Our Fallen Heroes

@ussoldiers

This virtual memorial was created to never forget our fallen heroes, who have made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. Allie Gentry

Marine Gunnery Sgt. Jeffrey E. Bohr Jr. 
Death: Apr 10, 2003
 of Ossian Iowa; assigned to 1st Battalion 5th Marine Regiment Camp Pendleton Calif.; killed April 10 in northern Baghdad while engaging enemy forces.  Growing up in the tiny farm town of Ossian Iowa Jeffrey Bohr was a quiet kid who liked horses enjoyed hunting and fishing and did a little calf roping.  Later as an Army Ranger and then a Marine he parachuted into Grenada helped oust Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega served in the Gulf War and trained for urban combat by rappelling out of helicopters and learning to float with his hands and feet tied.  Bohr39 Died April 10 in a seven-hour gun battle in front of a Baghdad mosque. His wife Lori also a native Iowan learned of his death from Marine officials as she was driving from California to Iowa to visit their parents. The couple had no children.  “I was proud of Jeff his whole life” said his father Edward Bohr who lives in Ossian. “He was part of an anti-terrorist group and went through intense training. They even sent him to Colorado to learn to ski. When he came home on leave he’d get up early in the morning and run 10 miles.”  His brother Richard who is in the Army Reserves and is scheduled to deploy to the Persian Gulf in May hopes to visit the spot where Bohr Died and erect a plaque.  Before leaving for the Middle East Jeffrey Bohr chastised his father for being skeptical about sending troops to Iraq. “He said ‘You don’t know as much about it as I do. We need to go there.’ He was ready to go. He was doing what he was good at.”  — USA Today Associated Press  Operation Iraqi Freedom

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1350 days ago

Marine Gunnery Sgt. Jeffrey E. Bohr Jr.
Death: Apr 10, 2003
of Ossian Iowa; assigned to 1st Battalion 5th Marine Regiment Camp Pendleton Calif.; killed April 10 in northern Baghdad while engaging enemy forces. Growing up in the tiny farm town of Ossian Iowa Jeffrey Bohr was a quiet kid who liked horses enjoyed hunting and fishing and did a little calf roping. Later as an Army Ranger and then a Marine he parachuted into Grenada helped oust Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega served in the Gulf War and trained for urban combat by rappelling out of helicopters and learning to float with his hands and feet tied. Bohr39 Died April 10 in a seven-hour gun battle in front of a Baghdad mosque. His wife Lori also a native Iowan learned of his death from Marine officials as she was driving from California to Iowa to visit their parents. The couple had no children. “I was proud of Jeff his whole life” said his father Edward Bohr who lives in Ossian. “He was part of an anti-terrorist group and went through intense training. They even sent him to Colorado to learn to ski. When he came home on leave he’d get up early in the morning and run 10 miles.” His brother Richard who is in the Army Reserves and is scheduled to deploy to the Persian Gulf in May hopes to visit the spot where Bohr Died and erect a plaque. Before leaving for the Middle East Jeffrey Bohr chastised his father for being skeptical about sending troops to Iraq. “He said ‘You don’t know as much about it as I do. We need to go there.’ He was ready to go. He was doing what he was good at.” — USA Today Associated Press Operation Iraqi Freedom

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