locker Jr. and Staff Sgt. William C. Moore.
Michigan soldier
killed in Iraq was athletic, popular
The Associated
Press
VERONA TOWNSHIP,
Mich. — A 23-year-old Army medic from Michigan’s Thumb who was
killed in Iraq attended a rural one-room school through eighth
grade but jumped right into the social whirl and sports scene
at Bad Axe High School, his former principal says.
Garrett Knoll of
Huron County’s Verona Township was killed when a truck bomb
exploded next to his patrol base near Baghdad, grandmother
Ruth Knoll told WLEW-AM in Bad Axe.
Nine members of the
82nd Airborne Division were killed and 20 were wounded April
23. It was the single greatest loss of life for American
ground forces in Iraq since Dec. 1, 2005, when a roadside bomb
killed 10 Marines and wounded 11 in an abandoned building near
Fallujah.
The soldiers were
members of the 5th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, 3rd
Brigade Combat Team, at Fort Bragg, N.C. A civilian
interpreter also was wounded.
Knoll, a 2001
graduate of Bad Axe High, lived with his grandparents near
Verona, about 100 miles north of Detroit. He had been serving
as a medic in Iraq for two months.
Ruth Knoll said
military officials notified her April 24. The Pentagon had not
yet announced his death by midmorning April 25.
Knoll attended the
one-room Verona Mills school from kindergarten through eighth
grade, said Bad Axe High Principal Wayne Brady.
Knoll “fit right
in” when he moved on to the high school, Brady told The
Saginaw News. The freshman joined the cross country, track and
wrestling teams.
“He was a
happy-go-lucky kid,” Brady said. “He was very friendly. One
thing I remember is his sense of humor. He was very sharp,
very witty. And he had a nice circle of friends.”
Lee Kahler, Knoll’s
track and cross country coach and his biology teacher,
described him as “happy, joyful, enthusiastic, eager, always
adventuresome.”
“He was a guy who
was always full of energy,” Kahler told the Huron Daily
Tribune of Bad Axe. “He was a really neat kid.”
“Our thoughts and
sympathies go out to his family, and we will honor his, and
their, sacrifice,” said Bad Axe Mayor Herbert Williams. “As a
community, we will do whatever we can to help them heal.”
Army Pfc. Garrett
C. Knoll was killed in action on 4/23/07.
http://www.militarycity.com/valor/2716008.html
The members of
Landstuhl Hospital Care Project were honored to
remember Garrett during the month of Febuary 2009 with
our shipments to the Landstuhl Regional Medical
Center in Germany, and U.S. military hospitals in
the Middle East. Our thoughts and prayers
remain with Garrett's family and friends today and in
the years to come.
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are tax-deductible.
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