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Greetings,
Memphis EAP Rep, Kathy Dotson sent
this to me and asked me to share it will all of
you. We hope that you can find the time
to read this entire story. It is a true account of a
Marine's experience with NWA. The flight attendant from
the back of the plane was former MEM flight attendant Kate
Conn. As I read the story, my heart swelled with pride in
my fellow flight attendant, and our NWA employees. This is
a very moving example of how our actions and good deeds
can continue to touch people's lives, without us
even knowing it. As a flight attendant, we have such a
great opportunity to impact our customers on a daily basis,
which is exactly what Kate did. Don't forget to
click at the bottom of the email to see the "Taking Chance"
Trailer. I can't wait to see the movie.
A personal narrative
by Lieutenant Colonel Michael R. Strobl
Chance Phelps
was wearing his Saint Christopher medal when he was killed on
Good Friday. Eight days later, I handed the medallion to his
mother. I didn't know Chance before he died. Today, I miss him.
Over a year ago, I volunteered to escort the remains of
Marines killed in Iraq should the need arise. Thankfully, I
hadn't been called on to be an escort since Operation Iraqi
Freedom began. The first few weeks of April, however, had been
tough ones for the Marines. On the Monday after Easter, I was
reviewing Department of Defense press releases when I saw that a
Private First Class Chance Phelps was killed in action outside
of Baghdad. The press release listed his hometown as Clifton,
Colorado — which is near where I'm from. I notified our
battalion adjutant and told him that , should the duty to escort
PFC Phelps fall to our battalion, I would take him.
I
didn't hear back the rest of Monday and all day Tuesday until
1800. The battalion duty NCO ca lled my cell phone and said I
needed to be ready to leave for Dover Air Force Base at 1900 in
order to escort the remains of PFC Phelps. I called the major
who had the task of in forming Phelps' parents of his death. The
major said that the funeral was going to be in Dubois, Wyoming.
(It turned out that PFC Phelps only lived near my hometown
during his senior year of high school.) I had never been to
Wyoming and had never heard of Dubois.
With two other
escorts from Quantico, I got to Dover AFB at 2330 on Tuesday
night. First thing on Wednesday we reported to the mortuary at
the base. In the escort lounge there were about half a dozen
Army soldiers and about an equal number of Marines waiting to
meet up with "their" remains for departure. PFC Phelps was not
ready, however, and I was told to come back on Thursday. Now at
Dover with nothing to do and a solemn mission ahead, I began to
get depressed.
I didn't know anything about Chance
Phelps; not even what he looked like. I wondered about his
family and what it would be like to meet them. I did push-ups in
my room until I couldn't do any more. On Thursday morning I
reported back to the mortuary. This time there was a new group
of Army escorts and a couple of the Marines who had been there
Wednesday. T here was also an Air Force captain there to
escort=2 0his brother home to San Diego.
We received a
brief covering our duties and the proper handling of the
remains, and we were shown20pictures of the shipping container
and told that each one contained, in addition to the casket, a
flag. I was given an extra flag since PFC Phelps' parents were
divorced.
It turne d out that I was the last escort to
leave on Thursday. This meant that I repeatedly got to
participate in the small ceremonies that mark all departures
from the Dover AFB mortuary.
Most of the remains are
taken from Dover AFB by hearse to the airport in Philadelphia
for air transport to their final destination. When the remains
of a service member are loaded onto a hearse and ready to leave
the Dover mortuary, there is an announcement made over the
building's intercom system. With the announcement, all service
members working at the mortuary, regardless of branch, stop work
and form up along the driveway to render a slow ceremonial
salute as the hearse departs. On this day, there were also some
civilian workers doing construction on the mortuary grounds. As
each hearse passed, they would stop working and place their hard
hats over their hearts. This was my first sign that my mission
with PFC Phelps was larger than the Marine Corps and that his
family and friends were not grieving alone.
Eventually I
was the last escort remaining in the lounge. The master gunnery
sergeant in charge of the Marine liaison there came to see me.
He had a pouch with Chance Phelps' personal effects. He removed
each item: a large watch, a wooden cross with a lanyard, two
loose dog tags, two dog tags on a20chain, and the Saint
Christopher medal, which was on a silver chain. Although we had
been briefed that we might be carrying some personal effects of
the deceased, I was taken aback. Holding hi s personal effects,
I was starting to get to know Chance Phelps.
Finally we
were ready. I grabbed my bags and went outside. I was somewhat
startled when I saw the shipping container, loaded three
quarters of the way into the back of a black Chevy Suburban that
had been modified to carry such cargo. This was the first time I
saw my "cargo," and I was surprised at how large the shipping
container was. The master gunnery sergeant and I verified that
the name on the container was Phelps', and then they pushed him
the rest of the way in and we left. Now it was PFC Chance
Phelps' turn to receive the military — and construction
workers' — honors. He was finally moving towards home.
As I chatted with the driver on the hour-long trip to
Philadelphia, it became clear that he considered it an honor to
contribute to getting Chance home. He offered his sympathy to
the family. I was glad finally to be moving, yet I was
apprehensive about what things would be like at the airport. I
didn't want this container to be treated like ordinary cargo,
but I knew that the simple logistics20of moving around something
this large would be difficult.
When we got to the
Northwest Airlines cargo terminal at the Philadelphia airport,
the cargo handler and hearse driver pulled the shipping
container onto a loading bay while I stood to the side and
executed a slow salute. Once Chance was safely in the cargo
area, and I was satisfied that he would be treated with due car
e and respect, the hearse driver drove me over to the passenger
terminal and dropped me off.
As I walked up to the
ticketing counter in my uniform, a Northwest employee started to
ask me if I knew how to use the automated boarding-pass
dispenser. Before she could finish, another ticketing agent
interrupted her. He told me to go straight to the counter, then
explained to the woman that I was a military escort. She seemed
embarrassed. The woman behind the counter already had tears in
her eyes as I was pulling out my government travel voucher. She
struggled to find words but managed to express her sympathy for
the family and thanked me for my service. She upgraded my ticket
to first class.
After clearing security, I was met by
another Northwest Airlines employee at the gate. She told me a
representative from cargo would be arriving to take me down to
the tarmac to observe the movement and loading of PFC Phelps. I
hadn't really told any of them what my mission was, but they all
knew. When the man from the cargo crew met me, he, too,
struggled for words. On the tarmac, he told me stories of his
childhood as a military brat and repeatedl y said that he was
sorry for my loss. Even here in Philadelphia, far away from
Chance's hometown, people were mourning with his family.
On the tarmac, the cargo crew was silent except for when
they gave occasional instructions to each other. I stood to the
side and saluted as the conveyor moved Chance to the aircraft. I
wa s relieved when he was finally settled into place. The rest
of the bags were loaded and I watched them shut the cargo-bay
door before heading back up to board the aircraft. One of the
pilots had taken my carry-on bag himself and had it stored next
to the cockpit door so he could watch it while I was on the
tarmac. As I boarded the plane, I could tell immediately that
the flight attendants had already been informed of my mission.
They seemed a little choked up as they led me to my seat.
About forty-five minutes into our flight, I still hadn't
spoken to anyone except to tell the first-class flight attendant
that I would prefer water. I was surprised when the flight
attendant from the back of the plane suddenly appeared and
leaned down to grab my hands. She said, "I want you to have
this," as she pushed a small gold cruci?x, with a relief of
Jesus, into my hand. It was her lapel pin and it looked somewhat
worn. I suspected it had been hers for quite some time. That was
the only thing she said to me the entire flight.
When we
landed in Minneapolis, I was the first one off the plane. The
pilot himself escorted me straight down the side stairs of the
exit tunnel to the tarmac. The cargo crew there already knew
what was on this plane. They were unloading so me of the luggage
when an Army sergeant, a fellow escort who had left Dover
earlier that day, appeared next to me. His "cargo" was going to
be loaded onto my plane for its continuing leg. We stoo d side
by side in the dark and executed a slow salute as Chance was
removed from the plane. I then waited with the soldier and we
saluted together as his fallen comrade was loaded onto the
plane.
My trip with Chance was going to be somewhat
unusual in that I had an overnight stopover. We had a late start
out of Dover and there was just too much traveling ahead of us
to continue on that day. (We still had a flight from Minneapolis
to Billings, Montana, then a five-hour drive to the funeral
home. That was to be followed by a 90-minute drive to Chance's
hometown.)
I was concerned about leaving him overnight
in the Minneapolis cargo area. My 10-minute ride from the tarmac
to the cargo holding area eased my apprehension; just as in
Philadelphia, the cargo guys in Minneapolis were extremely
respectful and seemed honored to do their part. While talking
with them, I learned that the cargo supervisor for Northwest
Airlines at the airport is a lieutenant colonel in the Marine
Corps Reserve. They called him for me and let me talk to him.
Once I was satisfied that all w ould be okay for the
night, I asked one of the cargo c rew if he would take me back
to the terminal so that I could catch my hotel's shuttle.
Instead, he drove me straight to the hotel himself.20At the
hotel, the lieutenant colonel called me and said he would
personally pick me up in the morning and bring me back to the
cargo area. Before leaving the airport, I had told the cargo
crew tha t I wanted to come back to the cargo area in the
morning rather than go straight to the passenger terminal. I
felt bad for leaving Chance and wanted to see the shipping
container where I had left it for the night.
The next
morning, the lieutenant colonel drove me to the airport, and I
was met again by a man from the cargo crew and escorted down to
the tarmac. The pilot of the plane joined me as I waited for
them to bring Chance from the cargo area. The pilot and I talked
about his service in the Air Force and how he missed it.
I saluted as Chance was moved up the conveyor and onto
the plane. It would be a while before the luggage was loaded, so
the pilot took me up to board the plane where I could watch the
tarmac from a window. With no other passengers yet on board, I
talked with the flight attendants and one of the cargo guys. He
had been in the Navy and one of the attendants had been in the
Air Force. Everywhere I went, people were telling me about their
relationship to the military. After all the baggage was aboard,
I went back down to=2 0the tarmac, inspected the cargo bay, and
watched them secure=2 0the door.
When we arrived at
Billings, I was again the first off the plane. The funeral
director had driven five hours up from Riverton, Wyoming, to
meet us. He shook my hand as if I had personally lost a brother.
We moved Chance to a secluded cargo area, and it was now
time for me to remove the shipping container20and drape the flag
over the casket. I had predicted that this would choke me up,
but I found I was more concerned with proper flag etiquette than
the solemnity of the moment. Once the flag was in place, I stood
by and saluted as Chance was loaded onto the van from the
funeral home. I picked up my rental car and followed Chance for
five hours until we reached Riverton. During the long trip I
imagined how my meeting with Chance's parents would go. I was
very nervous about that.
When we finally arrived at the
funeral home, I had my first face-to-face meeting with the
casualty assistance call officer (CACO). It had been his duty to
inform the family of Chance's death, and I knew he had been
through a difficult week.
Inside I gave the funeral
director some of the paperwork from Dover and discussed the plan
for the next day. The service was to be at 1400 in the high
school gymnasium up in Dubois, population about 900, some 90
miles away. Eventually, we had covered everything. The CACO had
some items that the family wanted inserted into the casket, and
I felt I needed to inspect Chance's uniform to ensure everything
was proper.20Although it was going to be a closed-casket
funeral, I still wanted to make certain his uniform was squared
away.
Earlier in the=2 0day I wasn't sure how I'd handle
this moment. Suddenly, the casket was open and I got my first
look at Chance Phelps.. His uniform was immaculate — a
tribute to the professionalism of the Marines at Dover. I
noticed that he wore six ribbons over his marksmanship badge;
the senior one was his Purple Heart. I had been in the Corps for
more than 17 years, including a combat tour, and was wearing
eight ribbons. This private first class, with less than a year
in the Corps, had already earned six.
The next morning,
I wore my dress blues and followed the hearse for the trip up to
Dubois. This was the most difficult leg of our trip for me. I
was bracing for the moment when I would meet his parents and
hoping I would find the right words as I presented them with
Chance's personal effects. We got to the high school gym about
four hours before the service was to begin. The gym floor was
covered with folding chairs neatly lined in rows.
There
were a few townspeople making final preparations when I stood
next to the hearse and saluted as Chance was moved out of the
hearse and into the gym. A Marine sergeant, the command
representative from Chance's battalion, met me inside. His eyes
were watery as he relieved me of watching Chance so that I could
go eat=2 0lunch and find my hotel.
At the restaurant,
the tabl e had a flyer announcing Chance's service. Dubois High
School gym, two o'clock. It also said that the family would be
accepting donations so that=2 0they could buy flak vests to send
to troops in Iraq.
I drove back to the gym at a quarter
after one. I could have walked; you could walk to just about
anywhere in Dubois in 10 minutes.20I wanted to find a quiet room
where I could take Chance's things out of their pouch and
untangle the chain of the Saint Christopher medal from the
dog-tag chains and arrange everything before his parents came
in. I had twice before removed the items from the pouch to
ensure they were all there — even though there was no
possibility anything could have fallen out. Each time, the two
chains had been quite intertwined. I didn't want to be fumbling
around trying to separate them in front of his parents. Our
meeting, however, didn't go as expected.
I practically
bumped into Chance's stepmom accidentally and our introductions
began in the noisy hallway outside the gym. In short order I met
Chance's stepmom and father, followed by his stepdad and, at
last, his mom. I didn't know how to express to these people my
sympathy for their loss and my gratitude for their sacrifice.
Now, however, they were repeatedly thanking me for bringing
their son home and for my service. I was humbled beyond words.
I told them that I had some of Chance's things and asked
if we could try to find a quiet place. The five of us ended up
in what20appeared to be a computer lab — not what I had
envisioned for this occasion. After we had arranged five chairs
around a small table, I tol d them about our trip. I told them
how, at every step, Chance was treated with respect, dignity,
and honor. I told them about the staff at Dover and all the
folks at Northwest Airlines. I tried to convey how the entire
nation, from Dover to Philadelphia, to Minneapolis, to Billings
and Riverton expressed grief and sympathy over their loss.
Finally, it was time to open the pouch. The first item I
happened to pull out was Chance's large watch. It was still set
to Baghdad time. Next were the lanyard and the wooden cross.
Then the dog tags and the Saint Christopher medal. This time the
chains were not tangled. Once all of his items were laid out on
the table, I told his mom that I had one other item to give
them. I retrieved the flight attendant's crucifix from my pocket
and told its story. I set that on the table and excused myself.
When I next saw Chance's mom, she was wearing the crucifix on
her lapel.
By 1400 most of the seats on the gym floor
were filled and people were finding seats in the fixed bleachers
high above the gym floor. There were a surprising number of
people in military uniform. Many Marines had come up from Salt
Lake City. Men from various VFW posts and the Marine Corps
League occupied multiple rows of folding chairs. It turned out
that Chance's sister, a petty officer in the Navy, worked for a
rear admiral — the chief of naval intelligence — at
the Pentagon. The admiral had brought many of the sailors on his
staff with h im to Dubois to pay respects to Chance and to
support his sister. After a few songs and some words from a Navy
chaplain, the admiral took the microphone and told us how Chance
had died.
C hance was an artillery cannoneer and his
unit was acting as provisional military police outside of
Baghdad. Chance had volunteered to man a .50caliber machine gun
in the turret of the leading vehicle in a convoy. The convoy
came under intense fie but Chance stayed true to his post and
returned fie with the big gun, covering the rest of the convoy,
until he was fatally wounded.
After the admiral spoke,
the commander of the local VFW post read some of the letters
Chance had written home. In letters to his mom, he talked of the
mosquitoes and the heat. In letters to his stepfather, he told
of the dangers of convoy operations and of receiving fire.
The service was a fitting tribute to this hero. When it
was over, we stood as the casket was wheeled out with the family
following. The casket was placed onto a horse-drawn carriage for
the mile-long trip from the gym, down the main street, then up
the steep hill to the cemetery. I stood alone and saluted as the
carriage departed the high school. I found my car and joined
Chance's convoy.
All along=2 0the route, people had
lined the street and were waving small Ame rican flags. The
flags that were otherwise posted were all at half-staff. For the
last quarter-mile up the hill, local Boy Scouts, spaced about 20
feet ap art, all in uniform, held large flags. At the foot of
the hill, I could look up and back and see how enormous the
procession was. I wondered how many people would be at this
funeral if it were in,=2 0say, Detroit or Los Angeles —
probably not as many as were here in little Dubois, Wyoming.
The carriage stopped about 15 yards from the grave, and
the military pallbearers and the family waited until the men of
the VFW and Marine Corps league were formed up and the school
buses had arrived, carrying many of the people from the
procession route. Once the entire crowd was in place, the
pallbearers came to attention and began to remove the casket
from the caisson. As I had done all week, I came to attention
and executed a slow ceremonial salute as Chance was being
transferred from one mode of transport to another.
From
Dover to Philadelphia, Philadelphia to Minneapolis, Minneapolis
to Billings, Billings to Riverton, and Riverton to Dubois, we
had been together. Now, as I watched them carry him the final 15
yards, I was choking up. I felt that, as long as he was still
moving, he was somehow still alive. Then they placed him at his
grave. He had stopped moving. Although my mission had been
officially complete once I turned him over to the=2 0funeral
director at the Billings airport, it was his placement at h is
grave that really concluded the mission in my mind. Now he was
home to stay and I suddenly felt at once sad, relieved, and
useless.
The ch aplain said some words that I couldn't
hear and two Marines removed the flag from the casket and slowly
folded it for presentation to his mother. When the ceremony was
over, Chance's father placed a ribbon fro m his service in
Vietnam on Chance's casket. His mother removed something from
her blouse and put it on the casket. I later saw that it was the
flight attendant's crucifix. Eventually friends of Chance's
moved closer to the grave. A young man put a can of Copenhagen
on the casket and many others left flowers.
Finally, we
all went back to the gym for a reception. There was enough food
to feed the entire population for a few days. In one corner of
the gym there was a table set up with lots of pictures of Chance
and some of his sports awards. People were continually
approaching me and the other Marines to thank us for our
service. Almost all of them had some story to tell about their
connection to the military. About an hour into the reception, I
had the impression that every man in Wyoming had, at one time or
another, been in the service.
It seemed like every time
I saw Chance's mom, she was hugging a different well-wisher.
After a few hours at the gym, I went back to the hotel to change
out of my dress blues. The local VFW20post had invited everyone
over to "celebrate Chance's life." The post=2 0was on the other
end of town from my hotel, and the drive took less than two
minutes. The crowd was somewhat smaller than earlier at the gym
but the pl ace was packed.
The largest room in the post
was a banquet/dining/dancing area and it was now being renamed
"The Chance Phelps Room." Above the entry were two items: a
large portrait of Chance in his20dress blues and a wooden
carving of the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor, the Marine Corps
emblem. In one corner of the room there was another memorial to
Chance. There were candles burning around another picture of him
in his blues. On the table surrounding his photo were his Purple
Heart citation and his Purple Heart medal. Above it all was a
television that was playing a photomontage of Chance's life from
small boy to proud Marine.
As had been happening all
day, indeed all week, people were thanking me for bringing
Chance home. I talked with the men who had handled the horses
and horse-drawn carriage and learned that they had worked
through the night to groom and prepare the horses for Chance's
last ride. They were all very grateful that they were able to
contribute.
After a while we all gathered in the Chance
Phelps Room for the formal dedication. The post commander told
us of how Chance had been so looking forward to becoming a life
member of the VFW. Now, in the Chance Phelps Room of the Dubois,
Wyoming, post, he would be an eternal20member. We all raised our
beers and the room was christened.
=0 ALater, a staff
sergeant from the reserve unit in Salt Lake grabbed me and said,
"Sir, you gotta hear this." There were two other Marines with
him and he tol d the younger one, a lance corporal, to tell me
his story. The staff sergeant said the lance corporal was
normally too shy to tell it, but now he'd had enough beer to
overcome his usual modesty. As the lan ce corporal started to
talk, an older man joined our circle.. He wore a baseball cap
that indicated that he had been with the 1st Marine Division in
Korea. Earlier in the evening, he had told me about one of his
former commanding officers, a Colonel Puller.
So, there
I was, standing in a circle with three Marines recently returned
from fighting with the 1st Marine Division in Iraq and one
not-so-recently returned from fighting with the 1st Marine
Division in Korea. I, who had fought with the 1st Marine
Division in Kuwait, was about to gain a new insight into our
Corps. At that moment, in this circle of current and former
Marines, the differences in our ages and ranks dissipated
— we were all simply Marines. The young lance corporal
began to tell us his story.
His squad had been on a
patrol through a city street. They had taken small-arms fire and
had literally dodged a rocket-propelled grenade that sailed
between two Marines. At one point they received fire from behind
a wall and had neutralized the sniper with a SMAW=2
0(shoulder-launched multipurpose assault weapon) round. The back
blast of the SMAW, however, kicked up a substantial rock that
hammered the lance corporal in the thigh, missing his groin only
because he had reflexively turned his body sideways at t he
shot.
Their squad had suffered some wounded and was
receiving more sniper fire when suddenly he was hit in the head
by an AK-47 round. I was stunned as he told us how he felt like
a baseball bat had been slammed into his head.
He had
spun around and fallen unconscious. When he came to, he had a
severe scalp wound but his Kevlar helmet had saved his life. He
continued with his unit for a few days before realizing he was
suffering the effects of a severe concussion.
The staff
sergeant finished the story. He told how this lance corporal had
begged and pleaded with the battalion surgeon to let him stay
with his unit. In the end, the doctor said there was just no
way; he had suffered a severe and traumatic head wound and would
have to be medevac'd.
The Marine Corps is a special
fraternity. There are moments when we are reminded of this.
Interestingly, those moments don't always happen at awards
ceremonies or in dress blues at Birthday Balls. I have found,
rather, that they occur at unexpected times and places —
next to a loaded moving van at Camp Lejeune's base housing, in a
dirty tent in northern Saudi Arabia, and in a smoky VFW post in
western Wyoming.
After the story was done, t he lance
corporal stepped over to the old man, put his arm over the man's
sh oulder, and told him that he, the Korean War vet, was his
hero. The two of them stood there with their arms over each
other's shoulders, and we were all silent=2 0for a moment. When
they let go, I told the lance corporal that there were recruits
down on the yellow footprints tonight who would soon be learning
his story.
I was finished drinking beer and telling=2
0stories. I found Chance's father and shook his hand one more
time. Chance's mom had already left, and I deeply regretted not
being able to tell her goodbye.
I left Dubois in the
morning before sunrise for my long drive back to Billings. It
had been my honor to take Chance Phelps to his final post. Now
he is on the high ground overlooking his town.
I miss
him.
A personal narrative
by Lieutenant Colonel Michael R. Strobl
Chance Phelps
was wearing his Saint Christopher medal when he was killed on
Good Friday. Eight days later, I handed the medallion to his
mother. I didn't know Chance before he died. Today, I miss him.
Over a year ago, I volunteered to escort the remains of
Marines killed in Iraq should the need arise. Thankfully, I
hadn't been called on to be an escort since Operation Iraqi
Freedom began. The first few weeks of April, however, had been
tough ones for the Marines. On the Monday after Easter, I was
reviewing Department of Defense press releases when I saw that a
Private First Class Chance Phelps was killed in action outside
of Baghdad. The press release listed his hometown as Clifton,
Colorado — which is near where I'm from. I notified our
battalion adjutant and told him that, should the duty to escort
PFC Phelps fall to our battalion, I would take him.
I
didn't hear back the rest of Monday and all day Tuesday until
1800. The battalion duty NCO called my cell phone and said I
needed to be ready to leave for Dover Air Force Base at 1900 in
order to escort the remains of PFC Phelps. I called the major
who had the task of informing Phelps' parents of his death. The
major said that the funeral was going to be in Dubois, Wyoming.
(It turned out that PFC Phelps only lived near my hometown
during his senior year of high school.) I had never been to
Wyoming and had never heard of Dubois.
With two other
escorts from Quantico, I got to Dover AFB at 2330 on Tuesday
night. First thing on Wednesday we reported to the mortuary at
the base. In the escort lounge there were about half a dozen
Army soldiers and about an equal number of Marines waiting to
meet up with "their" remains for departure. PFC Phelps was not
ready, however, and I was told to come back on Thursday. Now at
Dover with nothing to do and a solemn mission ahead, I began to
get depressed.
I didn't know anything about Chance
Phelps; not even what he looked like. I wondered about his
family and what it would be like to meet them. I did push-ups in
my room until I couldn't do any more. On Thursday morning I
reported back to the mortuary. This time there was a new group
of Army escorts and a couple of the Marines who had been there
Wednesday. There was also an Air Force captain there to escort
his brother home to San Diego.
We received a brief
covering our duties and the proper handling of the remains, and
we were shown pictures of the shipping container and told that
each one contained, in addition to the casket, a flag. I was
given an extra flag since PFC Phelps' parents were divorced.
It turned out that I was the last escort to leave on
Thursday. This meant that I repeatedly got to participate in the
small ceremonies that mark all departures from the Dover AFB
mortuary.
Most of the remains are taken from Dover AFB
by hearse to the airport in Philadelphia for air transport to
their final destination. When the remains of a service member
are loaded onto a hearse and ready to leave the Dover mortuary,
there is an announcement made over the building's intercom
system. With the announcement, all service members working at
the mortuary, regardless of branch, stop work and form up along
the driveway to render a slow ceremonial salute as the hearse
departs. On this day, there were also some civilian workers
doing construction on the mortuary grounds. As each hearse
passed, they would stop working and place their hard hats over
their hearts. This was my first sign that my mission=2 0with PFC
Phelps was larger than the Marine Corps and that his family and
friends were not grieving alone.
Eventually I was the
last escort remaining in the lounge. The master gunnery sergeant
in charge of the Marine liaison there came to see me. He had a
pouch with Chance Phelps' personal effects. He removed each
item: a large watch, a wooden cross with a lanyard, two loose
dog tags, two dog tags on a chain, and the Saint Christopher
medal, which was on a silver chain. Although we had been briefed
that we might be carrying some personal effects of the deceased,
I was taken aback. Holding his personal effects, I was starting
to get to know Chance Phelps.
Finally we were ready. I
grabbed my bags and went outside. I was somewhat startled when I
saw the shipping container, loaded three quarters of the way
into the back of a black Chevy Suburban that had been modified
to carry such cargo. This was the first time I saw my "cargo,"
and I was surprised at how large the shipping container was. The
master gunnery sergeant and I verified that the name on the
container was Phelps', and then they pushed him the rest of the
way in and we left. Now it was PFC Chance Phelps' turn to
receive the military — and construction workers' —
honors. He was finally moving towards home.
As I chatted
with the driver on the hour-long trip to Philadelphia, it became
clear that he considered it an honor to contribute to getting
Chance home. He offered his sympathy20to the family. I was glad
finally to be moving, yet I was apprehensive about what things
would be like at the airport. I didn't want this container to be
treated like ordinary cargo, but I knew that the simple
logistics of moving around something this large would be
difficult.
When we got to the Northwest Airlines cargo
terminal at the Philadelphia airport, the cargo handler and
hearse driver pulled the shipping container onto a loading bay
while I stood to the side and executed a slow salute. Once
Chance was safely in the cargo area, and I was satisfied that he
would be treated with due care and respect, the hearse driver
drove me over to the passenger terminal and dropped me off.
As I walked up to the ticketing counter in my uniform, a
Northwest employee started to ask me if I knew how to use the
automated boarding-pass dispenser. Before she could finish,
another ticketing agent interrupted her. He told me to go
straight to the counter, then explained to the woman that I was
a military escort. She seemed embarrassed. The woman behind the
counter already had tears in her eyes as I was pulling out my
government travel voucher. She struggled to find words but
managed to express her sympathy for the family and thanked me
for my service. She upgraded my ticket to first class.
After clearing security, I was met by another Northwest
Airlines employee at the gate. She told me a representative from
cargo would be arriving to take me down to the tarmac to obser
ve the movement and loading of PFC Phelps. I hadn't really told
any of them what my mission was, but they all knew. When the man
from the cargo crew met me, he, too, struggled for words. On the
tarmac, he told me stories of his childhood as a military brat
and repeatedly said that he was sorry for my loss. Even here in
Philadelphia, far away from Chance's hometown, people were
mourning with his family.
On the tarmac, the cargo crew
was silent except for when they gave occasional instructions to
each other. I stood to the side and saluted as the conveyor
moved Chance to the aircraft. I was relieved when he was finally
settled into place. The rest of the bags were loaded and I
watched them shut the cargo-bay door before heading back up to
board the aircraft. One of the pilots had taken my carry-on bag
himself and had it stored next to the cockpit door so he could
watch it while I was on the tarmac. As I boarded the plane, I
could tell immediately that the flight attendants had already
been informed of my mission. They seemed a little choked up as
they led me to my seat.
About forty-five minutes into
our flight, I still hadn't spoken to anyone except to tell the
first-class flight attendant that I would prefer water. I was
surprised when the flight attendant from the back of the plane
suddenly appeared and leaned down to grab my hands. She said, "I
want you to have this," as she pushed a small gold cruci?x, with
a relief of Jesus, into my hand. It was her lapel pin and it
looked somewhat worn. I suspected it had been hers for quite
some time. That was the only thing she said to me the entire
flight.
When we landed in Minneapolis, I was the first
one off the plane. The pilot himself escorted me straight down
the side stairs of the exit tunnel to the tarmac. The cargo crew
there already knew what was on this plane. They were unloading
some of the luggage when an Army sergeant, a fellow escort who
had left Dover earlier that day, appeared next to me. His
"cargo" was going to be loaded onto my plane for its continuing
leg. We stood side by side in the dark and executed a slow
salute as Chance was removed from the plane. I then waited with
the soldier and we saluted together as his fallen comrade was
loaded onto the plane.
My trip with Chance was going to
be somewhat unusual in that I had an overnight stopover. We had
a late start out of Dover and there was just too much traveling
ahead of us to continue on that day. (We still had a flight from
Minneapolis to Billings, Montana, then a five-hour drive to the
funeral home. That was to be followed by a 90-minute drive to
Chance's hometown.)
I was concerned about leaving him
overnight in the Minneapolis cargo area. My 10-minute ride from
the tarmac to the cargo holding area eased my apprehension; just
as in Philadelphia, the cargo guys in Minneapolis were extremely
respectful and seemed honored to do their part. While talking
with them, I lear ned that the cargo supervisor for Northwest
Airlines at the airport is a lieutenant colonel in the Marine
Corps Reserve. They called him for me and let me talk to him.
Once I was satisfied that all would be okay for the
night, I asked one of the cargo crew if he would take me back to
the terminal so that I could catch my hotel's shuttle. Instead,
he drove me straight to the hotel himself. At the hotel, the
lieutenant colonel called me and said he would personally pick
me up in the morning and bring me back to the cargo area. Before
leaving the airport, I had told the cargo crew that I wanted to
come back to the cargo area in the morning rather than go
straight to the passenger terminal. I felt bad for leaving
Chance and wanted to see the shipping container where I had left
it for the night.
The next morning, the lieutenant
colonel drove me to the airport, and I was met again by a man
from the cargo crew and escorted down to the tarmac. The pilot
of the plane joined me as I waited for them to bring Chance from
the cargo area. The pilot and I talked about his service in the
Air Force and how he missed it.
I saluted as Chance was
moved up the conveyor and onto the plane. It would be a while
before the luggage was loaded, so the pilot took me up to board
the plane where I could watch the tarmac from a window. With no
other passengers yet on board, I talked with the flight
attendants and one of the cargo guys. He had bee n in the Navy
and one of the attendants had been in the Air Force. Everywhere
I went, people were telling me about their relationship to the
military. After all the baggage was aboard, I went back down to
the tarmac, inspected the cargo bay, and watched them secure the
door.
When we arrived at Billings, I was again the first
off the plane. The funeral director had driven five hours up
from Riverton, Wyoming, to meet us. He shook my hand as if I had
personally lost a brother.
We moved Chance to a secluded
cargo area, and it was now time for me to remove the shipping
container and drape the flag over the casket. I had predicted
that this would choke me up, but I found I was more concerned
with proper flag etiquette than the solemnity of the moment.
Once the flag was in place, I stood by and saluted as Chance was
loaded onto the van from the funeral home. I picked up my rental
car and followed Chance for five hours until we reached
Riverton. During the long trip I imagined how my meeting with
Chance's parents would go. I was very nervous about that.
When we finally arrived at the funeral home, I had my
first face-to-face meeting with the casualty assistance call
officer (CACO). It had been his duty to inform the family of
Chance's death, and I knew he had been through a difficult week.
Inside I gave the funeral director some of the paperwork
from Dover and discussed the plan for the next day. The service
was to be at 1400 in t he high school gymnasium up in Dubois,
population about 900, some 90 miles away. Eventually, we had
covered everything. The CACO had some items that the family
wanted inserted into the casket, and I felt I needed to inspect
Chance's uniform to ensure everything was proper. Although it
was going to be a closed-casket funeral, I still wanted to make
certain his uniform was squared away.
Earlier in the day
I wasn't sure how I'd handle this moment. Suddenly, the casket
was open and I got my first look at Chance Phelps.. His uniform
was immaculate — a tribute to the professionalism of the
Marines at Dover. I noticed that he wore six ribbons over his
marksmanship badge; the senior one was his Purple Heart. I had
been in the Corps for more than 17 years, including a combat
tour, and was wearing eight ribbons. This private first class,
with less than a year in the Corps, had already earned six.
The next morning, I wore my dress blues and followed the
hearse for the trip up to Dubois. This was the most difficult
leg of our trip for me. I was bracing for the moment when I
would meet his parents and hoping I would find the right words
as I presented them with Chance's personal effects. We got to
the high school gym about four hours before the service was to
begin. The gym floor was covered with folding chairs neatly
lined in rows.
There were a few townspeople making final
preparations when I stood next to the hearse and saluted as
Chance was moved ou t of the hearse and into the gym. A Marine
sergeant, the command representative from Chance's battalion,
met me inside. His eyes were watery as he relieved me of
watching Chance so that I could go eat lunch and find my hotel.
At the restaurant, the table had a flyer announcing
Chance's service. Dubois High School gym, two o'clock. It also
said that the family would be accepting donations so that they
could buy flak vests to send to troops in Iraq.
I drove
back to the gym at a quarter after one. I could have walked; you
could walk to just about anywhere in Dubois in 10 minutes. I
wanted to find a quiet room where I could take Chance's things
out of their pouch and untangle the chain of the Saint
Christopher medal from the dog-tag chains and arrange everything
before his parents came in. I had twice before removed the items
from the pouch to ensure they were all there — even though
there was no possibility anything could have fallen out. Each
time, the two chains had been quite intertwined. I didn't want
to be fumbling around trying to separate them in front of his
parents. Our meeting, however, didn't go as expected.
I
practically bumped into Chance's stepmom accidentally and our
introductions began in the noisy hallway outside the gym. In
short order I met Chance's stepmom and father, followed by his
stepdad and, at last, his mom. I didn't know how to express to
these people my sympathy for their loss and my gratitude for
their sacrifice. Now, h owever, they were repeatedly thanking me
for bringing their son home and for my service. I was humbled
beyond words.
I told them that I had some of Chance's
things and asked if we could try to find a quiet place. The five
of us ended up in what appeared to be a computer lab — not
what I had envisioned for this occasion. After we had arranged
five chairs around a small table, I told them about our trip. I
told them how, at every step, Chance was treated with respect,
dignity, and honor. I told them about the staff at Dover and all
the folks at Northwest Airlines. I tried to convey how the
entire nation, from Dover to Philadelphia, to Minneapolis, to
Billings and Riverton expressed grief and sympathy over their
loss.
Finally, it was time to open the pouch. The first
item I happened to pull out was Chance's large watch. It was
still set to Baghdad time. Next were the lanyard and the wooden
cross. Then the dog tags and the Saint Christopher medal. This
time the chains were not tangled. Once all of his items were
laid out on the table, I told his mom that I had one other item
to give them. I retrieved the flight attendant's crucifix from
my pocket and told its story. I set that on the table and
excused myself. When I next saw Chance's mom, she was wearing
the crucifix on her lapel.
By 1400 most of the seats on
the gym floor were filled and people were finding seats in the
fixed bleachers high above the gym floor. There were a su
rprising number of people in military uniform. Many Marines had
come up from Salt Lake City. Men from various VFW posts and the
Marine Corps League occupied multiple rows of folding chairs. It
turned out that Chance's sister, a petty officer in the Navy,
worked for a rear admiral — the chief of naval
intelligence — at the Pentagon. The admiral had brought
many of the sailors on his staff with him to Dubois to pay
respects to Chance and to support his sister. After a few songs
and some words from a Navy chaplain, the admiral took the
microphone and told us how Chance had died.
Chance was
an artillery cannoneer and his unit was acting as provisional
military police outside of Baghdad. Chance had volunteered to
man a .50caliber machine gun in the turret of the leading
vehicle in a convoy. The convoy came under intense fie but
Chance stayed true to his post and returned fie with the big
gun, covering the rest of the convoy, until he was fatally
wounded.
After the admiral spoke, the commander of the
local VFW post read some of the letters Chance had written home.
In letters to his mom, he talked of the mosquitoes and the heat.
In letters to his stepfather, he told of the dangers of convoy
operations and of receiving fire.
The service was a
fitting tribute to this hero. When it was over, we stood as the
casket was wheeled out with the family following. The casket was
placed onto a horse-drawn carriage for the mile-long trip from
the gym, down20the main street, then up the steep hill to the
cemetery. I stood alone and saluted as the carriage departed the
high school. I found my car and joined Chance's convoy.
All along the route, people had lined the street and
were waving small American flags. The flags that were otherwise
posted were all at half-staff. For the last quarter-mile up the
hill, local Boy Scouts, spaced about 20 feet apart, all in
uniform, held large flags. At the foot of the hill, I could look
up and back and see how enormous the procession was. I wondered
how many people would be at this funeral if it were in, say,
Detroit or Los Angeles — probably not as many as were here
in little Dubois, Wyoming.
The carriage stopped about 15
yards from the grave, and the military pallbearers and the
family waited until the men of the VFW and Marine Corps league
were formed up and the school buses had arrived, carrying many
of the people from the procession route. Once the entire crowd
was in place, the pallbearers came to attention and began to
remove the casket from the caisson. As I had done all week, I
came to attention and executed a slow ceremonial salute as
Chance was being transferred from one mode of transport to
another.
From Dover to Philadelphia, Philadelphia to
Minneapolis, Minneapolis to Billings, Billings to Riverton, and
Riverton to Dubois, we had been together. Now, as I watched them
carry him the final 15 yards, I was choking up. I felt that, as
long as he was s till moving, he was somehow still alive. Then
they placed him at his grave. He had stopped moving.
Although my mission had been officially complete once I
turned him over to the funeral director at the Billings airport,
it was his placement at his grave that really concluded the
mission in my mind. Now he was home to stay and I suddenly felt
at once sad, relieved, and useless.
The chaplain said
some words that I couldn't hear and two Marines removed the flag
from the casket and slowly folded it for presentation to his
mother. When the ceremony was over, Chance's father placed a
ribbon from his service in Vietnam on Chance's casket. His
mother removed something from her blouse and put it on the
casket. I later saw that it was the flight attendant's crucifix.
Eventually friends of Chance's moved closer to the grave. A
young man put a can of Copenhagen on the casket and many others
left flowers.
Finally, we all went back to the gym for a
reception. There was enough food to feed the entire population
for a few days. In one corner of the gym there was a table set
up with lots of pictures of Chance and some of his sports
awards. People were continually approaching me and the other
Marines to thank us for our service. Almost all of them had some
story to tell about their connection to the military. About an
hour into the reception, I had the impression that every man in
Wyoming had, at one time or another, been in the service.
It seemed like eve ry time I saw Chance's mom, she was
hugging a different well-wisher. After a few hours at the gym, I
went back to the hotel to change out of my dress blues. The
local VFW post had invited everyone over to "celebrate Chance's
life." The post was on the other end of town from my hotel, and
the drive took less than two minutes. The crowd was somewhat
smaller than earlier at the gym but the place was packed.
The largest room in the post was a
banquet/dining/dancing area and it was now being renamed "The
Chance Phelps Room." Above the entry were two items: a large
portrait of Chance in his dress blues and a wooden carving of
the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor, the Marine Corps emblem. In one
corner of the room there was another memorial to Chance. There
were candles burning around another picture of him in his blues.
On the table surrounding his photo were his Purple Heart
citation and his Purple Heart medal. Above it all was a
television that was playing a photomontage of Chance's life from
small boy to proud Marine.
As had been happening all
day, indeed all week, people were thanking me for bringing
Chance home. I talked with the men who had handled the horses
and horse-drawn carriage and learned that they had worked
through the night to groom and prepare the horses for Chance's
last ride. They were all very grateful that they were able to
contribute.
After a while we all gathered in the Chance
Phelps Room for the formal dedication. The post commander told=2
0us of how Chance had been so looking forward to becoming a life
member of the VFW. Now, in the Chance Phelps Room of the Dubois,
Wyoming, post, he would be an eternal member. We all raised our
beers and the room was christened.
Later, a staff
sergeant from the reserve unit in Salt Lake grabbed me and said,
"Sir, you gotta hear this." There were two other Marines with
him and he told the younger one, a lance corporal, to tell me
his story. The staff sergeant said the lance corporal was
normally too shy to tell it, but now he'd had enough beer to
overcome his usual modesty. As the lance corporal started to
talk, an older man joined our circle.. He wore a baseball cap
that indicated that he had been with the 1st Marine Division in
Korea. Earlier in the evening, he had told me about one of his
former commanding officers, a Colonel Puller.
So, there
I was, standing in a circle with three Marines recently returned
from fighting with the 1st Marine Division in Iraq and one
not-so-recently returned from fighting with the 1st Marine
Division in Korea. I, who had fought with the 1st Marine
Division in Kuwait, was about to gain a new insight into our
Corps. At that moment, in this circle of current and former
Marines, the differences in our ages and ranks dissipated
— we were all simply Marines. The young lance corporal
began to tell us his story.
His squad had been on a
patrol through a city street. They had taken small-arms fire and
had literall y dodged a rocket-propelled grenade that sailed
between two Marines. At one point they received fire from behind
a wall and had neutralized the sniper with a SMAW
(shoulder-launched multipurpose assault weapon) round. The back
blast of the SMAW, however, kicked up a substantial rock that
hammered the lance corporal in the thigh, missing his groin only
because he had reflexively turned his body sideways at the shot.
Their squad had suffered some wounded and was receiving
more sniper fire when suddenly he was hit in the head by an
AK-47 round. I was stunned as he told us how he felt like a
baseball bat had been slammed into his head.
He had spun
around and fallen unconscious. When he came to, he had a severe
scalp wound but his Kevlar helmet had saved his life. He
continued with his unit for a few days before realizing he was
suffering the effects of a severe concussion.
The staff
sergeant finished the story. He told how this lance corporal had
begged and pleaded with the battalion surgeon to let him stay
with his unit. In the end, the doctor said there was just no
way; he had suffered a severe and traumatic head wound and would
have to be medevac'd.
The Marine Corps is a special
fraternity. There are moments when we are reminded of this.
Interestingly, those moments don't always happen at awards
ceremonies or in dress blues at Birthday Balls. I have found,
rather, that they occur at unexpected times and places —
next to a loaded moving van20at Camp Lejeune's base housing, in
a dirty tent in northern Saudi Arabia, and in a smoky VFW post
in western Wyoming.
After the story was done, the lance
corporal stepped over to the old man, put his arm over the man's
shoulder, and told him that he, the Korean War vet, was his
hero. The two of them stood there with their arms over each
other's shoulders, and we were all silent for a moment. When
they let go, I told the lance corporal that there were recruits
down on the yellow footprints tonight who would soon be learning
his story.
I was finished drinking beer and telling
stories. I found Chance's father and shook his hand one more
time. Chance's mom had already left, and I deeply regretted not
being able to tell her goodbye.
I left Dubois in the
morning before sunrise for my long drive back to Billings. It
had been my honor to take Chance Phelps to his final post. Now
he is on the high ground overlooking his town.
I miss
him.
ALL: Enclosed Here is a trailer link for the upcoming HBO
film "Taking Chance". The film is based on a true story.
"Taking Chance"
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