 WBIR News -- A Maryville Marine killed in action in Iraq has now returned home to be lain to rest.

The body of Sgt. Michael H. Ferschke, 22, arrived at McGhee Tyson Airbase at 9 Friday morning.
Some 400 members of the military lined the streets to salute Ferschke and show final respects.
Law enforcement officers and the Patriot Guard escorted the body to Smith Mortuary.
His family will receive friends there from 5 to 8 p.m. Sunday. A funeral mass will be held at 10:30 Monday morning at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church in Alcoa.
Burial will follow at the Tennessee Veterans Cemetery on Lyons View Pike in Knoxville.
Sgt. Ferschke died Aug. 10 while supporting combat operations in Salah ad Din Province, Iraq. He had joined the Marine Corps in October, 2003 and specialized in reconnaissance. He was promoted to the rank of sergeant last July.
His awards and decorations included the Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal, Sea Service Deployment Ribbon (third award), Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Iraqi Campaign Medal, the National Defense Service Medal and the Navy and Marine Corps Parachutist Insignia.
==Another news story==
MARYVILLE, Tenn. — A Marine who had married about a month ago and just found out his wife was going to have a baby was shot to death in Iraq during a house search, his family said Tuesday.
Sgt. Michael Ferschke Jr. died Sunday, his father said. Ferschke, 22, of Maryville, was assigned to the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 3rd Marine Division and stationed in Okinawa, Japan.
Ferschke’s father, Michael said his son had been in Iraq since March. The son and his wife had just found out they were going to have a baby, due in January.
Ferschke said his son was born in Rhode Island, but grew up and went to high school in Maryville, about 16 miles south of Knoxville.
The younger Ferschke joined the Marines because he was looking for a challenge after high school, his father said.
“He looked at all the other forces, but that didn’t look like a challenge for him,” Ferschke said. “He loved his job and he loved what he was doing.”
Ferschke, who was a radio operator, completed a diving school while in the Marines and hoped to become a diving instructor.
He had the option of finishing his service in the Marines in October, but he felt an obligation to stay and serve a tour in Iraq, like many of his fellow Marines, his father said.
His mother, Robin, said Ferschke was an energetic and adventurous teenager who liked riding BMX bikes and skiing. They talked a lot by phone even while he was in Japan and he was always giving advice or trying to help his friends and family, she said.
“He was like a male ‘Dear Abby,”’ Robin Ferschke said. “He helped me through things and I helped him. He always used to say his dad was his hero, but he’s our hero.”
Ferschke said her son was excited about becoming a father and talked a lot about the things he wanted to share with his child.
“He had lots of dreams, but the only one he wanted was to make sure that child grew up to be the best,” she said.
In a Father’s Day message aired on WBIR-TV in Knoxville in June, Ferschke greeted his father and brother from Camp Fallujah, Iraq, and said, “Hopefully next year, I’ll be down there with you guys. Have a couple of beers, celebrate. Love you guys.”
Ferschke is also survived by his brother, Raymond Lambert, and his sister, Alissa Bridgman. Funeral services are planned for Monday in Maryville.
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I would just like to say thank you for your service and sacrifice for our Country. And to your family and loved ones, I wish to extend my deepest sympathy.
Semper Fi Devil Dog!