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

 
 
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Jeremy M. Loveless

   
Individuals USwww.oregonlive.com -- Few people have figured things out by age 25, but Army Spcl. Jeremy Loveless believed he was well on his way. Early on, he'd found a strong faith and established a happy family. But in the past three years he'd found something else he'd been looking for -- his footing on an ascending career path.

A stint in the Army as a field medic, treating injured Iraqis, wasn't supposed to be Loveless' final stop, but only an interim destination to help him land a job. On Memorial Day, however, Loveless was killed near Mosul, Iraq. He is the 58th soldier with ties to Oregon to die in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the second graduate of Gresham High School to die.

People who knew Loveless in high school never pictured him in the Army. In high school, he was one of those kids who makes an impression on his teachers, though, not because he was a star (although he did play varsity soccer) but because he didn't live in the cool zone most teenagers inhabit, or at least pretend to occupy. Loveless was open, warm and inclined to heart-to-hearts. "That's the hardest thing for me," counselor Scott Lipner said Wednesday. Jeremy "was someone who was genuinely here to help others."


Loveless helped to start a group at Gresham High for Christian athletes and considered becoming a youth minister. He tried many things, including window washing, which helped him conquer his fear of heights. Three years ago, his friend and mentor Joe Schwab encouraged Loveless to try volunteer firefighting in Estacada, and Loveless -- an avid outdoorsman and rock climber -- became hooked.

Joining the Army was a way to pay for paramedic training, and secure a future for his family. As hard as it was to be so far away from wife, Melissa, and 4-year-old daughter, Chloe, Loveless enjoyed sharpening his skills, with one caveat. "I'm learning a lot over here," he wrote on March 20. " . . . But . . . when I'm called to do my job, it means something went wrong and somebody got hurt."

On Monday, it was Jeremy Loveless. Daughter Chloe has been told her dad is gone, but thinks he may only be visiting heaven, just as he visited her last year in Estacada.

We wish, too, that he were coming home soon.

An account has been established for Chloe Loveless. You should be able to contribute at any Portland-area branch of Washington Mutual.
 

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Jeremy M. Loveless
Authored by: anonymous on Friday, June 02 2006 @ 08:47 PM EDT
Jeremy,
I would like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for our Country for our Country. And to your family, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.

"Semper Primus"(Always First)1st Inf. Motto
Jeremy M. Loveless
Authored by: anonymous on Saturday, June 03 2006 @ 08:32 AM EDT
What a tragic loss. Not only because we are losing our friend, but the world is losing out on a wonderful person, who would have done unsurmountable good for the fire service and all the lives he could have touched. Spoken well by Melissa, Jeremy died for his family, not for his country. He made a sacrafice to make life better for Melissa and Chloe. He will live on in our hearts. We love you Jeremy, and will miss you terribly! Soldier on!!!

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