Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Dwight J. Morgan, Marines, Staff Sergeant -- Rest In Peace

Dwight J. Morgan, 24

Marines, Staff Sergeant 
Based:
Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Calif. 

Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 361 (HMH-361), the "Flying Tigers" of Marine Aircraft Group 16 
Supporting: Operation Enduring Freedom 

Died: January 19, 2002
Bagram, Afghanistan 

Married, 1 child 
Gender: Male 

Hometown: Mendocino 

High School: Willits High (Willits)

Two Marines killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan were eulogized Wednesday as young men of honor and courage who "made the world a safer place" by volunteering to serve in the war against terrorism.

"Their country called in November, and they volunteered," Lt. Col. David L. Spasojevich said of Staff Sgt. Walter F. Cohee III and Staff Sgt. Dwight J. Morgan. "They were chosen because they were the best. They were Marines' Marines."

Cohee, 26, of Mardela Springs, Md., and Morgan, 24, of Willits in Northern California, were killed in the Jan. 19 crash of a CH-53E Super Stallion in the snowy mountains near Kabul while on a resupply mission. Five members of the crew were injured....

The two crashes give Miramar the grisly distinction of being the U.S. military base that has suffered the most war zone fatalities in the war on terrorism.

Navy chaplain Lt. George R. Bradshaw said Morgan's 4-year-old son, Alex, can be proud that "the world is safer because his father had the courage to confront evil in a land faraway."


Morgan's widow, Teresa, is expecting the couple's second child.


Cohee and his fiancee, Vanessa Gerritsen, a graduate student at UC San Diego, planned to be married. Using military e-mail, he had asked her sister and parents for their blessing for the marriage.


"When I found out [Cohee] had died, I felt I died too," a tearful Gerritsen told reporters after the memorial. "I have no idea what my future holds or how I'm going to go on without him. He was the love of my life and always will be."

Cohee and Morgan were part of heavy helicopter Squadron 361, known as the Flying Tigers. Both had completed a deployment in the Middle East when the U.S. sent forces to Afghanistan to rout the Taliban government and Al Qaeda terrorist network.

"In disbelief, anger, grief and sorrow, we grasp for memories," said Spasojevich, the squadron's commanding officer. "They will be in our hearts forever."
Read the entire LA Times article about Staff Sgt. Dwight J. Morgan and Staff Sgt. Walter F. Cohee III here. Do visit Sergeant Morgan's Fallen Heroes Memorial.

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