173rd, 2-503 Welcome Home Fund Raiser in Madison, WI Update #2

July 26, 2008

 $1,800.00 were raised in Madison. FANTASTIC!

While the Blaskowskis were in Saute Ste Marie, Michigan at a fund rasier we (kev, Uncle Jimbo and I) had the most wonderful evening in Madison last Saturday night (19 July 2008).  We met some fantastic people and raised money for the Welcome Home party for the 2/503.  kev won’t tell me yet how much we raised because he is still raffling off items at local bars around town and soliciting donations.  What a guy!  I love you kev!

The following businesses and individuals in Madison, WI really stepped up to the plate to help out:

Trent and Brittney at Vintage (who hosted the event and helped out tremendously with the preparations)
Wandos
Stadium Bar
Lava Lounge
Blue lotus
Ultimate Arts
Capitol City Tattoo
Bellezza
Cha Cha Salon
General Beverage
Budwieser
Frank Liquor
Tony Schey
City Bar
Wal Mart
 
Aside from raising a lot of money we had the honor and privilege of meeting and getting to know some VERY SPECIAL families.  We met the Gold Star family of SGT Josh Brennan (173rd, 2-503 Battle Co., KIA Korengal Valley 25 October 2007), Blue Star family of SSG Kyle Seitz (173rd, 1/503 B Co) and the Silver Star family of Bob Remmel (173rd, 2-503 Chosen Company, wounded in the Battle at the Ranch House, Kunar Province).  What an incredible and amazing group of people.  If we hadn’t raised a penny it would have been worth it just to spend time with these great Americans.  And they were FUN FUN FUN to party with.  But most of all they love their Soldiers and those they served and serve with and are COMMITTED to remembering and honoring the lives of all of the Fallen Sky Soldiers as well as supporting those who return from this horrendous deployment.
 
UPDATE - We’re still about $30,000 short of our goal for the Welcome Home Celebration for the 2/503.  You can make a tax deductible donation via paypal here.  Or you can mail a tax deductible donation to:
 
173rd Sky Angels Fund
c/o Cheryl and Terry Blaskowski
P O Box 164
Cheboygan, MI  49721
 
Here are a few photos from the event:
And…what we did a LOT of aside from raising money - raising toasts to the Sky Soldiers:

Wounded Soldier Returns to Italy to Greet Comrades as They Come Home From Afghanistan Deployment

July 26, 2008

SPC Jesse Murphree greets returning Sky Soldiers at AvianoJul 24, 2008
BY Dave Melancon, U.S. Army Europe Public Affairs Office

VICENZA, Italy — July has been a month of homecomings for Soldiers of the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team as they return here from a 15-month deployment in Afghanistan.

Spc. Jesse A. Murphree of Destined Company, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment (Airborne), reversed that Afghanistan to Italy airflow July 22 when he traveled from the United States to rejoin his unit as they arrived at Aviano Air Base, Italy.

The “Rock Battalion” infantryman was among the first to greet the approximately 400 Soldiers from Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 173rd ABCT and the 503rd’s 1st and 2nd Battalions, on the air base flight line.

He shook their hands while standing on two artificial legs, steadying himself with a cane.

Murphree, 22, served as a gunner on an up-armored Humvee. His platoon was overwatching another platoon during a mounted patrol in the Korengal Valley, near Ali Abad, Afghanistan, two days after Christmas 2007. As his convoy was preparing to move, his vehicle struck an improvised explosive device.

Murphree said he has few memories of the explosion. He lost his legs below his knees and suffered minor burns in the incident. Two other Soldiers were also injured in the attack.

Medically evacuated from Afghanistan, he arrived at Walter Reed Army Medical Center Dec. 30.

“I was hit on the 27th and woke up in Walter Reed on New Year’s Day,” he said as he awaited the first of two aircraft bringing his comrades home.

Murphree arrived in Italy July 20 and said he plans to stay until the first week of August to welcome the remaining 173rd Soldiers. Upon arrival at Caserma Ederle in Vicenza, he was greeted by other Destined Company Soldiers, including his former platoon and section sergeants and two other Soldiers who were wounded in earlier incidents.

“I was looking forward to that feeling you get when you see everyone all happy because they just got done with a deployment. I came back for that feeling,” he said. “I’ve always been thinking about what is going on and worrying. I definitely miss being around all of the guys.”

He is staying in the Caserma Ederle Warrior Transition Unit quarters.

“It is pretty hooked up,” Murphree said of his lodging at the WTU. “They are accessible; there are ramps and a shower that works for me.”

Murphree says this is the longest trip he has taken since arriving at Walter Reed. He has made three other three-day trips in that time — to his hometown in Colorado, a Texas fishing trip hosted by the 173d Airborne Brigade Association, and a Memorial Day celebration in Pennsylvania.

He said he continues his routine of frequent stretching exercises and walking on his prosthetic legs here, adding that his two-week stay in Italy does not interfere with his treatment. In fact he says it’s a plus.

“This is actually better for me,” Murphree explained. “That’s pretty much what I am doing here. I am walking around a lot. Being on my legs is doing more than therapy would do.”

“I’m well past the critical stage of therapy,” he said. “You have to keep your core strength up. You have to build tolerance and confidence in your legs.”

The reunion night’s agenda included going into town with friends and around the Vicenza military community, he said. “We’ll have some drinks and stuff, go hang out and have a good time.”

Later plans include returning to Vicenza in September for the 173rd’s formal welcome-home ceremony and celebration, he said.

Murphree, who is still on active duty, said he will continue his treatment at Walter Reed while undergoing the Medical Evaluation Board process. He expects to be medically retired from the Army in February 2009.

“You can never predict how long you are going to be there, because there are always bumps in the road,” he said.

He said he is considering attending college and studying counterterrorism, English or public speaking, and possibly psychology. Plans also include taking up competitive mono-skiing, a sport that resembles snowboarding.

Murphree’s return to Italy, where he spent his first and only Army assignment, is an inspiration and strength for all 173rd ABCT Soldiers and the Vicenza military community, said Capt. Matthew J. Heimerle, the 2-503rd rear detachment commander.

“To see him in person lifts everybody’s spirit,” he said. “Murphree will never quit on his ambitions and goals and will forever be a source of inspiration for the Soldiers of the Battalion.”

Heimerle said there were no difficulties in arranging for Murphree’s reunion. Community and battalion leaders cleared the visit with doctors at Walter Reed and ensured there was a place for him to stay in the community and that his medical needs were met.

“This has been an extremely tough deployment for all in this battalion,” Heimerle said. “Every one of us has lost close, close friends, and to see someone like Murphree get hurt the way he did and recover the way he has, and will continue to do, gives everyone a huge morale boost.”

“To me his attitude, motivation, and character epitomize the young Soldiers that are in today’s Army and it also reflects our core Army values,” he said. “Guys like Murphree are the ones that should be talked about in the news.”

“It was good to see that he is alright,” said Sgt. Nathan Thomas, the emergency medical technician who treated Murphree in the Korengal Valley.

It’s also good for Murphree to see his friends, Thomas added. “He has been in Walter Reed for so long,” the medic said.

The entire Destined Company — especially his friends — are boosting Murphree’s morale, Thomas said.

“I’m not helping him. We are helping him,” Thomas said. “This is our little band of brothers sticking together.”

Scout team members Spc. Mitchell Raeon and Spc. Jay Liske, who witnessed the explosion, said they plan to get together with Murphree during his visit.

“He looked good,” Raeon said. “We have not seen him in about 10 months, so we did not know what to expect.”

“I can’t wait to drink a beer with him tonight,” added Liske.

“It’s been incredible to see my buddies come back. It is one of the feelings I’ve been waiting for,” Murphree said as 18 busloads of Soldiers pulled away from the flight line for the two-hour ride from Aviano to Vicenza. “You sit there at the hospital and you think constantly about your guys and what is going on. And when you finally get to see them and you know that they are OK, it is definitely awesome.”

173rd, 2-503 - Awards Demonstrate Valor of “The Rock”

July 8, 2008

AWARDED:

Silver Stars - 6

Bronze Stars with Valor - 48

ARCOMs with Valor - over 140

Purple Hearts - 98

SUBMITTED FOR APPROVAL:

More than 150 other awards for valor have been submitted for approval — including two for the Medal of Honor, three of for the Distinguished Service Cross and three more for Silver Stars.

And 950 engagements with the enemy in the past 14 months.

From Stars and Stripes
Awards demonstrate valor of ‘The Rock’

By Kent Harris, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Sunday, June 29, 2008

 

 

CAMP BLESSING, Afghanistan — Command Sgt. Major Bradley Meyers doesn’t seem surprised by his battalion’s performance in Kunar Province over the last 14 months.
“I think that soldiers will meet expectations,” the top enlisted soldier in the 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment said. “If you train them properly, they’ll do just fine.”

“Just fine,” in this case, might be an understatement.

Soldiers from “The Rock” have been awarded six Silver Stars. Forty-eight have earned Bronze Stars with valor. More than 140 Army Commendation Medals with valor have been approved. Ninety-eight Purple Hearts have been awarded. More than 150 other awards for valor have been submitted for approval — including two for the Medal of Honor, three of for the Distinguished Service Cross and three more for Silver Stars.

The numbers are a testament to the fierce fighting the battalion has seen in Afghanistan, where insurgent attacks have become both more numerous and more brazen over the past year.

The battalion has been involved in about 950 engagements with the enemy during its stint in Afghanistan. Fifteen soldiers from the unit and two Marines working in the province have died during the rotation. About two dozen members of the Afghan National Army, Afghan National Police and Afghan Border Police have also been killed in the line of duty.

Meyers, who joined the battalion during its last tour in Afghanistan, said 2-503 has aggressively interacted with the local population during both of its stints in country.

“Get out in the battle space, hook up with the local population and maintain relations with the locals,” he said. “When you do that, you’re going to end up running into the enemy.”

“We’re both fighting for the human terrain,” Lt. Col. Bill Ostlund, the battalion commander, said. “We go about it in different ways and for much different reasons. But we and the enemy both need the support of the local population.”

The unit operates in the low hills and mountains near this outpost in the Pech River Valley in eastern Afghanistan. The rugged border with Pakistan has long been a hideout and transit route for Taliban and other fighters in Afghanistan.

And while the fight has intensified in southern Afghanistan, the combat has been steady and thick here.

Staff Sgt. Brandon Thomas, a member of Company A, has received three Purple Hearts during the rotation. He’s been wounded in the shin, head and inner thigh. He received the Army Commendation Medal with valor recently, but said he wasn’t any different from any other soldier in the battalion.

“In my opinion, a valor award is just an act of stupidity viewed by others as heroism,” he said with a half-smile. “I guess I never learned to find cover in basic training.”

A group of soldiers standing around him when he said that all laughed and shook their heads. Several of them had also earned medals with valor during the tour.

“Unfortunately, we don’t get the respect and attention that soldiers fighting in Iraq do,” Thomas said, turning more serious. “But we’ve been fighting every day.”

“We have a pretty humble group of guys,” Ostlund said. “They don’t talk about themselves much. Some of them have seen as much combat as anyone in the Army.”

 

 

Cheboygan, MI Holds A Huge Fourth of July Fund Raiser For 173rd, 2-503 Welcome Home Party UPDATED

July 8, 2008

Almost $10,000.00 raised. HOOAH!

Major KUDOS to the people of Cheboygan and northern Michigan for participating in a very successful fund raiser on July 3rd. 

NOTE:  If you are in the Madison, WI or Sault Ste Marie, MI areas there will be fund raisers held in those locations on July 19, 2008.  Details will be posted here soon.

From 9and10 News Cheboygan, MI.

From Cheboygan to Afghanistan With Love
Posted: 7/3/2008

 

A Northern Michigan couple is raising money to give their son’s army unit a proper homecoming party when it returns to Italy in the fall.

Terry and Cheryl Blaskowski lost their son Matt last September during the war in Afghanistan. His unit is based in Italy and will return there after a year of fighting.

“There’s a lot of young soldiers over there that don’t have families,” said Cheryl Blaskowski. “We want to make sure they know how many people care about them.”

In Cheboygan on Thursday night the Blaskowskis held one a in a series of fundraisers. They are trying to collect more than $100,000 to welcome the troops back to their base.

9&10’s Michael Kasiborski and photojournalist Bridgette Pacholka have more from the fundraiser here. Then click on the “Watch Video” link on the left.  The video is fantastic! 

 
Donations (tax deductible) for the fundraising effort can be sent to:
173rd Sky Angels Fund
c/o Terry and Cheryl Blaskowski
PO BOX 164
Cheboygan, MI 49721
 
OR via Paypal using the email address airborne173rdskyangelsfund@yahoo.com
 
We appreciate all of the support and donations we have received to date but are still in full fund raising mode.  Please consider making a tax deductible donation and help us welcome these Soldiers home in true American style.