POW-MIA  United States  United Kingdom  Denmark  Bulgaria  Poland  Spain  Ukraine  Italy  Thailand  Estonia  El Salvador  Netherlands  Slovakia  Latvia  Hungary  Australia  Kazakhstan  Fiji  Romania  Canada  South Korea
   The Iraq Page
 
Remembering Those who Lost Their Lives
in the Iraq War of 2003 - 2006

 
 
 Welcome to The Iraq Page Sunday, October 12 2008 @ 01:39 AM EDT  
 Home  :  Contribute  :  Directory  :  Web Resources  :  List of War Dead  :  Printable List of Dead  :  About the Iraq Page  

William C. Chambers

   
Individuals US

WTVC 9 -- A Ringgold, Georgia family found out this morning their Marine died in the Iraq war.

Darrell and Kathy Chambers spoke to their son, 20 year old William C. Chambers, Saturday night, his last night alive.

His parents choked back tears. His father Darrell recounted their last conversation, "The night before he died." Chambers said. Will Chambers' mother finished his father's sentence. "He was sitting on the banks of the Euphrates River, talking to us at that point," Kathy Chambers said.

The very next morning, the Marines say Lance Corporal Chamber's boat capsized in the Euphrates River.

The Marines delivered the devastating news to his family.

The casualty report stated Chambers was on a combat operation when his boat sunk about 75 feet from the banks of Abul Hyatt...that city is in the Anbar province.

Chambers was in Charlie Company, second battalion, third platoon.

The 2005 graduate of Ringgold High school went into boot camp in January of last year and started his first tour in Iraq this March, according to his mother.

He was the oldest of four children, loved by them and his school.

His mother says the close knit relationship will help heal, "Will was all about family. Him and the other kids was close. It's devastating to all of us. It's a help knowing they loved each other as much as they did."

Lance Corporal Chambers stayed in touch with his favorite teacher, Jeanne Chambers. She (no relation) taught him English in the 11th grade. She described him as 100% Ringgold and representative of many of the men fighting in this war. "Just a young man who loves his community from which he comes, he loves his school. He loves his hometown, he loves his family," Jeanne Chambers said.

His JROTC instuctor at Ringgold High, Major James Creamer, remembered him like a son. "He was high spirited, very adventurous. Also very caring, he did a lot of community service in the town," Major Creamer said.

His family is awaiting word on when his body will return.

They plan to bury him in Ringgold.

 

What's Related

Story Options

Trackback

Trackback URL for this entry: http://iraq.pigstye.net/trackback.php/WilliamCChambers

No trackback comments for this entry.
William C. Chambers | 1 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
William C. Chambers
Authored by: anonymous on Friday, July 06 2007 @ 06:58 PM EDT
William,
I would 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!

 Copyright © 2008 The Iraq Page
 All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.
Powered By Geeklog 
Created this page in 0.41 seconds