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In Memoriam |
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LCpl.
Jeremy Tinnel
(reprinted from
PigStye.com, July 6, 2007)
In May, Marine Lance Cpl. Jeremy L. Tinnel was injured by an
improvised explosive device. But he remained in Iraq and returned to duty
after about a week's recovery.
"That's the way he wanted it," his wife said last night.
Tinnel, a 20-year-old Richmond native, and another Marine were killed Sunday
while conducting combat operations in the Euphrates River off the shore of
Anbar province, the military said yesterday.
Tinnel died on his wife's 22nd birthday.
"I got Marines on my doorstep for my birthday," said Angel Nichole Tinnel of
Havre de Grace, Md. "Every year I can go celebrate my birthday and his
life."
The military continues to investigate the nonhostile boat accident that also
killed Lance Cpl. William C. Chambers, 20, of Ringgold, Ga.
Tinnel and Chambers were trained as infantry riflemen and assigned to the
1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 2, 2nd Marine
Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
During a furlough from a 2006 deployment to Iraq, Tinnel visited the Sunday
children's worship service at New Bridge Baptist Church in eastern Henrico
County.
He and friend Jonathan Morr, an Air National Guardsman, stood up front,
dressed in their military uniforms, and answered questions from the
children. Then to the tune of "Supernatural," one of the children's favorite
church songs, they then broke into a silly dance.
"It has some of the goofiest, silliest motions to it that you've ever seen,
but Jeremy and Jonathan both, with their hearts being what they are for
kids, stood there in their uniforms and did that song and looked absolutely
ridiculous, and the kids just loved it," said the Rev. JD Sluss, the
church's director of ministries, administrator and children's ministry team
leader.
Before joining the Marine Corps, Tinnel volunteered for many summers at the
church's summer camp ministry and had created a puppet character for Sluss'
children's ministry that had a pointy green head, red hair and an English
accent.
"He created the character, the voice, the personality, the whole nine yards.
He was just awesome with it," said Sluss, who had been Tinnel's pastor since
childhood.
"Jeremy was very caring, and he was a very deep thinker. He would take
something that he questioned or something that he was interested in and he
would really dig into it," Sluss said. "He was a Civil War history buff. He
was definitely Dixie at heart. He was American by birth, Southern by the
grace of God, was the way he would put it. He thought a lot about the issues
that were important to him."
Born in Richmond, Tinnel grew up in Highland Springs and Sandston and was
home-schooled. He lived in Mechanicsville before joining the Marines in
August 2004.
While in North Carolina, Sluss said, Tinnel met "the love of his life." He
and his wife were married in December during a small ceremony in
Mechanicsville.
"He was a genuine guy. He was his own self. That was one of the main things
that made me fall in love with him," she said. "He was not influenced by
anyone. He did his own thing."
He was promoted to lance corporal Jan. 1. His military decorations include
the Combat Action Ribbon, Iraq Campaign Medal, Global War on Terrorism
Service Medal, National Defense Service Medal and the Sea Service Deployment
Ribbon.
Tinnel left for his second deployment to Iraq on March 7, his wife said.
Tinnel considered military service a rite of passage, Mrs. Tinnel said. "He
believed that every able-bodied male should join the military."
In addition to his wife, survivors include his father, Herold Tinnel, and
stepmother, Joyce Tinnel, of Sandston; two sisters, Christy Flowers of
Charles City County and Laura Tinnel of Sandston; and a brother, James
Tinnel of Sandston.
A memorial service for Tinnel will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at New Bridge
Baptist Church, 5701 Elko Road, in Sandston. Another service will be held
Monday at 7 p.m. at Zellman Mitchell Smith Funeral Home in Havre de Grace.
The military also reported yesterday that Pfc. Steven Alexander Davis, 23,
of Woodbridge died Wednesday in Baghdad of wounds suffered when insurgents
attacked his unit with grenades.
Davis joined the Army on Sept. 8, 2005, and was deployed to Iraq in October.