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Interview Archives |
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LtCol Jerome Lynes: Homeward Bound, Mission Accomplished August 2002 CAMP LEJEUNE, NC- Extraordinary calm fills the voice of Lt. Col. Jerome Lynes. As Commander of Battalion Landing Team, 3rd Battalion, 6th Marines, Lt. Col. Lynes is perfectly relaxed. His 1,100 Marines - who comprised about half of the 26th MEU, have shared with him a dear victory. War has been waiting for Lt.Col. Lynes. His Eagle Scout badge, his degree in History from Notre Dame, his role as combat advisor to the Royal Saudi Marine Corps and his placement as Co-National Honor graduate of the Naval Command and Staff Course - groomed him to conquer Al Quaida in Afghanistan, at the very least. His life as a Marine began while in the Navy ROTC at Notre Dame. "My strengths, my interests, were more in line the Marine Corps. I loved the 'people' aspect of the Marine Corps. That ignited into a passion to serve her. Shakespeare's 'Band of Brothers' tugs at my heartstrings. I love being a Marine." Without missing a beat, the Colonel's posts on his unit's web-page depict his positive attitude and patient leadership - before and after September 11 (excerpts below). "A talented BLT Marine named LCpl Mark McDow built the site and maintained it," the Colonel reports, and each month the Colonel provided a photo and heartfelt status report. The audience was intended to be the families of his Marines, however he reports that the site had over 30,000 visitors between 1 January and 1 April 2002. 1 September 2001 1 November 2001 1 December 2001 1 January 2002 1 February 2002 1 March 2002 1 April 2002 1 May 2002 Home with his wife Mindy, daughter Kate and son Sam, is what really says it all. The day of this interview he and Mindy celebrated their 21st wedding anniversary. Having returned from his seventh long-term deployment, he confides, he never comes home without jewelry. This journey brought her jewelry from Spain and the United Arab Emirates, as well as a hand-made Persian rug. "She's much the better part of me. She's insuring my place in Heaven. If we have heroes in the Marine Corps then we have heroines at home." The BLT's Key Volunteer network of wive's were responsible for the lowest number of home front problems, he feels. "There were not less problems," Lt. Col. Lynes declares, "as much as they were resolved locally by the wives. Their patience and strength is enormous. I don't have the words to express my respect for them." Kate is a gifted musician studying at the University of North Carolina, and Sam, a junior in high school has an interest in the Corps. The Colonel doesn't discourage his son, although, "I try not to be a C.O. at home. I try to be Dad. I've tried to include my family in Corps things however; Mindy meets me at the Officer's Club when I go and once she even went on a night training exercise. I've brought my daughter to the Birthday Ball, and Sam has spent many a day with Dad at work-from about the time he was five!" He has been selected for full-bird Colonel so his tenure is not up yet. His thoughts about life after the Corps are still fluid, but expects to work with people. "So much of leadership is getting inside people's heads and helping them to achieve goals." Lt. Col. Lynes' heart is at home and the Corps is his core. "The Marine Corps is definitely a filter I look at the world through. Unless lightening strikes, I'm happy to just be doing what I'm doing." Editors Note: Special thanks to Maj. Wesley Feight for his invaluable contribution to this story.
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