Sgt. 1st Class Daniel Henry. Petithory Hometown



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War in Iraq


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Dighton Marine killed in Iraq near Syria border

09:28 AM EDT on Thursday, July 8, 2004

BY MICHAEL P. McKINNEY
Journal Staff Writer

*

Journal photo / Kathy Borcher

John and Jane Van Gyzen of Dighton, Mass., the father and stepmother of Lance Cpl. John J. Van Gyzen IV who was killed in action in Iraq on Monday, grapple with the news of his death yesterday.

They remembered John J. Van Gyzen IV, a Marine killed Monday in Iraq, as the boy who used to look at mom, waiting for her to unhook the fish from the fishing rod. The young man who bounded about on a snowmobile in New Hampshire. The guy they nicknamed Buddy.

Van Gyzen, of Dighton, a rifleman and lance corporal who served in the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, turned 21 on June 16. He died as a result of "enemy action" in the Al Anbar province near Syria.

From Dighton to across Rhode Island, people grappled with sadness but also fond memories.

"All I can say," said his father, John Van Gyzen, his voice choking, "is he never came home to take the ribbon off the tree."

There was the time his father took his son out on Mount Hope Bay. The son asked whether there were any sharks. "And I said, 'Well, you'll be the first to find out'," Van Gyzen joked. He made sure his son got wet that day.

Other times, they loaded the son's dirt bike in the back of a truck and went in search of power lines. The younger Van Gyzen would bike his way along the path cut to accommodate the towers that carry the lines, his father said.

There was water rafting and tubing. And Van Gyzen loved baseball. At Dighton-Rehoboth Regional High School, from which he graduated in 2001, Van Gyzen participated in track and field.

He enlisted in the Marines on Oct. 9, 2001. After boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., he joined the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, as a rifleman on March 30, 2002.



*

John J. Van Gyzen IV joined the Marines shortly after graduating fro Dighton Rehoboth Regional High School in 2001.

In January 2003, Van Gyzen was sent to Kuwait and, months later, headed into Iraq as the war to oust Saddam Hussein began. In September 2003, he returned to the United States where he married, according to several family members. His wife, Amanda, who lives in Twentynine Palms, Calif., could not be reached yesterday.

Dorothy Arsenault, of West Warwick, yesterday recalled her son's sense of humor. As he got older, he would still sometimes do what he did as a little boy: walk over to her and wait for her to take the fish off the line.

"He thought it was funny," she said.

Van Gyzen's mother and father raised him mainly in Foster and then in West Warwick, with his sisters Bethany, Jessica and Angel. When his parents divorced, Van Gyzen went to live with his father in Dighton but also saw his mother regularly.

His mother remembered a food drive at her church. Her son, she said, took charge and helped collect money from people at a Sam's Club store.

Van Gyzen's stepmother, Jane Van Gyzen, of Dighton, said her stepson became a "wonderful uncle." She called him a "hero" for his service.

Van Gyzen's grandmother, Genevieve Van Gyzen, of Warwick, had 10 grandchildren to dote on. Van Gyzen and the rest of the children grew up on her potato salad, and "grammie's meatballs."

As a boy, John Van Gyzen played with a toy that, his grandmother said, eventually landed him the nickname Buddy. It seemed yesterday that the nickname came to mean something more.

His grandmother said she has strong doubts about the war, but said she is "proud of him, of course."

Van Gyzen has been recommended for a Purple Heart, the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center said yesterday.

There has been talk in the family of putting the fallen soldier to rest in a familiar place, she said. It is a family plot in the Veterans Cemetery in Exeter. There rests another soldier named John Van Gyzen, who fought in World War II in the Navy. It is Genevieve's husband, Lance Cpl. Van Gyzen's grandfather.

"It's very difficult," said Genevieve Van Gyzen. "The child buries the parent. The parent doesn't bury the child."



Gunnery Sgt. Elia P. Fontecchio

photo of gunnery sgt. elia p. fontecchio

Hometown: Milford, Massachusetts, U.S.

Age: 30 years old

Died: August 4, 2004 in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Unit: Marines, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif.

Incident: Killed in an attack in Anbar province.

When Elia P. Fontecchio returned from his first tour of duty in Iraq, he spent days figuring out how to break the news to his wife that he would be going back. When it came to his 2-year-old son, he felt there was no way to explain. "You don't at that age. You just do what you can," he told The Associated Press in an interview in December. "Mommy bears the brunt of it." The 30-year-old from Milford, Mass., was killed in Iraq's Anbar province Aug. 4, two weeks before he was due to return home. He was based at Twentynine Palms, Calif. Fontecchio's first tour gave him confidence as he approached his second departure. "I'm very familiar with the territory and the culture now. We know some of the mistakes ... and we know how to handle them now," he said. "He was the model Marine, the model person, the model husband, the model father," his uncle Dana Fontecchio said. Survivors include his wife, Kinney, and son, Elia Jr.



gunnery sgt. elia p. fontecchio


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Elia P. Fontecchio
Gunnery Sergeant, United States Marine Corps

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U. S. Department of Defense
Release No. 747-04
IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
August 5, 2004 DoD Identifies Marine Casualties

The Department of Defense announced today the death of three Marines who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Corporal Dean P. Pratt, 22, of Stevensville, Montana, died Aug 2, 2004, due to enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq.  He was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Pendleton, California.

Gunnery Sergeant Elia P. Fontecchio, 30, of Milford, Massachusetts, died August 4, 2004, from injuries received from enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq.  He was assigned to 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, California.

Lance Corporal Joseph L. Nice, 19, of Nicoma Park, Oklahoma, died August 4, 2004, due to enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq.  He was assigned to 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, California.

For further information on Pratt contact the Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton Public Affairs Office at (760) 725-5044.  For further information on Fontecchio or Nice, contact the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms Public Affairs Office at (760) 830-6213.

Marines and family members came together on April 12, 2004, to say goodbye to Gunnery Sergeant Elia P. Fontecchio, 3/7 Marines, Kilo Company. He died in combat in the small town of Husaybah on the Syrian border of Iraq. He left behind a grieving family; his wife Kinney and two year old son, Elia. And he left behind brother Marines who feel the loss keenly even as they keep on with their mission. He would have been home very soon. Instead, he came all the way home - he now stands guard at the gates of Heaven with those who have gone before.

The men he has lived with and fought beside for the last six months could not be here. They have a mission to complete in Iraq. They were represented by Captain Buster O'Brien who served with GSgt Fontecchio last year during OIF1. He spoke for them:

"I'm speaking here today on behalf of Gunny's brothers in 3/7," started O'Brien, fighting back tears. "I can tell you that though there are many of them here today, the vast majority could not be here-for they are paying their respect to their beloved Gunny by going back out on patrol and doing their job the way he taught them to-with courage, competence, discipline and, when necessary, a smile."

O'Brien, like those who spoke before him at Saint Sebastian's by the Sea in Melbourne Beach, shared stories depicting "Gunny"' as an incredible mentor, teacher, father, husband, friend and Marine.

The thing that made O'Brien's speech stand out were the words, penned by Fontecchio himself, weeks before his death and given to his friend and fellow Marine in Iraq, Captain Jeremy Graczyk.

"I loved every one of you," Fontecchio wrote in a letter to be read in the event of his death. "You will forever be my brothers in arms."

Before he finished, and fighting for composure, O'Brien addressed young Elia, sitting in the pew next to his mother.

"Elia first of all, we'll have time later on to talk about your Daddy, and we will," he said, tears flowing again. "But today please know that your Daddy was truly a courageous warrior. We were overseas in combat, and at least once a day he took out pictures of you and said, 'Come on, you gotta admit it, is he the cutest kid you've ever seen?' He was so proud of you. You were literally the pride of his existence. He will always be with you. And whenever you need anything, just call on one of Gunny's brothers-in-arms."
On Tuesday the Town of Milford came together at the Upper Town Hall to participate in a ceremony unveiling memorial highway signs for Marine Gunnery Sergeant Elia P. Fontecchio and Milford Area Veterans. The event, organized by Rep. Marie J. Parente, gathered local, state and federal officials, local veterans, friends and family of Sgt. Fontecchio. The Master of Ceremonies was Craig Hill, a former Marine who serves as Director of Facilities at Curis, Inc. and also announces the Milford High School Football games.

Guests included Governor Mitt Romney, Congressman Richard Neal, Secretary of Transportation Daniel Grabauskas, Massachusetts National Guard Adjutant General George Keefe, Senator Richard Moore, and Chairman of the Milford Board of Selectman John Seaver. Special thanks is due to officers and members of the Milford V.F.W. Post 1544, Lawrence Hughes commanding, and officers and members of the Italian-American Veterans, Disabled American Veterans, American Legion and Auxillary, Armenian-American Veterans, and Medway V.F.W. Post 1526. The Milford High School Orchestra and Chorale, led by William Moffett and Joshua Nannestad, sang the Marine Corps Hymn, National Anthem, and played the traditional folk song "Shenandoah".

Among the many family and friends who attended were Sergeant Fontecchio's widow, Kinney, parents Dennis and Cindy, sister Jane, uncle Dana, cousin Greg and Michelle Allegrezza, and numerous other relatives and friends. Gold Star Mother Mrs. Antoinette Cormier (Milford Daily News Woman of the Year), whose son Eugene was killed in Vietnam, presented flowers to Sgt. Fontecchio's widow and mother. She was accompanied by her daughter-in-law Carol. Friends and relatives came from as close as New Hampshire and as far away as California and Florida.

Members of the 25th Marine Corps Regiment from Worcester and the Milford Police Department presented the Colors of the United States, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and U.S. Marine Corps. Milford Firefighter Pat Salmon performed "Amazing Grace" on the bagpipes. Following the event, sandwiches and drinks were provided by Oliva's Market and Catering, courtesy of Kevin Meehan, owner of Imperial Chevrolet.

Rep. Parente said the event could not have been made possible without the assistance of many individuals and businesses not already mentioned, including: Milford Police Chief Thomas O'Loughlin, Deputy Police Chief Ronald Marino, Detective Dustin Testa, Officer Edward Pomponio, Officer Richard Belanger, Officer Brian Cahill, Officer Paul Parisi, The Milford Board of Selectmen, Town Administrator Louis Celozzi and the Town Hall maintenance staff, Milford Veterans Agent John Pilla, Milford Fire Department Chief John Touhey, Milford High School Principal John Brucato and Music Director Nadine Pomeroy, Kevin Meehan, Wildside Florist, the Milford Radisson Hotel, Cascio Limousine, Massachusetts Highway Department Commissioner John Cogliano and his staff, District 3 Highway Engineer Thomas Waruzila, Army Captain Pat Shea and Marine Corporal Steve Mazzuchelli, and O'Toole's North Pond House.

In his days at Milford High School, Elia Fontecchio was a driven student with many interests who stood out among his peers. He played football, acted in school plays and would sing in chorus.

"He was a kid who was pleasant, friendly, and he was a strong contributing member of the school community," recalled High School Principal John Brucato.

In the 1992 Milford High yearbook, Elia said his goal in life was "to continue being myself and to follow my dreams and make them come true."

On Wednesday, now-Marine Gunnery Sergeant Fontecchio, 30, was killed during fighting in Iraq, just two weeks before completing his second tour of duty, according to the Department of Defense.

ep fonteccio & son elia, jr. photo

He leaves his wife, Kinney, his 2-year-old son Elia Jr., his twin sister Alicia Powers, and his parents, Dennis and Cindy Fontecchio of Satellite Beach, Florida.

     Serving his country was important to Elia, said his uncle Dana Fontecchio.



"His father was a Marine and he knew all about military life," said Fontecchio. "His father was instrumental in his life plans. He wasn't just over in Iraq for you and me, he was over there because he wanted to support peace."

Principal Brucato recalled the goal-driven young man.

"He had a lot of different interests and he placed a lot of emphasis on the quality of human relationships in school. It turned out that he held to his goals and did what he wanted to do. He disliked war and he wanted to do something about it. He wanted to make a difference by serving his country.

In his high school yearbook, Fontecchio listed "war" as one of his main dislikes.

Fontecchio died after being injured during a battle in the Anbar province, considered to be a volatile Sunni-dominated region west of Baghdad, the Defense Department said.

Fontecchio was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marines Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, based at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Califfornia.

His great-aunt Bette Blackburn of Milford said he "loved the Marines. It was something he always wanted to do and he did it. He was very ambitious."

Elia's parents and wife declined to talk over the phone yesterday. John Mansur, a spokesman for the family in Florida, issued a statement:

"The Fontecchio family is saddened beyond words by the loss of our beloved Elia," said Mansur in the statement released to The Milford Daily News yesterday. "We appreciate the kindness and expressions of sympathy and support offered by our many friends within the civilian and military community.

"(Elia) was a Marine first and foremost, and his courage and devotion to his country have cost him and us the ultimate price. We know that Elia would want our first concern to be for his wife Kinney, his young son and his family. For that reason, we hope you will respect our need for privacy at this time," the statement continued.

His uncle, Dana, who lives on Fruit Street in Milford, said his nephew was an ambitious person who followed his dreams.

"He was a kid who excelled in anything he did in life," Dana Fontecchio said yesterday while sitting at his desk at Karl A. Bright Insurance Agency in Milford. "He was a beautiful family man. He was just a good kid that turned into an incredible man."

At Milford High, Elia Fontecchio played football and was an active member in theater and chorus.

"I remember he had a lead solo in the school's production of 'Grease' one year," said Fontecchio's uncle. "He brought the house down."

His great-aunt said she remembers her nephew was always a happy person.

"He was a good kid," said Blackburn. "He never was a troublemaker. He was just happy-go-lucky and he loved his family. He was fantastic."

Brucato said he remembered Elia had a strong presence with his peers at school.

 "He was a member of our alumni and our family and we all grieve for him and his family," he said. "It's a tragedy."



 After graduation, Fontecchio enlisted in the Marine Corps on April 19, 1993, and attended recruit training at Parris Island, S.C. He joined the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment as a platoon sergeant on Oct 16, 2002.

This was his second deployment to Iraq. He left with his unit to Operation Iraqi Freedom Two in February 2004.

According to a the public relations office at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Elia's list of awards include: a Combat Action Ribbon, Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal (multiple awards), Navy-Marine Corps Commendation Medal, Navy-Marine Corps Achievement (two awards), Presidential Unit Citation, Meritorious Unit Commendation (two awards), Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, Armed Forces Service Medal, Marine Security Guard Ribbon and Navy-Marine Corps Overseas Service Ribbon (three awards), National Defense Service Medal (two awards), Sea Service Deployment Ribbon (four awards) and The War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal.

Brucato said he plans to put up some kind of memorial in the form of a commemorative plaque at the high school honoring Elia's life. A scholarship fund may also be set up in Elia's name.

"I think it's important for the young people in this school to identify with a peer and hope they see the connection," said Brucato. "Elia was a student here much like they are now. He made a choice in order for them to be safe. Our young people should reflect on his sacrifice."

Fontecchio's burial and funeral services are expected to take place next week in Florida at a time and place to be announced, according to the combat center's public relations office.

6 August 2004:

Firefight kills Brevard son
Marine days away from wrapping up second combat tour in Iraq

ep fontecchio photo
 

Memories of a son, twin brother, husband and father are all that remain for the Fontecchio family.

Marine Gunnery Sergeant Elia Paietta Fontecchio, 30, died on Wednesday in a firefight in the Al-Anbar province of Iraq. He was within days of finishing his second combat tour in the Middle East.

His mother and father in Satellite Beach are heartbroken and didn't want to speak to the news media, a family spokesman said.

A flag once flown over the Iwo Jima Memorial in Washington D.C. flies at half-staff in their front yard in Satellite Beach.

Alicia Powers, Fontecchio's younger sister by six minutes, gathered with her husband at a friend's home in Melbourne on Friday night to page through a photo album and remember better days.

Fontecchio was stationed at Twentynine Palms, California, where he lived with his wife, Kinney, and 3-year-old Elia Jr.

"His son was wearing battle fatigues," Powers said. "He loved wearing them because he wanted to be like his daddy."

Fontecchio was home around Christmas but was sent back to combat a short time later. Featured in a wire-service newspaper story about soldiers returning to fight, he told a reporter then it was hard to break that news to his wife.

Fontecchio actually helped other Marines deliver the sobering news to their families.

"I'm being straight with them, and telling them the importance of their job. Marines will want to do the right thing," he said at the time.

That kind of straight-forward reaction to duty doesn't surprise his family -- Fontecchio's dad fought as a Marine in Vietnam.

Powers' husband, Scott, said Fontecchio made the best of his duty in Iraq, trying to help those less fortunate.

"He liked working to get those people from under Saddam Hussein's rule and give them a chance to have what we have. He talked about giving soccer balls to the (Iraqi) kids and playing soccer with them. He felt his true mission was to help other human beings in Iraq."

"He'd want to know that we'd support the troops over there," he said.

Nicole Fontecchio, the sergeant's 34-year-old sister and a single mom, said he was like a father to her children.

"He talked to my son. I'd e-mail him and he'd e-mail me, even from Iraq, and he'd tell my son to 'behave for your mother.' Family was a priority to him," she said.

But as they mourn their brother, the sisters couldn't help but remember funny memories from their teenage years, even as they held each other's hands for support.

"His honesty in high school," the girls said, giggling. "We'd be getting ready to go out and he'd say, 'Your butt looks too big.' So every time after that, we'd check with him before we went out."

The sisters said Fontecchio was smart, serious and studious, but that didn't stop him from enthusiastically rushing to see "Star Wars" in the theater.

"We all had to go see it. He gathered the family up and we all went to see the redone 'Star Wars,' " Alicia said.

John Mansur, a family friend, said he talked to Fontecchio before the second tour of duty and asked him his feelings about going back.

"And he said: 'Sir, there's a job to be done, the Marines do the job, and I'm a Marine,' " Mansur said.

In high school in Milford, Mass., Fontecchio was interested in theater, performing in a production of "Grease," his sisters said.

He played Frenchie's guardian angel and sang "Beauty School Drop Out." But when he got married, Fontecchio's primary focus was his family, wife and son.

"Sometimes, we'd stay at home with his son while he and his wife went out for dinner," Powers said.

Elia's pet name for his twin sister was WT-2, after the Wonder Twins superhero characters in the Superfriends cartoon. He'd e-mail Alicia from Iraq and always addressed her at WT-2.

"He always talked about his men," Alicia said.

 NOTE: Gunnery Sergeant Fontecchio was buried with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery on 25 August 2005.

FONTECCHIO, ELIA P
GYSGT   US MARINE CORPS
DATE OF BIRTH: 07/29/1974
DATE OF DEATH: 08/04/2004
BURIED AT: SECTION 60  SITE 8214
ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY

Webmaster: Michael Robert Patterson




Posted: 22 August 2005  Updated: 25 August 2005  Updated: 27 August 2005 Updated: 24 October 2005 Updated: 21 January 2006

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ep fontecchio gravesite photo
Photo Courtesy of Holly, 24 October 2005

Lance Cpl. Alexander S. Arredondo

photo of lance cpl. alexander s. arredondo

Hometown: Randolph, Massachusetts, U.S.

Age: 20 years old

Died: August 25, 2004 in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Unit: Marines, Battalion Landing Team 1/4, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendl

Incident: Killed by enemy action in Najaf.

Alexander Arredondo always saw the glass half-full. He joined the Marines out of a sense of duty, and when others complained about their training, he just smiled and kept working. When Iraqi children threw rocks at American troops, Arredondo tried to change their attitudes. "That's one thing I will say I gave to him: optimism, which is a good thing to have in this life," said his mother, Victoria Foley. Arredondo, 20, of Randolph, Mass., died Aug. 25 in a hostile attack in Najaf. He was based at Camp Pendleton, Calif. His father was so upset upon learning of the death that he climbed into a Marine Corps van and set fire to the vehicle, seriously burning himself. "This is his scream that his child is dead. The war needs to stop," said Melida Arredondo, the fallen Marine's stepmother. She said Alex joined the Marines at the age of 17 to help pay for college. He was in his second tour of duty in Iraq. When he called home hours before his death, he sounded upbeat. "He was ready," Foley said. "He was ready to fight that night. He knew it was going to get rough."



Alexander Scott Arredondo

Lance Corporal USMC, in the service of His country in Najif, Iraq August 25th. Loving son of Victoria Foley of Jamaica Plain and Bangor Maine and Carlos Arredondo of Florida. Stepson of Melida Arredondo of Hollywood, Fla. Brother of Brian Arredondo & Nathaniel Foley of Bangor, Maine. Grandson of John C. Foley (former U.S. Marine) and the late Nancy R. Foley of Jamaica Plain and Luz Marina Redondo and the late Carlos Luis Quios of Costa Rica. He is also lovingly remembered by aunts, uncles and numerous cousins. Late graduate of Blue Hills Regional Technical High School in 2002. He entered the US. Marine Corps & participated in Operation Iraqui Freedom, serving two tours of duty until he was killed in action on August 25th. Funeral from the Mann & Rodgers Funeral Home, 44 Perkins St. (corner of So. Huntington Ave.) JAMAICA PLAIN Sat. at 9:15 AM followed by a Funeral Mass at St. Thomas Aquinas Church, 90 South St., Jamaica Plain at 10 o'clock. Relatives & friends invited. Visiting hours Fri. 3-8 PM. Interment Rural Cemetery, Walpole.



Published in The Boston Globe from September 1 to September 3, 2004

February 27th, 2009 11:17 AM




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