Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Mural, Vet Pays Tribute to Fallen Soldiers

A traveling photo exhibit honoring Mississippi soliders who have died in Afghanistan and Iraq will be on display at Bancorp South in Gulfport then Biloxi until Sept. 21.


The exhibit includes American soldiers killed during WWII, and the Korean and Vietnam wars.



www.wlox.com Aug. 24, 2009

Friday, August 21, 2009

Military Kids Grow Up Fast

Three high school students in different parts of the country tell their stories about life after mom or dad goes off to war. Check out this story at www.wlox.com(Aug. 20, 2009)

By Stephanie Chen
CNN Writer
(CNN) - In Pennsylvania, Tyler Dix, a 16-year-old movie buff, is wide awake by 7 a.m. to cook breakfast for his younger siblings. In Georgia, Tucker Simmons, a 14-year old novice guitarist, prepares ice packs for his mother whenever her chronic lower back pain kicks in. In California, Kaylei Deakin, an avid 17-year old rock climber, disciplines her little sisters when they act out. ...

Friday, August 14, 2009

Soldier, Officer Remembered in Gulfport

GULFPORT -- South Mississippi is remembering two men who dedicated their lives to protecting their community and country.

This evening, visitation will be held for U. S. Army Staff Sgt. Johnny Polk; a candlelight vigil is planned for Gulfport police Lt. Robert Curry. Polk died July 25 from injuries received on duty in Iraq; Curry died Aug. 14 last year in a motorcycle-car accident.

Read media accounts of events:

www.wlox.com Aug. 14, 2009

www.wlox.com Aug. 14, 2009 (video subject to time availability)


On Saturday, funeral services will be held for Sgt. Polk with burial at Biloxi National Cemetery.

Candlelight Vigil to Remember Lt. Curry

GULFPORT -- A candlelight vigil will be held at 8 p.m. today at Coalville Cemetery to honor the memory of officer Robert J. Curry.

Curry, 39, a lieutenant with the Gulfport Police Department, was killed a year ago today while helping to escort a funeral procession on U.S. 49. He was lieutenant for the traffic division and district supervisor for Orange Grove.

Cmdr. Chris Ryle, public information officer, said the vigil will be a time for Gulfport police to honor Curry. "Everybody's in a somber mood, but Robert would want us to carry on with protecting the citizens of Gulfport."

He said numerous police personnel contributed to the vigil, so much so he can't tell who handled what aspect of the vigil that will take place at the Lorraine Road cemetery, where Curry is buried. Curry, who had lived in Woolmarket, attended Coalville United Methodist Church.

Cmdr. Ryle said that during the past year police personnel have provided support to Curry's wife, Leslee, daughter Krysten and son Trevor. Leslee Curry, also a police lieutenant, was not scheduled for duty today.

Ryle and Curry had worked together for 11 years. "We were really good friends. He's been missed. I've missed seeing his face everyday at work."

Still, Ryle said he and the other police officials press on because they have a job to do protecting the public in Gulfport, and that's what Curry would want them to do.

Lt. Rob Curry had been employed with Gulfport police since 1994, and had worked for the Harrison County Police Academy. He was a hostage negotiator and a master DUI instructor for Gulfport Police Department. He also served in the U.S. Air Force during the Gulf War.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Services planned for Staff Sgt. Johnny Polk


GULFPORT -- Funeral services for Staff Sgt. Johnny Roosevelt Polk have been set for this weekend, Aug. 14 and 15.

A viewing will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday and services at 1 p.m. Saturday at Little Rock Baptist Church on 15th Street. Burial will be at 3 p.m. at Biloxi National Cemetery.


A route for the funeral procession has not been finalized.



Marshall Funeral Home in Biloxi is handling arrangements.

Sergeant 1st Class Johnny Roosevelt Polk attended Harrison Central High School in Gulfport, where he was a member of the football team. He also worked as a volunteer firefighter in Gulfport.

He joined the United States Army on March 12, 1992, and completed Basic Training and Advanced Individual Training as a canon crew member MOS 13B) at Fort Sill, Okla.; July 1992 to July 1993, his first assignment was to Camp Casey, Korea, where he served as a gunner; July 1993 to July 1999 his second assignment was to Fort Bragg, N.C., where he served as a section chief; July 1999 to July 2000 his third assignment was to Camp Casey, Korea, where he served as a section chief; July 2000 to November 2005 his forth assignment was to Fort Hood, Texas, where he served as a section chief.

While assigned to Fort Hood, he was deployed to Iraq from March 2004 to March 2005. In November 2005 to November 2008 his fifth assignment to Fort Sill, where he served as an instructor and training Management NCO. While assigned to Fort Sill, he was deployed to Iraq from February 2006 to February 2007, November 2008 to July 2009 sixth assignment to Fort Hood, where he served as a Howitzer section chief. Upon arrival, he prepared to immediately deploy to Iraq with the 3-82 Field Artillery Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division on Feb. 6, 2009, until he was killed in action Saturday, July 25, 2009.

Staff Sgt. Polk was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star medal and the Purple Heart Medal.

He was a member of the Veterans of Foreign War Post 1193,
Lawton, Okla., and the Masons Masonic Lodge. He enjoyed fishing, hunting, and the Dallas Cowboys football team. He will be remembered as a very compassionate, funny, giving, and dedicated man.

"He would always make me smile!"

He is preceded in death by his father, Alton Polk Sr. of Greenville, La; and mother Herman M. Polk of Gulfport.

He is survived by his wife, Wanonia Janise Polk of
Killeen, Texas; children Antoine J. Azeheart of Milton, Fla., Xavier D. Jones, Mary T. Gardner, Alvin L. Jones and De'Andra I. Jones, all of Killeen; brothers Walter B. Polk of Gulfport and Artha J. Polk of Picayune, Miss.; and sister Mary A. Polk of Memphis, Tenn.

Friday, August 7, 2009

403rd's Squadron Returns to Keesler

BILOXI -- Members of the 403rd Wing Security Forces Squadron at Keesler Air Force Base returned home this week from Iraq.


The Key Family Member Program sponsored a homecoming for the returning soldiers Thursday.


Thursday, August 6, 2009

Last Trench Soldier in Britain Dies

by saluteandhonor
photo courtesy wikipedia.org
Harry Patch at age 109
------------------------------------

Unless you're in the military, over 90 years old, or really good at world history, trench soldier is not a word that's part of your usual vocabulary. Not like national guardsman or marine is familiar to most Americans today.

However, trench soldier is well-known to American and British citizens who lived through World War I, during which trench warfare was a standard method of battlefield strategy.


In honor of Britain's last trench soldier, crowds lined the streets of Wells, Somerset, to watch the funeral procession for Henry Patch, who died July 25 at 111 years old. The memorial was held at Wells Cathedral.

ABC reporter Maeva Bambuck said Patch "was a plumber who found himself in the light infantry at the beginning of the war, and later fought in some of the bloodiest trenches, including in the battle of Ypres. Patch defended his country until a piece of shrapnel lodged itself in his groin in 1917.'

Born in 1898, Henry John "Harry" Patch had celebrated his birthday June 17.

Patch's life was chronicled in the 2005 BBC TV program "The Last Fighting Tommy," which told the story of six of the WWI veterans still alive at the time. Excerpts were read during the memorial.

Three WWI veterans are still alive: 108-year-old Frank Buckles in Charlestown, W.Va.; 109-year-old Canadian John Babcock in Spokane, Wa., and 108-year-old Englishman Claude Choules living in Perth, Australia.

World War I started after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, on June 28, 1914.

According to www.wikipedia. org, World War I is abbreviated as WW-I, WWI, or WW1, and is also known as the First World War, the Great War, and the War to End All Wars. It was a global military conflict that embroiled most of the world's great powers, assembled in two opposing alliances: the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance.

More than 70 million military personnel were mobilized in one of the largest wars in history. The main combatants descended into a state of total war, pumping their entire scientific and industrial capabilities into the war effort. More than 15 million people were killed, making it one of the deadliest conflicts in history.

The immediate or proximate cause of war was the assassination on 28 June 1914 of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, by Gavrilo Princip, a Serbian nationalist. Austria–Hungary's resulting demands against the Kingdom of Serbia activated a sequence of alliances. Within weeks the major European powers were at war; their global empires meant that the conflict soon spread worldwide.

By the war's end, four major imperial powers—the German, Russian, Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires—had been militarily and politically defeated, with the last two ceasing to exist as autonomous entities. The revolutionized Soviet Union emerged from the Russian Empire, while the map of central Europe was completely redrawn into numerous smaller states.

The League of Nations was formed in the hope of preventing another such conflict. The European nationalism spawned by the war, the repercussions of Germany's defeat, and the Treaty of Versailles would eventually lead to the beginning of World War II in 1939.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Family, Deputies Reminisce about Gaston

GULFPORT -- Last year this time law enforcement personnel in South Mississippi were reeling from tragic news that their comrade Frederick Joiner Gaston III had been
killed during a random crime.

Sunday, Aug. 2, marked the death of Gaston, at the time a deputy with the Jackson County Sheriff's Department in Pascagoula and former interim police chief with the city of Moss Point. He had worked for the Gulfport Police Department over 17 years, said a family member.

Gaston, 49, was shot and killed during an attempted robbery while at a hotel in Gastonia, N.C. A lieutenant colonel with the U.S. Air Force, he was on his way to reserve training in Virginia and had stopped to rest for the night.

Gaston's wife, Angela, said Rakcam Jamall Fleming, 16, of Gastonia and 17-year-old Tommy Dean Battiste of Bessemer City were convicted of first-degree murder earlier this year. After cooperating with police, Fleming was sentenced to 25 years; Battiste was sentenced to 27 1/2 years. The latter was also convicted of possession of a firearm by a felon.

Members of the sheriff's department joined part of Gaston's family to remember the son who was a buddy to his father, the brother who shared a love of school band and military service with his siblings, the doting father who couldn't say no to his children, and the busy and always professional officer who still put his wife first.

Angela Gaston attended a luncheon Aug. 3 with Jackson County Sheriff Mike Byrd, deputy Daniel Sullivan and other deputies. They reminisced about her husband's law enforcement service, and Sullivan talked about how much he'd gained during the time he spent with Gaston. The two men also had worked together in Moss Point.

Fred Gaston on duty with Gulfport Police Department
(Photo courtesy of Gaston family)

"He was always very professional," said Angela Gaston. "He was always very well respected by everyone who ever met him."

She and her father-in-law, Frederick William Gaston Sr., said they appreciate and are grateful for the many acts of kindness afforded them just after and since the death of their relative, as well as the compliments expressed about Frederick Gaston III, his personality and his work in law enforcement and the military.

"We were so gratified by the response of the police force up there in Gastonia," said Gaston Sr. "(The funeral service) was a wonderful tribute. The whole Gulf Coast and (Gulfport) police station came to honor him."

Family members visited Lt. Col. Gaston's gravesite at Biloxi National Cemetery before they gathered for dinner to provide strength and support for each other and to remember good times with Gaston, his sense of humor and his love of good food.

"We'll never get over the fact that he's no longer here. We're trying to get used to it," said Gaston's father.

Gaston Sr., a master sergeant who retired after a 24-year Air Force career, said at first he felt resentment toward God for the loss of his son, and the hardest thing for him was asking God to forgive the young men who caused his death. Still, it was the Christian thing to do, and he wanted compassion for the younger teen after learning the facts of the attempted robbery. The father said he now has made peace with God.

"He was always a wonderful son. He wasn't the least bit of trouble for us or anybody. We were honored that God allowed us to be his host in this life.

"He was my buddy. He was a wonderful companion as well as son," said the 78-year-old Gulfport resident.

The senior Gaston said his wife, Michiko Gaston, still wonders about the "what if"of events leading to her son's intended trip to Virginia.

The Air Force lieutenant colonel was an active reservist, training two days each month and two weeks of each year.

Angela Gaston said she is doing as well as can be expected since her husband was accosted and shot while in the parking lot of a Microhotel. He would have turned 50 years old March 27 this year.

Their children, son William Lee Gaston of Biloxi and daughter Melissa Davis of Metairie, La., are still struggling with their father's death. Davis, who already was dealing with other issues, was devastated by his shooting.

William has matured greatly since August 2008 and is now engaged, his mother said. She's happy he's decided to continue has college education instead of sticking around to make sure she's okay.

"My son has his good days and bad days, like all of us. He's trying to stay strong for me," she said.

William Lee Gaston plans to study at University of Southern Mississippi, where his father, aunt Anne Gaston and uncle F. William Gaston Jr. also attended. Anne Gaston retired from the Air Force after a 20-year career. William Lee has considered a career in law enforcement.

The Biloxi mother said her husband was a loving father to their children. "When they were younger he spent a lot of time making sure they had what they wanted. He never told them no. I was always the stricter one."

Angela Gaston said her husband's law enforcement career and Air Force service often kept him away from her and the children, but Gaston spent as much time as he could with his family.

"What makes me proud of him is he always put himself second. He always went above and beyond for everybody," she said.

"Even though he lived such a busy life he always found time to put me first. That's what I love about him. That's what I miss the most. He was a wonderful citizen and a wonderful husband. I couldn't have asked for a better life with him."

3 Soldiers Stationed in Jackson Killed

When it rains it pours, and misery loves comany.

Just like that, within days of one family's loss three more soldiers with ties to Mississippi have lost their lives. One is a native of the state while other two lived in America's eastern region. All three were stationed in Jackson, according to a news report .

News at www.wlox.com said the Department of Defense announced their deaths today.


Sgt. 1st Class Severin W. Summers III, 43, of Bentonia was killed along with Capt. Ronald G. Luce Jr., 27, of Fayetteville, N.C., and Sgt. 1st Class Alejandro Granado, 42, of Fairfax, Va., on Sunday, Aug. 2, in Afghanistan. Their vehicle was hit by an improvised explosive device.

Their deaths in Qole Gerdsar follow that of Gulfport native Staff Sgt. Johnny Roosevelt Polk, 39, who reportedly died July 31 from injuries after being struck by an anti-tank grenade July 23. He was serving in Iraq.

The Defense Department's website said the three soldiers were members of the Mississippi Army National Guard and assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 20th Special Forces Group (Airborne) in Jackson.

According to www. abcnews.com on Monday, 43 American soldiers died in Afghanistan during July. That number is the highest monthly toll of deaths since the war in Afghanistan began eight years ago, the report said.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Staff Sgt. Johnny Roosevelt Polk


A media report this morning has stated that Staff Sgt. Johnny R. Polk died Saturday, July 25, 2009, from injuries received while serving in Kirkuk, Iraq.

Gulfport Soldier Dies from Combat Wounds

Polk, 39, had been sent to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Landstuhl, Germany for treatment of his injuries.


According to the Department of Defense and Websites reporting on Sgt. Polk's death, he was struck by an anti-tank grenade while serving in Operation Iraqi Freedom.


Polk was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Calgary Division at Fort Hood, Texas.


A service will be held at Fort Hood before Polk is brought to Gulfport for burial.