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LCpl. Tavon Hubbard (KIA)
(reprinted from ConnectionNewspapers.com, August 31, 2004)
Marine from Reston Killed in IraqTavon Lee Hubbard, 24, died alongside another Virginia
soldier last week in a helicopter crash.
By Brian
McNeill
August 26, 2004
John Ellenberger, coach of the South Lakes Seahawks football
team, remembers that whenever he had to lecture his wide receiver Tavon Lee Hubbard, he
would try to be stern but would always end up smiling.
"He was that kid who was always joking,"
Ellenberger recalled. "He was a real easygoing kid. It's a real shame."
Last Wednesday, Hubbard, who went on to become a Lance
Corporal in the U.S. Marines, was killed in a helicopter crash while serving in Iraq.
Pentagon officials confirmed Monday afternoon that Hubbard was among those killed in the
crash in the Al Anbar Province of Iraq, located just west of Baghdad.
Hubbard, who grew up in Reston and graduated from South Lakes
High School in 1998, died in the crash alongside Staff Sgt. John R. Howard, 26, of
Covington, Va. The cause of the crash is still under investigation, though no enemy fire
was observed near the crash site, according to a statement from the U.S. military.
Hubbard was assigned to the Command Element 11th
Expeditionary Unit and was stationed at the Marine Corps base at Camp Pendleton. He was
deployed to Iraq last month, according to a statement by the Marine Corps.
He joined the Marines on Aug. 18, 1998 shortly after
graduating high school and was the recipient of the Marine Corps Good Service Medal, the
National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon.
Hubbard's relatives could not be located for comment, but
Ellenberger said he remembers the former varsity football player distinctly.
"He was a good kid," Ellenberger said. "He was fun to be around. This is
such a shame."
At the Sept. 17 South Lakes football game against Herndon
High School, South Lakes's National Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps will lower the
school's flags to half-staff, play taps before the game and fire a 21-gun salute, said
Sgt. Sean Keating, one of the two NJROTC officials at the school.
The ceremony at the game will be held in honor of Hubbard and
also Nathan B. Bruckenthal, a U.S. Coast Guard officer who graduated from Herndon in 1997
and was killed in Iraq on April 24.
"We want to honor both of these young men," Keating
said.
According to a Aug. 16 Pentagon report, 937 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq since
the war began and 3,565 soldiers have been wounded.