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thedrifter
03-13-08, 07:10 AM
22 Marines to salute comrade with visit

By James Vaznis, Globe Staff | March 13, 2008

Walter O'Haire loved the St. Patrick's Day Parade. Nothing could keep him away. Not even the US Marines.

The night before last year's festivities, O'Haire, a Marine lance corporal, quietly left Camp Lejeune in North Carolina without permission and drove all night in his silver Honda Civic to enjoy what would be his last South Boston parade. O'Haire died in a firefight with insurgents in Iraq's volatile Anbar province last May, six days before his 21st birthday.

This year, in a tribute to their fallen comrade, 22 Marines from O'Haire's platoon will march in Sunday's celebration, while family and friends will wave from the street corner where O'Haire stood last year.

"It's a great honor to have 22 Marines pay respect for your kid," O'Haire's mother, Maureen, said in a telephone interview yesterday from her home in Rockland. She added, "It should be a great tribute to the men and women who are serving over there."

Maureen O'Haire, at the suggestion of her oldest son, arranged for the Marines' appearance. She thought she would be lucky to get a dozen, let alone 22.

She is using federal government money, given to her when her son died, to foot the bill for their airline tickets, hotel rooms, and other expenses, which could total more than $20,000. O'Haire acknowledges she could have used the money to remodel her house or at least fix her leaking roof, but she said she could not imagine a better way to spend it.

The Marines arrive tomorrow at Logan Airport. The weekend events also include a memorial Mass for her son Saturday evening at St. Vincent Church in South Boston. The Marines will carry a sign in the parade in honor of their platoon and O'Haire, their only lost comrade.

Family and friends will gather on the corner of O Street and Broadway, holding signs and wearing T-shirts in the fallen Marine's honor. The T-shirts, which the mother has been selling to help cover the trip's expenses, are decorated with shamrocks, the Marine Corps insignia, and a picture of the cartoon character Wally Gator. His mother gave her son that nickname because, like the cartoon character created in the 1960s, he was always on the go.

Walter O'Haire spent about half his childhood in South Boston before his family moved to Rockland. One of nine children, he decided to serve in the Marines in honor of his father, a Navy veteran who died about three years ago.

"He wanted to make us proud," his mother said.

In preparation for the Marines' visit, O'Haire said yesterday that she finally mustered the emotional strength to hang a framed certificate of the Purple Heart her son received during his tour in Iraq. She received the certificate at a memorial service at Camp Lejeune in November, where she and her family met many of the Marines in her son's unit.

"He was a little daring," she said. "He did break some rules, but I'm grateful we got to see him at last year's parade."

Ellie