Sgt Christopher Hrbek, USMC... Rest in Peace - Page 2
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  1. #16
    Marine Free Member Troutzilla's Avatar
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    RIP BROTHER

    SEMPER FI



  2. #17
    Phantom Blooper
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    Fallen Marine to receive Bronze Star

    January 16, 2010 4:50 PM
    A Camp Lejeune Marine that died Thursday in Afghanistan was in line to receive a medal of valor, according to media reports.

    Sgt. Christopher R. Hrbek, 25, was killed when he stepped on an improvised explosive device, according to reports by The New Jersey Bergen County Record.

    Hrbek was to be awarded a Bronze Star with combat “V” for saving his sergeant major’s life when he stepped on an IED under enemy fire Dec. 23, the paper reported.


  3. #18
    Marine Free Member jerryk's Avatar
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    sorry to hear that mark and ellie.rest in peace my brother marine


  4. #19
    I was lucky enough to meet Chris a few years ago. He's a good friend of a couple of my buddies in Jacksonville.

    Heaven has another HERO at the gate...

    Rest in peace, brother...


  5. #20
    R.I.P. Brother !

    Semper Fidelis


  6. #21
    Marine Free Member rb1651's Avatar
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    RIP Brother. Prayers are outbound for family members and friends of Sgt. Hrbek.


  7. #22
    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/worl...int=1&page=all


    Great Article above...

    A few of Our friends are taking the journey for us to pay there last Respect to Chris...

    His Fellow Brothers will be sleeping along side of Chris this evening....

    Chris has made an impact on All of us.. We are Glad to meet a Outstanding Marine and Friend....

    Ellie and Mark

    PJ and Rich His Marine Brother's

    http://fontman.smugmug.com/Events/PI...45_m3KyF-M.jpg


    http://fontman.smugmug.com/Events/PI...05_MMheh-M.jpg

    Trying to give Chris advice...since I was his second mom here...
    Hell that never worked....That's why he got the nickname Dirty Squirrel...LOL

    http://fontman.smugmug.com/Events/PI...84_w3Fwe-M.jpg


  8. #23
    Marines carry remains of Sgt. Christopher Hrbek at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware. Below, Sgt. Hrbek at Fleet Week.


  9. #24

    Marine Sergeant Christopher Hrbek Comes Home

    Marine Sergeant Christopher Hrbek Comes Home

    The remains of Marine Sergeant Christopher Hrbek arrive in his hometown of Westwood, NJ and are met by hundreds of firefighters from all over the tri-state area and Bergen County residents

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFGRIBtf440

    Love You

    Ellie


  10. #25

  11. #26
    RIP brother. I will see you at the gates.


  12. #27
    By MIKE KELLY
    RECORD COLUMNIST

    With the mournful hum of dozens of bagpipes, the gentle flapping of hundreds of flags and the indelible silence of thousands of residents lining its streets, Westwood welcomed home a local boy Thursday who gave his life in a faraway war.

    Marine Sgt. Christopher Hrbek, 25, was killed a week ago in the hills of Afghanistan’s Helmand Province after stepping on a booby-trapped bomb.

    His wake is scheduled for Friday afternoon at the Zion Lutheran Church, and his funeral will be held on Saturday at the church. But in the fading afternoon sunlight on Thursday, Westwood honored Hrbek with a solemn procession.

    Funerals are not just moments of sadness. For some towns, they are moments of proud unity, too. In Westwood on Thursday, that mix of unmitigated sadness and unity were on full display.[/font]

    Hrbek deployed with his Marine unit to Afghanistan in November. Before that, he served three combat tours with the Marines in Iraq.

    A giant American flag hung between ladder trucks from the Emerson and Woodcliff Lake fire departments.

    And only weeks earlier in Afghanistan, he dashed through enemy gunfire to save the life of another Marine who had stepped on a similar bomb – an act for which the Marines had nominated Hrbek for a Bronze Star medal for valor.

    But on Thursday, the Central Bergen County town that Hrbek called home before enlisting in the Marines came to a standstill.

    “You hear about this kind of thing everyday in the news, but it doesn’t really touch home until it’s someone from home,” said Brian Schumeyer, 32 of Emerson, who grew up in Westwood and took the day off work.

    With a color guard of Westwood firefighters marching in front and followed by five Marines from his former unit who had driven all night from North Carolina, a hearse bearing Hrbek’s flag-draped coffin rolled slowly past his high school and elementary school – and hundreds of students lining the sidewalk and holding small flags.

    “What an extraordinary day,” said Hrbek’s father, Richard, who rode in the procession. “He knew so many people, but the thing that struck me was all the young children.”

    Some people clapped softly. Others dabbed their eyes with tissues. Many just placed their right hand over their heart and silently mouthed “thank you” to Hrbek’s wife, Jamie Lynn Wengerter, and other relatives riding in a convoy of SUVs and cars.

    There were senior citizens and young men in camouflage National Guard uniforms. There were painters who laid down their brushes and hair stylists who set aside their scissors, joggers in bright jackets and business women in long wool coats.

    Police estimated the overall crowd at more than 5,000.

    “Our family loved Chris very much,” said Hrbek’s mother-in-law, Ramona Wengerter of Emerson. “The whole community is turning out. It’s very honorable. The Marines are very honorable. The police and firemen are very proud of him. It’s wonderful how they are welcoming him home.”

    Indeed, among many firefighters, Hrbek was seen as something of a younger brother, in part because he joined Westwood’s volunteer department when he was only 16.

    Hrbek’s stepfather, Jaymee Hodges, is still senior captain of Westwood’s department. Hrbek’s two stepbrothers, Jim and Beau Hodges, are New York City firefighters. “It’s a close knit department,” said retired Westwood firefighter Nick Ariemma. “The fire department is like a piece of the heart of the town.”

    Several of Hrbek’s fellow Marines from Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, echoed similar feelings.

    “Once you’re together, it’s like a family,” said Marine Staff Sgt. Jose Galvan, who served with Hrbek in Iraq. “He was always looking out for his brother Marines.”

    With pipers striking up a rendition of the Marine Corps hymn at the town’s center, the procession passed under a giant American flag that hung between ladder trucks from the Emerson and Woodcliff Lake fire departments. Then, the marchers turned on to Westwood’s main business district, where fire fighters from dozens of neighboring towns and New York City stood shoulder-to-shoulder, each one holding an American flag.


  13. #28

    Rip

    Rest In Peace Brother, Semper Fidelis!


  14. #29
    Rest in Peace Marine, Semper Fidelis!


  15. #30
    Marine Free Member vfm's Avatar
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    Rest in Peace Brother.
    Semper Fi!!!
    vfm


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