WASHINGTON (Army News Service, May 23, 2008) - President Bush has
announced that Spc. Ross McGinnis will posthumously be awarded the
Medal of Honor in a White House ceremony June 2, two weeks shy of what
would have been his 21st birthday.
McGinnis will be just the second U.S. Soldier to receive the medal for
actions in Operation Iraqi Freedom and a special Web site dedicated to
his heroics has been created by the Soldiers Media Center at www.army.mil/medalofhonor/McGinnis.
The site includes a profile on the 1st Infantry Division Soldier,
battlescape, background on the medal, video news reports and a number
of other resources.
Story of a Hero
McGinnis began his transformation from scrawny boy to standout Soldier
at 17, enlisting in the Army through the Delayed Entry Program in June
2004. Although not remembered as a troublemaker, McGinnis was not
interested in school, and spent his teen years struggling to eek by.
"He put us through our trials, definitely. From little up, he liked to
push the limits," his mother, Romayne, said. "You never knew what was
going to come out of his mouth or out of his actions."
In high school, McGinnis never made the honor roll or played sports.
According to teachers, he made his mark, but in ways that were uniquely
Ross.
"He stood out, but just by bits and pieces," said Franki Sheatz,
McGinnis's 9th and 11th-grade French teacher at Keystone High School.
"When he stood out, a lot of times it was because of his wit, or
because he was trying to get away with something. He never did any more
or less than a lot of the other kids I had in class, although he was
charming in his little way."
His parents and teachers agreed that the catalyst that sparked a change in McGinnis was his decision to join the military.
"He came to us and said he wanted join the Army, and we accepted that,"
said McGinnis's father Tom. The way we looked at it was that he had no
intention of going to school, and there really aren't very good jobs
for a person that doesn't have higher education. The Army was an
opportunity for him to be able to get the kind of education that he
wanted."
The younger McGinnis had aspirations of one day becoming an automotive
technician. The Army, in his eyes, was a means to that end - a place
where he could serve his country as an infantryman, but receive an
off-duty education that would prepare him for a future career.
Once McGinnis made the decision to join the Army, that became his
focus. "The different conversations I had with Ross sometimes were over
academics and encouraging him to do his best and that he had goals in
mind," Vicky Walters, Keystone High's principal said. "We were
encouraging him to complete those goals...He indicated he would do what
it took to get the job done." He would finish high school so he could
join the Army.
His parents shared concerns about their son enlisting during a time of
war, but knew if he stayed in Knox, his odds of making something of
himself were limited. "He had just as much chance at home of ending up
dead as he did in Iraq at that point," Tom said. "When young men get
out of school and they don't have an education, it's a dangerous life
for them for several years. Something could happen at home as quick as
it could over there. I knew that in the Army he was going to have a
serious discipline. He was going to be trained, and that would help him
stay on the right path."
McGinnis left his rural Pennsylvania town for basic training at Fort
Benning, Ga., within days of graduating from Keystone High School, just
before his 18th birthday. During the first stage of training,
McGinnis's parents received a phone call from him. "He said the first
week was boring, a lot of, 'Hurry up and wait,'" Romayne said. In
subsequent calls, he conveyed his increasing enthusiasm.
"He really liked the physical part of the training. Ross wasn't one to
push a pencil. He wanted to be actively involved," she said. "He was
really excited about the weapons training. While in Boy Scouts, they
went to a shooting range once and he really liked that, so it didn't
surprise me when he said he wanted to go with the gunner position."
According to reports from fellow Soldiers, McGinnis's interest in
weapons was crafted into a skill set that would serve him well in his
position as an.50-caliber machine gunner.
Soldier Among Civilians
McGinnis finished basic and then infantry training in Georgia and
headed home to Knox on leave before reporting to his first assignment
in Germany. The changes in him were evident, and shocking to some.
"He looked so much taller. He wasn't. I think it was the uniform
really," Romayne said. "But it was, 'Yes, ma'am,' and, 'No, ma'am." And
I was like, 'Who is this kid?' He had a lot of respect, not that Ross
ever disrespected us, but there was definitely that attitude that the
Army had bred into him already in that short amount of time."
Tom echoed his wife's feelings about the new Soldier. "When he came
home on leave and he was around civilians, he felt uneasy because other
people seemed to be sloppy and lazy as compared to what it was like in
the military. He was definitely different and thought differently after
he'd gone through the training. It was surprising, because I don't know
if I ever knew anyone like that before, especially my own son. He had
learned and grown quite a bit."
His former teachers saw maturity in him that didn't exist before he
became a Soldier. "He has been described as a 100-percent guy or a
zero-percent guy," Erik Sundling, Ross's 12th-grade English teacher,
said when he talked about the effort McGinnis put forth if he was
interested in something, and the lack thereof when he wasn't. "He came
back in uniform and he was the 100-percent Ross. He was very proud to
wear the uniform."
When his family learned that McGinnis's first assignment would be to a
Germany-based infantry regiment scheduled for an Iraq deployment, they
worried but wished him well. "I told him, 'Be safe. Think before you
act.' Any parent would say that to their child, I'm sure. We thought he
was coming back," Romayne said.
Soldier's Soldier
McGinnis arrived in Schweinfurt, Germany in November 2005 and reported
to 1st Platoon, C Company, 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment with
an influx of Soldiers as the company was preparing for its upcoming
mission to Iraq. According to retired Staff Sgt. Ian Newland, he
immediately became in instrumental part of the team.
"His personality and humor made him stand out. He was the comedian out
of everybody," Newland, a squad leader with 1st Platoon at the time,
said. "You could be having the worst day in the field, or the worst day
in the rear "D", and Ross would come in a room and everybody would be
laughing within three minutes."
Ross was known as the funny guy with an infectious smile from the day
he joined the unit, Newland said. "I have this image of him, even
today. We were in Germany and he was up on a .50-cal gunning. We had
been doing a convoy for probably around eight hours. I was in the
vehicle behind him and he turned around and smiled at my gunner. His
teeth were just covered in dirt from being up on the gun, but he's just
still smiling ear to ear. That right there was just him."
His gifts extended beyond platoon funny man according to his leaders, who said he was also a top-notch Soldier.
"I had four platoons, roughly 190 Soldiers in my command. There were
certain Soldiers that would stand out. McGinnis was definitely one of
those Soldiers," said Maj. Michael Baka, commander of C Company from
June 2005 to March 2007. "He was one of the top members of his platoon.
His platoon sergeant handpicked him to serve as the machine gunner on
his Humvee, which speaks highly of his performance." McGinnis excelled
in weaponry, marksmanship and physical training as well.
He was also a born leader, Newland said, who knew how to read and react
to different Soldiers in a variety of situations. "People responded to
him, and he knew how to respond to people's personalities and
characters. That is one of the hardest traits to build as a leader, to
be able to adapt, per Soldier. He had that naturally."
Adamiyah
The first unit from the battalion on the ground, C Co. arrived in Iraq
Aug. 4, 2006 following a week of training in Kuwait. Combat Outpost
Apache in Adamiyah, a northeast section of Baghdad steeped in sectarian
violence, was to be their home. The area had lacked a U.S. presence for
eight months.
"There were a lot of kidnappings, killings and a lot of enemy activity
in our sector," Baka said. Insurgent attacks, sniper fire, grenade
contact and IEDs were all part of daily life in Adamiyah.
In October, just two months into the deployment, C Co. had already lost
two of its Soldiers; Staff Sgt. Garth Sizemore to a sniper's bullet,
and Sgt. Willsun Mock in an IED explosion. In November, after Saddam
Hussein was found guilty of crimes against humanity, the battalion
fought a five-hour battle against enemy insurgents who attacked the
outpost.
By December, the men of 1/26 were battle hardened, but McGinnis had a way of taking the focus off the tragedies.
"He was constantly motivating and positive all the time, and that
really helped the platoon out a lot. He was key in our platoon because
of that," Newland said. "Right after we lost Sgt. Sizemore, we were all
really shocked - it really hit home. And then Sgt. Mock - we were
getting pretty depressed. But Ross, he knew how to take our attention
off of that - all of us - from senior leaders to your private Joe. He
knew how to respond."
That Fateful Day
Dec. 4, 2006, 1st Plt. was gearing up to patrol the streets of Adamiyah
and deliver a 250-kilowatt generator to provide increased electricity
to the area. Insurgents had been lobbing grenades at vehicles on
patrols, and in response the platoon had honed it's reaction skills
through a series of training scenarios Newland likened to fire drills.
He had experienced such an incident nine days earlier on patrol, but
the grenade turned out to be a dud.
As they rolled out of Apache's gates, the men in the six-vehicle patrol
felt up to their mission, despite ever-present dangers, as they did
each time they patrolled Adamiyah's streets, Baka said. "We had only
just left the gate. We were moving deliberately down the streets, and
had just taken a left-hand turn on a main road just south of Abu
Hanifah mosque."
Baka's was the fourth vehicle in the order of movement. The platoon
sergeant's vehicle was the last, as is typical for a standard patrol,
and McGinnis manned its machine gun.
According to official statements from Sgt. Lyle Buehler (the driver),
Sgt. 1st Class Cedric Thomas (platoon sergeant and truck commander),
Spc. Sean Lawson (medic) and Newland, McGinnis sat in the gunner strap,
.50-cal at the ready, facing backward to ensure rear security. Buehler
and Thomas rode in the front of the vehicle, and Newland and Lawson in
the back.
As the sixth vehicle made the left turn, Baka heard a loud explosion.
His initial thought was that a grenade had exploded outside his own
up-armored Humvee. Baka's machine gunner got on the intercom and said,
"Sir, it looks like our last vehicle got hit." All four of the Humvee's
doors had been blown off. Baka ordered his vehicle and the one behind
it to turn around. "Once I saw the vehicle I knew right away that we
had a hand grenade that had entered the vehicle, and that we had a
large number of casualties," he said.
Baka got a new driver for the crippled but still running Humvee, and
they headed back to Apache. He said he knew the Soldiers had sustained
injuries, but did not know to what extent until arriving at the
outpost. He didn't know that McGinnis was dead, or that he died a hero.
Thomas pulled Baka aside within minutes of arriving at Apache and said,
"Sir, McGinnis saved our lives today." Then he told the story that
would support that statement.
An insurgent on a nearby rooftop threw a grenade at McGinnis's vehicle.
He unsuccessfully attempted to deflect the grenade, and it entered the
vehicle behind him. McGinnis quickly announced, "Grenade!"
According to official accounts by survivors, McGinnis stood up and was
preparing to jump out of the vehicle. "That is what the machine gunner
is supposed to do," Baka said. "He's supposed to announce the grenade,
give a fair amount of time for people in the vehicle to react, and then
he's supposed to save himself. No one would have blamed him if he did
that, because that is what he was trained to do."
This time, the 19-year-old Soldier would not heed his training.
The other Soldiers asked, "Where?" McGinnis's response - "It's in the truck!"
McGinnis saw the grenade sitting on the radio mount behind him and
realized the others weren't aware of its location. They were
combat-locked in the Humvee and would not have time to escape. As he
gave his response, he pushed the gunner strap out from under him and
laid his back on top of the grenade. It detonated, killing him
instantly.
Buehler and Thomas received minor shrapnel injuries, and Lawson
suffered a perforated eardrum and concussion. Newland received more of
the blast and was severely wounded, but would survive. "The driver and
truck commander I am certain would have been killed if that blast had
taken full effect," Baka said.
Newland, who was medically retired because of his injuries, was able to
protect himself because of McGinnis's warning. "He put his arm over his
face, which I think saved his life, because a piece of shrapnel hit him
in the arm. Another hit him in the chin and some in his legs. But he's
alive today," Baka added.
Within 24 hours of McGinnis's sacrifice, Baka gathered statements from
the survivors and wrote the recommendation for his Medal of Honor. He
received the Silver Star, the third-highest award for valor, as an
interim award.
Magnitude of his Sacrifice
"The first time it became full magnitude for me was when we were
loading his body onto the helicopter for the hero flight - that's
standard," Baka said. The unit held a small, informal ceremony and Baka
led them in a prayer, as there was no chaplain at the combat outpost.
As the helicopter flew away, they saluted the young man who laid down
his life so the men he loved and served with could live.
"We have hero flights for every Soldier, and every Soldier that gives
his life's a hero. But McGinnis, in my mind, is the definition of
hero," Baka said. "From this day forward if anyone ever asks me to
define the word hero, I would simply tell them the story of Spc. Ross
McGinnis and the actions he took that day to save four of his brothers."
For the men who survived, each breath they take serves as a reminder of McGinnis's courageous sacrifice.
"By all means I should have died that day. He gave me a life that he
can't have now," Newland said. "There isn't a single day or hour that
goes by that I don't take in everything. The smell of my daughter's
hair, the smile my son gives me out of nowhere, the soft touch of my
wife's hand just driving in the car. Normally those are things people
might take for granted. I'm able to appreciate and have these things
all over again, every day, every hour, because of what Ross did."
Regular Guy Who did an Extraordinary Thing
Tom McGinnis is still adjusting to the fact that his son, who he
described as average, often to the point of being an underachiever, is
receiving the Medal of Honor.
"I never pictured what a Medal of Honor winner is supposed to look
like, but I guess I would think of somebody like a John Wayne character
in the movies, where the guy is macho and tough and fear is nothing,"
Tom said. "But of course, that's not anywhere close to what my son,
Ross, was like. Although he had very little fear in him, he wasn't a
tough, macho type of person. He was just like you and me." For those
outside the Army closest to McGinnis, he was a regular guy who came
through for his friends when it mattered.
Remembering Ross McGinnis
For his brothers in arms, the best way to remember McGinnis is to tell
the story of what he did for them Dec. 4, 2006, and to live their lives
every day with purpose and meaning.
"I think for me to thank him, is to do everything I can to live my life
to the fullest," Newland said. "Because if he can have courage like
that, if he can give up his 19-year-old life, then I can live the rest
of my life, however long it is, to every day's fullest."
The family McGinnis left behind still wrestles with his hero status and
the wounds that haven't had a chance to heal. Tom and Romayne said the
constant focus on their son and what he did honors his memory, but
keeps already raw emotions on the surface.
"It's been good, because people want to keep his memory alive, and
people do things to show you that it really meant a lot to them," Tom
said. "But at the same time, it doesn't give us a chance to just drop
it for a while...it keeps that wound fresh. It's painful, but
eventually once everything dies down, then I think that the healing
process will start."
The McGinnis's remember their son as an average kid who made mistakes
but found purpose and direction as he became a young man, just like
many other kids out of high school. For them, it is difficult to think
of Ross as the larger-than-life character others may see him as because
of his sacrifice.
"I've had people ask me if I'd like a book or a movie written about
him, and I say, 'No." They would have to write so much into this to
make it readable or viewable that Ross wouldn't even be in there. It
wouldn't be him," Tom said. "It would be somebody else, because his
life was dull, boring and nothing to write about. He was just an
ordinary person who, when it came time, did the right thing, and that's
the most important thing to remember about him."
(This story was written from videotaped interviews of the sources. Sgt.
1st Class Pete Mayes and Staff Sgt. Ray Flores of Soldiers Radio and
Television conducted the interviews.)
Spc. Ross McGinnis Photo by courtesy
Sources and Credits: http://www.army.mil/-news/2008/05/23/9396-second-oif-soldier-to-receive-posthumous-medal-of-honor/
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