![]() Russell K. Shoemaker Staff Sergeant, United States Army |
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![]() U.S. Department of Defense
DoD Identifies Army Casualties The Department of Defense announced today the death of two soldiers who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom. They died May 24, 2007, in Baghdad, Iraq, of wounds suffered when an improvised explosive device detonated near their vehicle. They were assigned to 1st Brigade Transition Team, and attached to the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kansas. Killed were: Sergeant First Class Robert E. Dunham, 36,
of Baltimore, Maryland
For more information in regard to this release the media can contact the Fort Riley public affairs office at (785) 239-3410. 28 May 2007: By KEVIN HOFFMANN Courtesy of The Kansas City Star A former Missouri soldier who was killed in Iraq will be laid to rest next week at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. Staff Sergeant Russell K. Shoemaker, formerly of Sweet Springs, died Thursday when his vehicle struck a roadside bomb in Baghdad. Also killed was Sergeant First Class Robert E. Dunham, 36, of Baltimore, Maryland.
They were members of a special team trained at Fort Riley and assigned to the 1st Infantry Division’s 4th Brigade Combat Team. The team was training the Iraqi army. Dunham’s and Shoemaker’s deaths were the 101st and 102nd from Fort Riley in Iraq. Shoemaker, 31, played baseball in high school and wanted to be a pro. When that didn’t work out, he turned to the Army, like his father and brother. “He went in shortly after high school,” said his father, Keith Shoemaker, who is set to retire Wednesday after 27 years in the Army. The brother, Kevin Shoemaker, is stationed at Fort Leonard Wood. Russell Shoemaker, an Army reservist since 1995, had been in Iraq since January, his father said. In 2003 he did a tour in Afghanistan. Keith Shoemaker said he talked to his son three weeks ago when he was on leave and had returned to North Carolina, where he had been living for five years. “He was enjoying time with his wife,” he said. “They went out and did a second-honeymoon kind of thing.” The topic of war didn’t come up much when father and son talked on the phone. Both understood what the duty meant. The family expected Shoemaker’s body to be flown back later this week and were planning his burial for next week. “That was something he and his wife talked
about before he went over there,” Keith Shoemaker said. “…In our minds,
he is an American hero.”
Webmaster: Michael
Robert Patterson
Posted: 20 June 2007 Updated: 2 July 2007 Updated: 16 July 2007 |
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