Caleb Powers
Caleb Powers was the first born to John Byron Powers, Jr. and Tracy Wells.
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Name: Caleb Powers
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Caleb John Powers, 21, a lance corporal in the United States Marine Corp laid down his life while engaging the enemies of this nation Aug. 17, 2004, in the Al Anbar Province of Iraq.
Powers, a registered Cherokee Indian, was born Oct. 31, 1982, in Tillamook. He attended elementary school at Cloverdale. He lived at Child Help USA in Virginia, where he met his mentor, Admiral William Owens.
Powers moved to Mansfield, where he found a new life with his uncle and aunt, Mike and Jackie Tupling. The ranch became his home. He loved working on equipment, wheat farming and cattle ranching. Even during military service, he dreamed of owning a ranch of his own and often requested "Wheat Life," "Tractor" and "Grandpa's" magazines.
Powers attended Mansfield High School, graduating with 11 classmates in 2001. He enjoyed his vocational shop classes and playing football. He soon earned the nickname "Chippewa" by wearing his work boots to practice.
Caleb enlisted in the USMC Infantry Unit on his 18th birthday. He went to boot camp at Paris Island, S.C. and was then stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif. There he met a good friend, Jay Cooper of Laguna Beach, Calif., and they became fast friends over the past three years. He used Jay's house as a base of R & R operations. He was deployed to Okinawa, Japan. He then served in Iraq as a member of the Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division.
Powers loved to hunt, rappel, tear apart rigs, ride motorcycles and camp. People have called him "Sniper," "Bear Bait" and "Cubby." He wrote letters often and kept notebooks and journals. He loved his family and missed the ranch terribly. However, he believed in what he was doing and understood his mission.
Powers is survived by his father, John Powers Jr. of Pacific City; his mother, Tracy Powers of Stafford, Va.; his sister, Rosanna "Rosie" Powers and son Brody Lord of Manassas, Va.; half-brothers, David Bush of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Maximillian "Max" Craske of Petersburg, Alaska; special aunt/mom, Jackie (Mike) Tupling and cousins/sisters Mikia, Mikki and Mishell of Mansfield; grandparents, John and Anna Powers and Tom and Inez Tupling of Mansfield; Greg and Joani Wales of Fairfax, Va., and Charles and Carol Murray of Portland; great-grandmothers, Mavis Gilmore and Naomi Matthiesen of Mansfield and Lillie Bennett of Portland; aunts, JoAnn (Don) Randall and children Dayl (Laura) Randall, Mindi (Mat) Farris, all of Tigard; Rose (Wayne) Tupling and children Amanda (Jesse) Schafer, TJ Tupling and Cassidy Tupling, all of Mansfield; Ida (John) Monroe and children Anna (Jared) Chytka and Sean all of Pacific City; Patti (Ken) Peters and children Kimber, Cortney and Cameron, all of Mansfield; Delaine (Dr. Gary) Malsbury of Bay City and Alicia Woodson of Fairfax, Va.; uncles, Chris (Wendy) Powers of Buda, and Vern Bush, both of Texas; and many extended members.
He was preceeded in death by grandparents Ardell and Donna Bush.
Funeral services were Aug. 27, at Mansfield High School, followed by a graveside service at the Mansfield Cemetery, with Pastors Ric Bayless and Ernie Elmore officiating. The community of Mansfield served a dinner at Mansfield High School for all family and friends. Funeral arrangements were by Waterville Funeral Home.
Memorials may be made to the "Raise the Flag" Fund c/o Mansfield Booster Club, P.O. Box 154, Mansfield, WA 98830, to honor and memorialize Caleb's sacrifice. Donations may also be made to the "Caleb Powers Memorial Fund" at any Wells Fargo Bank Branch to assist with memorial arrangements.
A Web page honoring Powers has been created at: http://homepage.mac.com/judecooper/Caleb(A)/PhotoAlbum17.html
Powers, a registered Cherokee Indian, was born Oct. 31, 1982, in Tillamook. He attended elementary school at Cloverdale. He lived at Child Help USA in Virginia, where he met his mentor, Admiral William Owens.
Powers moved to Mansfield, where he found a new life with his uncle and aunt, Mike and Jackie Tupling. The ranch became his home. He loved working on equipment, wheat farming and cattle ranching. Even during military service, he dreamed of owning a ranch of his own and often requested "Wheat Life," "Tractor" and "Grandpa's" magazines.
Powers attended Mansfield High School, graduating with 11 classmates in 2001. He enjoyed his vocational shop classes and playing football. He soon earned the nickname "Chippewa" by wearing his work boots to practice.
Caleb enlisted in the USMC Infantry Unit on his 18th birthday. He went to boot camp at Paris Island, S.C. and was then stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif. There he met a good friend, Jay Cooper of Laguna Beach, Calif., and they became fast friends over the past three years. He used Jay's house as a base of R & R operations. He was deployed to Okinawa, Japan. He then served in Iraq as a member of the Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division.
Powers loved to hunt, rappel, tear apart rigs, ride motorcycles and camp. People have called him "Sniper," "Bear Bait" and "Cubby." He wrote letters often and kept notebooks and journals. He loved his family and missed the ranch terribly. However, he believed in what he was doing and understood his mission.
Powers is survived by his father, John Powers Jr. of Pacific City; his mother, Tracy Powers of Stafford, Va.; his sister, Rosanna "Rosie" Powers and son Brody Lord of Manassas, Va.; half-brothers, David Bush of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Maximillian "Max" Craske of Petersburg, Alaska; special aunt/mom, Jackie (Mike) Tupling and cousins/sisters Mikia, Mikki and Mishell of Mansfield; grandparents, John and Anna Powers and Tom and Inez Tupling of Mansfield; Greg and Joani Wales of Fairfax, Va., and Charles and Carol Murray of Portland; great-grandmothers, Mavis Gilmore and Naomi Matthiesen of Mansfield and Lillie Bennett of Portland; aunts, JoAnn (Don) Randall and children Dayl (Laura) Randall, Mindi (Mat) Farris, all of Tigard; Rose (Wayne) Tupling and children Amanda (Jesse) Schafer, TJ Tupling and Cassidy Tupling, all of Mansfield; Ida (John) Monroe and children Anna (Jared) Chytka and Sean all of Pacific City; Patti (Ken) Peters and children Kimber, Cortney and Cameron, all of Mansfield; Delaine (Dr. Gary) Malsbury of Bay City and Alicia Woodson of Fairfax, Va.; uncles, Chris (Wendy) Powers of Buda, and Vern Bush, both of Texas; and many extended members.
He was preceeded in death by grandparents Ardell and Donna Bush.
Funeral services were Aug. 27, at Mansfield High School, followed by a graveside service at the Mansfield Cemetery, with Pastors Ric Bayless and Ernie Elmore officiating. The community of Mansfield served a dinner at Mansfield High School for all family and friends. Funeral arrangements were by Waterville Funeral Home.
Memorials may be made to the "Raise the Flag" Fund c/o Mansfield Booster Club, P.O. Box 154, Mansfield, WA 98830, to honor and memorialize Caleb's sacrifice. Donations may also be made to the "Caleb Powers Memorial Fund" at any Wells Fargo Bank Branch to assist with memorial arrangements.
A Web page honoring Powers has been created at: http://homepage.mac.com/judecooper/Caleb(A)/PhotoAlbum17.html
Headlight-Herald, Sept. 1, 2004
Corporal Rosanna Powers kneels by her brother's grave to say her final goodbye
yesterday, in Arlington National Cemetery. Caleb Powers, 21, was killed while standing
guard at his unit's compound in the Al Anbar province in western Iraq. One day after
her brother was killed, her fiancé, Sgt. Richard Lord, was also killed while on duty in Iraq.
Corporal Rosanna Powers kneels by her brother's grave to say her final goodbye
yesterday, in Arlington National Cemetery. Caleb Powers, 21, was killed while standing
guard at his unit's compound in the Al Anbar province in western Iraq. One day after
her brother was killed, her fiancé, Sgt. Richard Lord, was also killed while on duty in Iraq.
Caleb John Powers – Lance Corporal, United States Marine Corps
NEWS RELEASE from the United States Department of Defense
No. 805-04
DoD Identifies Marine Casualties
The Department of Defense announced today the death of three Marines who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Lance Corporal Caleb J. Powers, 21, of Manfield, Washington, died Aug 17, 2004, due to
enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Lance Corporal Powers was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, Camp Pendleton, California.
Lance Corporal Dustin R. Fitzgerald, 22, of Huber Heights, Ohio, died August 18, 2004, in a non-combat related vehicle incident in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Lance Corporal Fitzgerald was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 1/2, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
Sergeant Harvey E. Parkerson III, 27, Yuba City, California, died August 18, 2004, due to enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Sgt. Parkerson was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 1/4, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), Camp Pendleton, California.
NEWS RELEASE from the United States Department of Defense
No. 805-04
DoD Identifies Marine Casualties
The Department of Defense announced today the death of three Marines who were supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Lance Corporal Caleb J. Powers, 21, of Manfield, Washington, died Aug 17, 2004, due to
enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Lance Corporal Powers was assigned to 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, Camp Pendleton, California.
Lance Corporal Dustin R. Fitzgerald, 22, of Huber Heights, Ohio, died August 18, 2004, in a non-combat related vehicle incident in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Lance Corporal Fitzgerald was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 1/2, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
Sergeant Harvey E. Parkerson III, 27, Yuba City, California, died August 18, 2004, due to enemy action in Al Anbar Province, Iraq. Sgt. Parkerson was assigned to Battalion Landing Team 1/4, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), Camp Pendleton, California.
Mansfield Remembers A Marine
The Iraq conflict claimed the life of a Central Washington Marine. Family and friends of Lance Corporal Caleb Powers, along with the entire town of Mansfield, gathered Friday to remember him.
Among those grieving for the young Marine, his sister Rosanna. Herself a Marine, Rosanna got the news of her brother's death, the day before learning her fiancé had also been shot and killed in Iraq.
Rosanna and her baby boy will return home to Florida Saturday to bury her fiancé, Sergeant Richard Lord. Her brother will be honored with a marker in Arlington National Cemetery as well as the one in Mansfield.
Marine's life, death: An American story
The short, brave and tragic life of Caleb Powers speaks to
American agony over Iraq war
In life, Caleb Powers was a hero, pure and simple.
In death, depending on one's point of view, the young Marine might be considered a hero, a martyr, a victim–or all three.
His wrenching and complex story of triumph and tragedy, ending with his August 17, 2004, death in Iraq crystallizes the conflicting emotions currently raging over the war.
The 21-year-old Marine Corps Lance Corporal never saw the sniper who shot him while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq. This time he never had a chance to fight back the way he did during a troubled childhood.
Powers grew up battling unseen forces that might well have crushed most others.
Doctors were puzzled by Caleb's childhood emotional problems, his mother, Tracy Powers of North Stafford, said. She said attention deficit disorder and bipolar disorder were suggested as possibilities and Caleb was put on different drugs including Ritalin and lithium.
A professional who saw Caleb as a child said he diagnosed the boy with both attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and post-traumatic stress syndrome. The second illness is a problem that, ironically, is often associated with soldiers returning from war.
Caleb was traumatized by an incident that occurred when he was 8 years old, the newspaper was told. The principal at his elementary school reportedly called his mother to come pick him up because he had acted up in class, apparently due to ADHD.
Tracy Powers put Caleb in her car, which was running, and got out to talk to the principal. Caleb, who was bouncing around in the car, accidentally threw the vehicle into drive. It ran over the principal, breaking his leg.
Caleb reportedly was tortured by that memory for years before being convinced he could not blame himself for an accident that happened when he was so young.
His mother gave up custody of Caleb so he could be placed at the Culpeper County location of Childhelp USA, which works with abuse, abandoned or emotionally troubled children.
In photograph after photograph of the young boy at parties early in his time at Childhelp, Caleb looks detached and numb while other children are laughing and frolicking.
“Caleb never played” as a child, said Eunice Haigler, who worked with him at Childhelp. Many of her photos show him dressed in Marine Corps garb. Almost eerily, several also show him in the role of an angel wearing wings and a halo in a Childhelp play.
The indomitable will of a young boy who dreamed of becoming a Marine persevered, friends said. But the dedication and enthusiasm of a young Marine could not.
The only battle in life he could not win was against an enemy crouching in the dark with a rifle during a controversial war some contend was at best ill-timed and, at worst, unnecessary.
His mother is comforted by her belief that if Caleb and other American troops had not gone to Iraq, U.S. citizens would be dying at home now.
On the other side is his mother's boyfriend, Lee Russell Sr. of North Stafford. Russell, who grew close to Caleb in recent years and also has a son who has fought in Iraq, is bitter. He says Caleb might be alive if President Bush had focused on Afghanistan instead of deciding to invade Iraq last year.
According to The Associated Press, 967 American troops had been killed in Iraq as of Wednesday.
Tracy Powers, who recently worked at Costco at Spotsylvania Mall and now for a computer software company in Richmond, backs President Bush.
“If they weren't fighting the war on terror in Iraq, they might be doing it here in the streets,” Caleb's mother said.
She said she is “not political,” but believes anti-American forces crossing the borders into Iraq to fight would have come here.
Russell sides with opponents of the president's policy.
“I firmly believe we should have finished the job in Afghanistan before we went anywhere else,” Russell said. “I believe we got rid of a bad guy [Saddam Hussein], but I wish we would have kept focused on al-Qaida and chased them down. There's still a threat today.”
Lee Russell Sr. emphasized that Caleb never had doubts about his mission, nor does his own son, U.S. Army Sergeant Michael Russell.
“But I'm really ticked off that Caleb got killed over there,” the elder Russell said. “It's devastating. We all really lost someone special.”
Four other friends of Caleb from Virginia to California said invading Iraq was the right thing to do.
No one believed that Caleb ever disagreed with anything the Marine Corps did–even though he was busted in rank from Corporal to Lance Corporal for an unspecified infraction.
Haigler said the fact that Caleb handled the demotion without bitterness showed both how far he had come and how much he loved the Corps. She said he thrived on Marine discipline.
Every Halloween, Caleb “dressed up like a soldier,” Tracy Powers said. “I found an Army cot at a yard sale, and he slept on it every night. He knew all his life [that being a Marine] was what he wanted to do.”
Caleb's father left before he was born, his mother said. By the third grade, a crippling mental illness placed the boy firmly under a cloud of stigma.
He was kicked out of a grade school that couldn't deal with his emotional problems, she said. Childhelp USA, however, set him on his desired course.
There was a service for Caleb yesterday in Mansfield, Washington – a tiny farming community of 350 where he spent his high school years with an aunt and uncle, Jackie and Mike Tupling.
Friends want him to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, but it could take time for that to be approved.
John Bacon, who was commander of Caleb's Young Marine unit at Quantico who gave him his first bike and remained close to him until the end, said Arlington is where Caleb belongs. “That's the place for heroes on the battlefield.”
But Bacon added that the desires of the family are paramount.
It wasn't clear yesterday what would happen, Haigler said.
“I'd like to see it,” Lee Russell Sr. said about Arlington. “For a kid that grew up looking at the Marine Corps the way he did, that's the place he probably should be.”
Tracy Powers, though, said Caleb was more at ease in the slow-paced environment of Mansfield than in bustling Northern Virginia. She thinks Mansfield might be a better final resting place because her son loved farm life and had many friends there.
And, she said, “I'd like to have closure” rather than waiting for a government decision.
Caleb Powers, who overcame severe emotional problems as a boy to attain his dream of becoming a Marine, and then died in Iraq last month at age 21, will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery at 10 a.m. on October 14, 2004.
“That's the place for heroes fallen on the battlefield,” said John Bacon of Los Angeles, a lifelong friend who commanded a Young Marines unit based at Quantico that Powers joined at age 10.
Lance Corporal Powers, the son of Tracy Powers of North Stafford, was only two weeks from being sent home when he was killed by a sniper while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq, about 40 miles from Fallujah, on August 17, 2004.
It was a week of unimaginable agony for the Powers family.
The next day, the man who was to become Caleb Powers' brother-in-law, Marine Sergeant Rick Lord of Florida, was killed in action in Anbar province, Iraq. The 24-year-old Lord and Caleb's sister Rosie planned to marry upon his return from Iraq. Rosie Powers, also a Marine, lives in Manassas.
Caleb Powers' uplifting and tragic story of heroic perseverance, then death at the hands of an unseen enemy has attracted the attention of national media including CNN and USA Today.
A funeral was held for Powers on August 27, 2004, in Mansfield, Washington, a tiny farming community with a population of just 350. But more than 200 people attended the service at Mansfield High School, where Powers played football.
His mother said she was overwhelmed that little Mansfield closed all its shops and its grocery store for the funeral.
As a boy, Powers spent three years at Childhelp in Culpeper County because of behavioral problems. There, he was inspired by Bacon and the idea of becoming a Marine that turned his life around. At Childhelp, he was befriended by Navy Admiral William Owens, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who became his mentor.
Marine Remembered As Striver, Role Model
Iraq War Casualty Had Overcome A Difficult Childhood, Friends Say
In a ceremony all too familiar to military families, an American flag, folded with precision into a crisp triangle, was gently handed to Rosanna Powers yesterday.
Powers, a Marine corporal on inactive reserve, gathered with family at Arlington National Cemetery to inter the ashes of her brother, Lance Corporal Caleb J. Powers.
The 21-year-old Marine was killed August 17, 2004, in western Iraq, the victim of an insurgent's bullet as he stood guard at his unit's compound in Al Anbar province.
Marine Corporal Rosanna Powers receives the flag from Staff Sergeant Robert Dorsey
during services for her brother at Arlington National Cemetery.
Rosanna Powers was still struggling to cope with her brother's death when she got word that her fiance, Sergeant Richard Lord, 24, the father of her young son, had been killed in Iraq. Lord died August 18, 2004, one day after Caleb Powers and also in Al Anbar.
Imagine “your worst nightmare,” Rosanna Powers said yesterday. “I couldn't believe this could actually happen to someone.”
Friends of Caleb Powers lovingly portrayed him as a young man who cobbled together the shards of a tumultuous childhood and transformed them into the stuff of role models — offering hope to disadvantaged youth and children from broken homes.
Powers's parents divorced when he was a small child. Described by those who knew him as a high-energy child — years later he was found to have attention deficit disorder — Powers was sent to a group home, where he stayed until age 9, when he was placed in a residential facility run by Childhelp USA, a nonprofit agency that serves abused and neglected children.
Officials with the organization say Powers was among the first residents of the Alice C. Tyler Village of Childhelp East in Northern Virginia.
It was at a mentoring session that Powers met Adm. William A. Owens, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who saw the shy, withdrawn boy standing apart from his peers and chose him to be his “special friend,” a Childhelp designation for its big brother- styled program.
Officials said Powers flourished, and they credit Owens with drawing out the young boy, taking him on a special submarine tour and to the White House, among other high-profile excursions. They spent many weekends together, forging a strong bond, friends said.
“You can imagine what that did for Caleb's self-esteem,” said Childhelp co-founder Sara O'Meara.
When he was 13, Powers was taken in by extended family in the farming community of Mansfield, Wash., where he lived until he joined the Marines in 2001, enlisting on his 18th birthday.
Childhelp officials say Powers returned often to lend a hand with fundraising events, sometimes appearing alongside celebrities and other notables. He also spoke to the children there, encouraging them to consider a bright future.
O'Meara recalled that one of Powers's pep talks went like this: “Believe these people when they [say] you can make anything you want out of yourself. It's true. Look at me.”
She added: “He knew what life was about. Giving back.”
At the time of his death, Powers was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division from Camp Pendleton.
Jay Cooper met Powers at the California base. It was a chance encounter at a movie theater, and the entertainment industry executive who works in fundraising said he and Powers were surprised to discover that they both had ties to Childhelp. They became close friends.
“It's been painful for everyone,” said Cooper, who attended the service at Arlington.
“You just don't know who he could have been and how great his contributions would have been,” Cooper said, his voice choked with emotion. “He touched so many people in his short life that he'll always be remembered. We know that.”
Lance Corporal Caleb Powers, the troubled child from Lignum who grew up to be a Marine, then died in Iraq in August 2004, was interred today at Arlington National Cemetery.
About 100 people attended the 15-minute graveside ceremony, complete with a rifle volley and bugler playing Taps.
Powers, 21, was shot by a sniper while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq, on August 17, 2004.
Today’s burial at Arlington National Cemetery was at least the third memorial service for the Marine. His unit — Fox Company, 2nd Batallion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division — held a memorial service for him in Iraq, and family and friends held another one 10 days after his death in Mansfield, Washington, where he graduated from high school.
The Iraq conflict claimed the life of a Central Washington Marine. Family and friends of Lance Corporal Caleb Powers, along with the entire town of Mansfield, gathered Friday to remember him.
Among those grieving for the young Marine, his sister Rosanna. Herself a Marine, Rosanna got the news of her brother's death, the day before learning her fiancé had also been shot and killed in Iraq.
Rosanna and her baby boy will return home to Florida Saturday to bury her fiancé, Sergeant Richard Lord. Her brother will be honored with a marker in Arlington National Cemetery as well as the one in Mansfield.
Marine's life, death: An American story
The short, brave and tragic life of Caleb Powers speaks to
American agony over Iraq war
In life, Caleb Powers was a hero, pure and simple.
In death, depending on one's point of view, the young Marine might be considered a hero, a martyr, a victim–or all three.
His wrenching and complex story of triumph and tragedy, ending with his August 17, 2004, death in Iraq crystallizes the conflicting emotions currently raging over the war.
The 21-year-old Marine Corps Lance Corporal never saw the sniper who shot him while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq. This time he never had a chance to fight back the way he did during a troubled childhood.
Powers grew up battling unseen forces that might well have crushed most others.
Doctors were puzzled by Caleb's childhood emotional problems, his mother, Tracy Powers of North Stafford, said. She said attention deficit disorder and bipolar disorder were suggested as possibilities and Caleb was put on different drugs including Ritalin and lithium.
A professional who saw Caleb as a child said he diagnosed the boy with both attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder and post-traumatic stress syndrome. The second illness is a problem that, ironically, is often associated with soldiers returning from war.
Caleb was traumatized by an incident that occurred when he was 8 years old, the newspaper was told. The principal at his elementary school reportedly called his mother to come pick him up because he had acted up in class, apparently due to ADHD.
Tracy Powers put Caleb in her car, which was running, and got out to talk to the principal. Caleb, who was bouncing around in the car, accidentally threw the vehicle into drive. It ran over the principal, breaking his leg.
Caleb reportedly was tortured by that memory for years before being convinced he could not blame himself for an accident that happened when he was so young.
His mother gave up custody of Caleb so he could be placed at the Culpeper County location of Childhelp USA, which works with abuse, abandoned or emotionally troubled children.
In photograph after photograph of the young boy at parties early in his time at Childhelp, Caleb looks detached and numb while other children are laughing and frolicking.
“Caleb never played” as a child, said Eunice Haigler, who worked with him at Childhelp. Many of her photos show him dressed in Marine Corps garb. Almost eerily, several also show him in the role of an angel wearing wings and a halo in a Childhelp play.
The indomitable will of a young boy who dreamed of becoming a Marine persevered, friends said. But the dedication and enthusiasm of a young Marine could not.
The only battle in life he could not win was against an enemy crouching in the dark with a rifle during a controversial war some contend was at best ill-timed and, at worst, unnecessary.
His mother is comforted by her belief that if Caleb and other American troops had not gone to Iraq, U.S. citizens would be dying at home now.
On the other side is his mother's boyfriend, Lee Russell Sr. of North Stafford. Russell, who grew close to Caleb in recent years and also has a son who has fought in Iraq, is bitter. He says Caleb might be alive if President Bush had focused on Afghanistan instead of deciding to invade Iraq last year.
According to The Associated Press, 967 American troops had been killed in Iraq as of Wednesday.
Tracy Powers, who recently worked at Costco at Spotsylvania Mall and now for a computer software company in Richmond, backs President Bush.
“If they weren't fighting the war on terror in Iraq, they might be doing it here in the streets,” Caleb's mother said.
She said she is “not political,” but believes anti-American forces crossing the borders into Iraq to fight would have come here.
Russell sides with opponents of the president's policy.
“I firmly believe we should have finished the job in Afghanistan before we went anywhere else,” Russell said. “I believe we got rid of a bad guy [Saddam Hussein], but I wish we would have kept focused on al-Qaida and chased them down. There's still a threat today.”
Lee Russell Sr. emphasized that Caleb never had doubts about his mission, nor does his own son, U.S. Army Sergeant Michael Russell.
“But I'm really ticked off that Caleb got killed over there,” the elder Russell said. “It's devastating. We all really lost someone special.”
Four other friends of Caleb from Virginia to California said invading Iraq was the right thing to do.
No one believed that Caleb ever disagreed with anything the Marine Corps did–even though he was busted in rank from Corporal to Lance Corporal for an unspecified infraction.
Haigler said the fact that Caleb handled the demotion without bitterness showed both how far he had come and how much he loved the Corps. She said he thrived on Marine discipline.
Every Halloween, Caleb “dressed up like a soldier,” Tracy Powers said. “I found an Army cot at a yard sale, and he slept on it every night. He knew all his life [that being a Marine] was what he wanted to do.”
Caleb's father left before he was born, his mother said. By the third grade, a crippling mental illness placed the boy firmly under a cloud of stigma.
He was kicked out of a grade school that couldn't deal with his emotional problems, she said. Childhelp USA, however, set him on his desired course.
There was a service for Caleb yesterday in Mansfield, Washington – a tiny farming community of 350 where he spent his high school years with an aunt and uncle, Jackie and Mike Tupling.
Friends want him to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery, but it could take time for that to be approved.
John Bacon, who was commander of Caleb's Young Marine unit at Quantico who gave him his first bike and remained close to him until the end, said Arlington is where Caleb belongs. “That's the place for heroes on the battlefield.”
But Bacon added that the desires of the family are paramount.
It wasn't clear yesterday what would happen, Haigler said.
“I'd like to see it,” Lee Russell Sr. said about Arlington. “For a kid that grew up looking at the Marine Corps the way he did, that's the place he probably should be.”
Tracy Powers, though, said Caleb was more at ease in the slow-paced environment of Mansfield than in bustling Northern Virginia. She thinks Mansfield might be a better final resting place because her son loved farm life and had many friends there.
And, she said, “I'd like to have closure” rather than waiting for a government decision.
Caleb Powers, who overcame severe emotional problems as a boy to attain his dream of becoming a Marine, and then died in Iraq last month at age 21, will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery at 10 a.m. on October 14, 2004.
“That's the place for heroes fallen on the battlefield,” said John Bacon of Los Angeles, a lifelong friend who commanded a Young Marines unit based at Quantico that Powers joined at age 10.
Lance Corporal Powers, the son of Tracy Powers of North Stafford, was only two weeks from being sent home when he was killed by a sniper while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq, about 40 miles from Fallujah, on August 17, 2004.
It was a week of unimaginable agony for the Powers family.
The next day, the man who was to become Caleb Powers' brother-in-law, Marine Sergeant Rick Lord of Florida, was killed in action in Anbar province, Iraq. The 24-year-old Lord and Caleb's sister Rosie planned to marry upon his return from Iraq. Rosie Powers, also a Marine, lives in Manassas.
Caleb Powers' uplifting and tragic story of heroic perseverance, then death at the hands of an unseen enemy has attracted the attention of national media including CNN and USA Today.
A funeral was held for Powers on August 27, 2004, in Mansfield, Washington, a tiny farming community with a population of just 350. But more than 200 people attended the service at Mansfield High School, where Powers played football.
His mother said she was overwhelmed that little Mansfield closed all its shops and its grocery store for the funeral.
As a boy, Powers spent three years at Childhelp in Culpeper County because of behavioral problems. There, he was inspired by Bacon and the idea of becoming a Marine that turned his life around. At Childhelp, he was befriended by Navy Admiral William Owens, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who became his mentor.
Marine Remembered As Striver, Role Model
Iraq War Casualty Had Overcome A Difficult Childhood, Friends Say
In a ceremony all too familiar to military families, an American flag, folded with precision into a crisp triangle, was gently handed to Rosanna Powers yesterday.
Powers, a Marine corporal on inactive reserve, gathered with family at Arlington National Cemetery to inter the ashes of her brother, Lance Corporal Caleb J. Powers.
The 21-year-old Marine was killed August 17, 2004, in western Iraq, the victim of an insurgent's bullet as he stood guard at his unit's compound in Al Anbar province.
Marine Corporal Rosanna Powers receives the flag from Staff Sergeant Robert Dorsey
during services for her brother at Arlington National Cemetery.
Rosanna Powers was still struggling to cope with her brother's death when she got word that her fiance, Sergeant Richard Lord, 24, the father of her young son, had been killed in Iraq. Lord died August 18, 2004, one day after Caleb Powers and also in Al Anbar.
Imagine “your worst nightmare,” Rosanna Powers said yesterday. “I couldn't believe this could actually happen to someone.”
Friends of Caleb Powers lovingly portrayed him as a young man who cobbled together the shards of a tumultuous childhood and transformed them into the stuff of role models — offering hope to disadvantaged youth and children from broken homes.
Powers's parents divorced when he was a small child. Described by those who knew him as a high-energy child — years later he was found to have attention deficit disorder — Powers was sent to a group home, where he stayed until age 9, when he was placed in a residential facility run by Childhelp USA, a nonprofit agency that serves abused and neglected children.
Officials with the organization say Powers was among the first residents of the Alice C. Tyler Village of Childhelp East in Northern Virginia.
It was at a mentoring session that Powers met Adm. William A. Owens, former vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who saw the shy, withdrawn boy standing apart from his peers and chose him to be his “special friend,” a Childhelp designation for its big brother- styled program.
Officials said Powers flourished, and they credit Owens with drawing out the young boy, taking him on a special submarine tour and to the White House, among other high-profile excursions. They spent many weekends together, forging a strong bond, friends said.
“You can imagine what that did for Caleb's self-esteem,” said Childhelp co-founder Sara O'Meara.
When he was 13, Powers was taken in by extended family in the farming community of Mansfield, Wash., where he lived until he joined the Marines in 2001, enlisting on his 18th birthday.
Childhelp officials say Powers returned often to lend a hand with fundraising events, sometimes appearing alongside celebrities and other notables. He also spoke to the children there, encouraging them to consider a bright future.
O'Meara recalled that one of Powers's pep talks went like this: “Believe these people when they [say] you can make anything you want out of yourself. It's true. Look at me.”
She added: “He knew what life was about. Giving back.”
At the time of his death, Powers was assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division from Camp Pendleton.
Jay Cooper met Powers at the California base. It was a chance encounter at a movie theater, and the entertainment industry executive who works in fundraising said he and Powers were surprised to discover that they both had ties to Childhelp. They became close friends.
“It's been painful for everyone,” said Cooper, who attended the service at Arlington.
“You just don't know who he could have been and how great his contributions would have been,” Cooper said, his voice choked with emotion. “He touched so many people in his short life that he'll always be remembered. We know that.”
Lance Corporal Caleb Powers, the troubled child from Lignum who grew up to be a Marine, then died in Iraq in August 2004, was interred today at Arlington National Cemetery.
About 100 people attended the 15-minute graveside ceremony, complete with a rifle volley and bugler playing Taps.
Powers, 21, was shot by a sniper while on guard duty in Ramadi, Iraq, on August 17, 2004.
Today’s burial at Arlington National Cemetery was at least the third memorial service for the Marine. His unit — Fox Company, 2nd Batallion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division — held a memorial service for him in Iraq, and family and friends held another one 10 days after his death in Mansfield, Washington, where he graduated from high school.
This profile is part of a Memorial Day project remembering the fallen servicemen of Chelan and Douglas counties. See the full project here.
Among the last things Caleb Powers ever did before he was killed by sniper fire in Iraq was talk about life back home in Mansfield.
“He was in a good mood; talking about, you know, farming and biking,” said Brandon Hill, a corpsman in Powers’ infantry platoon. As a corpsman, Hill’s job was to treat the wounded.
On Aug. 17, 2004, the marines took turns on guard duty atop a roof while those off guard duty sat inside an enclosed area. That’s where Powers talked of home.
In military jargon, the marines of 3rd Platoon, Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 4 Marine Regiment were in Ramadi to conduct stability and support operations. Hill described it in simpler terms: their mission was to provide safety to the area and win hearts and minds.
They knew of an insurgent sniper team in the area and didn’t underestimate the threat.
“We were on our A-game,” Hill said.
But an effective sharpshooter inside a dense city can be hard to defend against.
Powers was only a few minutes into a shift of guard duty on a rooftop — a few minutes from talks of home — when he was shot. He was 21.
Caleb J. Powers, Marine from Mansfield, was killed in Iraq while serving in the military.
“When he went out to his area he got shot pretty quickly,” Hill said. “I don’t think they had time to set up or anything.”
Outside of training, deployments and everyday work life, they got to know each other at the barracks where they lived in Camp Pendleton, California. He talked about farming there, too.
Hill recalled the way Powers’ tone changed when he’d speak of plowing the earth on the Waterville Plateau.
“It sounded like he was kind, you know, in |a meditative state,” Hill said.
Hill struggled with the experience of Powers’ death and others from his unit and for several years used alcohol as a coping mechanism before finding religion and sobriety in 2010.
The members of Fox Company remember their lost marines each year on the anniversary of their death. This is usually through Facebook, but five or six years ago they visited Powers’ grave at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
Among the last things Caleb Powers ever did before he was killed by sniper fire in Iraq was talk about life back home in Mansfield.
“He was in a good mood; talking about, you know, farming and biking,” said Brandon Hill, a corpsman in Powers’ infantry platoon. As a corpsman, Hill’s job was to treat the wounded.
On Aug. 17, 2004, the marines took turns on guard duty atop a roof while those off guard duty sat inside an enclosed area. That’s where Powers talked of home.
In military jargon, the marines of 3rd Platoon, Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 4 Marine Regiment were in Ramadi to conduct stability and support operations. Hill described it in simpler terms: their mission was to provide safety to the area and win hearts and minds.
They knew of an insurgent sniper team in the area and didn’t underestimate the threat.
“We were on our A-game,” Hill said.
But an effective sharpshooter inside a dense city can be hard to defend against.
Powers was only a few minutes into a shift of guard duty on a rooftop — a few minutes from talks of home — when he was shot. He was 21.
Caleb J. Powers, Marine from Mansfield, was killed in Iraq while serving in the military.
“When he went out to his area he got shot pretty quickly,” Hill said. “I don’t think they had time to set up or anything.”
Outside of training, deployments and everyday work life, they got to know each other at the barracks where they lived in Camp Pendleton, California. He talked about farming there, too.
Hill recalled the way Powers’ tone changed when he’d speak of plowing the earth on the Waterville Plateau.
“It sounded like he was kind, you know, in |a meditative state,” Hill said.
Hill struggled with the experience of Powers’ death and others from his unit and for several years used alcohol as a coping mechanism before finding religion and sobriety in 2010.
The members of Fox Company remember their lost marines each year on the anniversary of their death. This is usually through Facebook, but five or six years ago they visited Powers’ grave at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.