November 9, 2004

660 Views | 4 Replies | Last: 15 days ago by bigtruckguy3500
usmcbrooks
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This is a bit late but this will always be "The" memory that lives with me forever. RIP Lonny !

Marine Sgt. Lonny D. Wells
Died November 9, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom
29, of Vandergrift, Pa.; assigned to 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, N.C.; killed Nov. 9 by enemy action in Anbar province, Iraq.
Camp Lejeune Marine killed in Iraq



VANDERGRIFT, Pa. A North Carolina Marine killed in Iraq this week was a great father who left behind four children, his mother said.

Sgt. Lonny D. Wells, 29, of Vandergrift, died Tuesday in enemy action in Iraq's Anbar province, a volatile area that stretches west from Baghdad to the Syrian border, the Defense Department said in a statement. He died in an explosion, his family said.

He had been in the Marine Corps for eight years and served in Kosovo, France, Spain and Germany, said his mother, Yvonne Lynn Wells. He had been in Iraq since June and was scheduled to come home in January, his family said.

Wells' wife, Jennifer, and the couple's 7-month-old daughter, Jade, live at the Marine base in Camp Lejeune, N.C., his family said. The 1994 graduate of Kiski Area High School also had three children Marissa, Lonny Jr. and Daylon from a previous marriage who live in Apollo, his mother said.

"He was a great father," Yvonne Lynn Wells told the Valley News Dispatch of Tarentum. "He would do anything for his kids."

His mother remembered her son as a man who loved the Dallas Cowboys, sang Kenny Rogers songs in the car and loved the Marines.

"He was committed," she said. "He was all-military."

Wells was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division based at Camp Lejeune, the Defense Department said.



This image is burned into my brain housing group. I will never forget the actions of Gunnery Sgt Ryan Shane and Navy Corpsman Joel Lambott under enemy fire as they tried to pull Lonny to safety. Fallujah was absolutely the definition of hell on earth. A lot of great young men took their last breaths, spilled their last drops of blood and and willingly walked into harms way, knowing it could be their last steps. I don't mourn them, I envy them. Their time on earth is done. SEMPER FIDELIS!
OldArmyCT
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AG
Great post, thank you.
Gunny456
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AG
Wow. Damn dirt in my eyes this morning.
Thanks for sharing this.
Here
Aggie12B
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AG
Thank you for sharing this.
That is a great tribute to a fallen comrade.
HERE for all our fallen brothers and sisters in arms
bigtruckguy3500
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Unfortunately, perfect example of what not to do in care under fire situations. And this picture is used to teach just that in the schoolhouse.

Also, posts like this just make me wonder about the futility of war. Can seem necessary, but also pointless, like something was accomplished, but nothing really changed - just than lives lost and money burned.
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