Advertisement

LCPL Daniel Richard Wyatt

Advertisement

LCPL Daniel Richard Wyatt Veteran

Birth
USA
Death
12 Oct 2004 (aged 22)
Babil, Iraq
Burial
Union Grove, Racine County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Marine Lance Corporal Daniel R. Wyatt, 22, passed away while serving his country in Babil Province, Iraq, Tuesday, October 12, 2004.

Laura Watson will never forget the day Lance Cpl. Daniel Wyatt proposed. It was March 9 — the same day he was called up for active duty that would eventually take him to Iraq, where he died. “He proposed to me at eight o’clock in the morning, and at eight at night, 12 hours later, he got the call.

Wyatt, 22, a rifleman from Racine, was killed Tuesday in the Babil province southwest of Baghdad, Chief Warrant Officer Terry Bellis told The Journal Times of Racine. Wyatt had been in Iraq for only a few weeks, said Bellis, of the Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Center in Milwaukee.

Bellis said Wyatt served with Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 24th Marines. He joined the Marine Reserves three years ago, and his unit was activated June 1.

Wyatt’s stepmother, Kathy Sullivan of Racine, said he joined the Marines out of a desire to serve the country and went to boot camp right after graduating with honors from Racine Horlick High School in 2001.

“Some people are born to serve,” she said. “They feel responsible for that. They enjoy it.”

She and other family members described Daniel as quiet but venturesome, and a lover of music, reading history and sports. His mother died when he was a boy, and the family later moved from Prospect Heights, Ill., to the Racine area in 1992, Sullivan said.

They had a hobby farm at nearby Caledonia, Sullivan said. She and Daniel’s father, David Wyatt, divorced in 1999, and Daniel stayed with his father in Caledonia until after high school. His father no longer lives in the area, Sullivan said.

She said Daniel showed his caring nature in the separate letters he wrote to everyone, telling them he loved them and mentioning a couple times that he might not make it back. But he didn’t complain, she said. “Daniel wasn’t a whiner,” she said. “Nobody wants war, but sometimes it needs to be fought.”

After boot camp, Daniel had enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee but later went to Milwaukee Area Technical College where he was studying to become a police officer before the call-up, Sullivan said.

“We will miss him horribly,” she said. “He lived a short life but a good life.”
Marine Lance Corporal Daniel R. Wyatt, 22, passed away while serving his country in Babil Province, Iraq, Tuesday, October 12, 2004.

Laura Watson will never forget the day Lance Cpl. Daniel Wyatt proposed. It was March 9 — the same day he was called up for active duty that would eventually take him to Iraq, where he died. “He proposed to me at eight o’clock in the morning, and at eight at night, 12 hours later, he got the call.

Wyatt, 22, a rifleman from Racine, was killed Tuesday in the Babil province southwest of Baghdad, Chief Warrant Officer Terry Bellis told The Journal Times of Racine. Wyatt had been in Iraq for only a few weeks, said Bellis, of the Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Center in Milwaukee.

Bellis said Wyatt served with Fox Company, 2nd Battalion, 24th Marines. He joined the Marine Reserves three years ago, and his unit was activated June 1.

Wyatt’s stepmother, Kathy Sullivan of Racine, said he joined the Marines out of a desire to serve the country and went to boot camp right after graduating with honors from Racine Horlick High School in 2001.

“Some people are born to serve,” she said. “They feel responsible for that. They enjoy it.”

She and other family members described Daniel as quiet but venturesome, and a lover of music, reading history and sports. His mother died when he was a boy, and the family later moved from Prospect Heights, Ill., to the Racine area in 1992, Sullivan said.

They had a hobby farm at nearby Caledonia, Sullivan said. She and Daniel’s father, David Wyatt, divorced in 1999, and Daniel stayed with his father in Caledonia until after high school. His father no longer lives in the area, Sullivan said.

She said Daniel showed his caring nature in the separate letters he wrote to everyone, telling them he loved them and mentioning a couple times that he might not make it back. But he didn’t complain, she said. “Daniel wasn’t a whiner,” she said. “Nobody wants war, but sometimes it needs to be fought.”

After boot camp, Daniel had enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee but later went to Milwaukee Area Technical College where he was studying to become a police officer before the call-up, Sullivan said.

“We will miss him horribly,” she said. “He lived a short life but a good life.”

Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement