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Remembering Those who Lost Their Lives
in the Iraq War of 2003 - 2006

 
 
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Rex Chris Kenyon

   
Individuals US

Daily Breeze -- When the credits rolled after "Top Gun," Rex "Chris" Kenyon stayed for a second showing, never leaving his theater seat.

Next came requests for flying lessons. As an El Segundo High School student, he took his first helicopter flight at Torrance Municipal Airport

Kenyon was hooked.

He was flying aerial patrols Monday in an Apache helicopter with another Army pilot when they were shot down in Baghdad, Iraq. Both pilots died.

Kenyon was a 34-year-old chief warrant officer for the Army, a career soldier still amazed he was paid to fly helicopters, his father, Rex Kenyon, said.

"He did what he did and loved what he did," the father said. "He used to say, 'Where else can you work where they give you a $30 million helicopter, all the gas you wanted and all you have to do is fly around?' "

He was meant to fly, the elder Kenyon said.

As a freshman at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, during the Gulf War, Kenyon's hand shot up when Army recruiters asked a class who would like to fly helicopters for the military.



An appointment to the Air Force Academy had not panned out, and this was his chance.

Before he knew it, Kenyon was whisked away for basic training, Rex said.

He received the silver wings of an Army aviator and was appointed as a warrant officer after finishing the rotary wing aviator course at Fort Rucker, Ala., in 1993.

His love of flight took him all around the world: Germany, Bosnia, South Korea. Kenyon was sent to Iraq in November, leaving behind a wife and 5-year-old daughter. He expected to stay a year.

The night before Kenyon died, he and his father chatted for an hour. It was the longest conversation they'd had in awhile. He talked about the good he thought he was doing every day.

"They knew they were making a difference," the elder Kenyon said. "One of the things he told us was that when he was flying, you could see the kids walking to school and playing soccer and people getting their lives back together."

Before saying goodbye, Kenyon told his father he was going to watch a movie and go to bed because he had to get up early and fly. The next day, as he was looking for "bad guys," Kenyon's aircraft was shot down.

At home in Big Bear, the elder Kenyon began to worry when he heard a helicopter was shot down. He got scared when he found out it was an Apache.

He went online looking for his son, who had kept in contact with e-mail and instant messages. It was evening in Iraq, and Kenyon should have been online by then. He wasn't.

Rex and Beverly Kenyon received official word of their son's death at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Funeral services are planned for Jan. 27.

On Friday, Kenyon's father and mother were in Copperas Cove, Texas, working out details of their son's funeral and thinking of him every moment.

Tall and lean with strawberry-blond hair, he recently laid tile and wood flooring in his house. He raised koi fish in a massive pond out back.

Kenyon was dedicated and helpful at every turn, showing up to work with the stomach flu because he knew he was needed, his father said.

In high school, Kenyon was captain of the cross-country team, and loved to cruise in a cranberry MGB convertible.

"Chris was an outgoing, likable young man," said Terry Crystal, Kenyon's high school cross-country coach. "If you asked for help or assistance, he was always glad to help you or assist you."

An honor student and Eagle Scout, Kenyon worked at a Boy Scout summer camp as a youth, his father said.

"He was a wonderful, wonderful person," Scoutmaster Shelly Butler said. "Chris was one of those guys: a super, super nice guy. He did what he always wanted to do. He went into the Army and started flying helicopters."

In Kenyon's honor, his father hopes to establish a "campership" that will help fund camp fees for children of active military officers stationed in Fort Hood, Texas.

"He loved Scouting and being a camp counselor," the elder Kenyon said. "We were very proud of our son. He never called without saying, 'I love you.' "

 

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Rex Chris Kenyon
Authored by: LWAHL1 on Monday, January 23 2006 @ 04:03 PM MST
REX THANK YOU FOR SERVING OUR COUNTRY. FOR BEING A MILITARY BROTHER TO OUR SON SGT GREGORY L. WAHL DRAGON SOLDIER KIA BALAD, IRAQ 05-03-04. HE CONSIDERED YOU HIS BROTHER. REX YOU HAVE NOT DIED IN VAIN! YOU ARE AN AMERICAN HERO! AN YOU ANSWERED A CALLING IN LIFE THAT VERY FEW AMERICANS DARE TOO! WHY? IT TAKE'S AVERY SPECIAL UNSELFISH INDIVIDUAL TO BE A PROFESSIONAL SOLDIER. WILLING TO RISK YOU LIFE DAY IN AND DAY OUT. TO PROTECT AND SAFEGUARD OUR WAY OF LIFE. WHILE THOSE THAT DON'T SERVE. TAKE FOR GRANTED OUR FREEDOM AND LIBERITIES. REX YOU ARE SOMEONE'S SOMEONE AND SOMEONE TO THE WAHL FAMILY. AN YOU SHOULD BE SOMEONE TO EVERY AMERICAN. YOU HAVE TOUCHED MANY HEARTS. SO YOU HAVE ACCOMPLISHED MUCH. TO THOSE HEARTS YOU TOUCHED. ALL WILL SHARE WITH YOUR FAMILY THOSE PRECIOUS MOMENTS. SURE SOME SAD, SOME HAPPY MOST OF ALL YOU SHARED YOU SHOULDER WITH THOSE DEAR TO YOU. I HAVE SHED MANY MANY TEARS, NEVER SEEMS TO REALLY END. FROMNEW OF MY SON AND TODAY. THE TEARS ROLL DOWN MY CHEEK FOR YOU REX. YOUR LIKE ANOTHER SON. GREGORY AND YOU NEVER KNEW ONE ANOTHER UNTIL NOW. NOW YOU ARE TOGETHER ANBD THAT IS A COMFORT. THAT OUR FALLEN ARE TOGETHER! NOW WE THE FALLEN FAMILIES MUST HONOUR YOU (REX) AND YOUR BROTHER'S AND SISTER'S WITH YOU. YOU ALL HAVE MADE AMERICAN ALOT SAFER SINCE 911! AN YOU GIVEN THE PEOPLE OF IRAQ HOPE. THAT ONE DAY ALL WILL LIVE IN PEACE. PLEASE CHECKOUT WWW.FALLENHEROESMEMORIAL.COM CLICK ON LINKS, MANY MANY ORGANIZATION TO HELP YOUR FAMILY. AN REACH OUT TO YOUR COMMUNITY AND POLITICAL LEADERS TODAY. REQUEST A STREET BE NAMED IN YOUR HONOUR REX. AFTER ALL YOU SERVED MORE THEN YOUR COUNTRY. YOU SERVED YOUR COMMUNITY, COUNTY AND STATE AS WELL. YOU ARE REMEMBERED TODAY, TOMORROW AND FOREVER REX. GOD BLESS!
Rex Chris Kenyon
Authored by: anonymous on Wednesday, February 08 2006 @ 06:12 AM MST
CWO Kenyon,
Sir, I would like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice-not just in OIF, but in Bosnia as well. And to your family, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

A grateful citizen
Rex Chris Kenyon
Authored by: anonymous on Tuesday, May 23 2006 @ 08:52 PM MDT
dear kenyon family. my name is james eisman. i went to high school with chris. i was on the X country team with him and he was a very close and totally awesome friend/bro. we were going to meet in the airforce academy in a coupla years after high school! In honor of my friend and his great selflessness and definitely being the most righteous of all my friends i am naming my soon to be born son, Kenyon, in honor of what we all used to call him in high school. you should be very proud of the son you raised, he was the best of all of us and God needs him somwhere else right now to continue his good work.
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