CSM Jerry Lee Wilson

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CSM Jerry Lee Wilson

Birth
Thomson, McDuffie County, Georgia, USA
Death
23 Nov 2003 (aged 45)
Mosul, Ninawa, Iraq
Burial
Thomson, McDuffie County, Georgia, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.5159194, Longitude: -82.5051722
Memorial ID
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Command Sergeant Major Jerry Lee Wilson of Harrison Road, Thomson, entered into rest Sunday, November 23, 2003 in Mosul, Iraq. CSM Wilson was a McDuffie County native and a 1976 graduate of Thomson High School. He was a member of the Springfield Baptist Church where he had participated in Sunday School, Baptist Training Union, the Youth Choir, Vacation Bible School, Courtesy Guild and other ministries and activities. He entered the United States Army in June of 1976 and was presently serving as the 2nd Brigade, 502nd Infantry Regiment Command Sergeant Major at both Fort Campbell, Ky. and as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom in Mosul, Iraq. He received numerous awards and decorations.
Survivors include his mother, Daisy Wilson, Thomson; devoted sister, Susan Milton, Thomson; two caring sons, Mantrell (Ni Sharn) Wilson, Augusta, Sidney Wilson, Thomson; a granddaughter, JeKiya Jackson Wilson, Jonesboro; two aunts, Hattie Harris and Georgia Mae Wilson of Thomson; one uncle, Roy Lee Wilson, Newark, N.J.; and a host of cousins, other relatives and friends. Family, friends and soldiers remembered Command Sgt. Maj. Jerry L. Wilson on Dec. 3 as a mentor with a dominating presence. At least 500 people crowded into the Springfield Baptist Church in Thomson for Wilson’s funeral. At least 100 of those in attendance were uniformed soldiers. Wilson, 45, and another soldier — Spc. Rel A. Ravago IV, 21, of Glendale, Calif. — were killed Nov. 23 when their vehicle was attacked in Mosul. Initial reports said the two were pelted with concrete blocks, but the Army has said there was no evidence the men were beaten after their vehicle was shot and crashed into a wall. Wilson is survived by two sons, a granddaughter, a sister and his mother. During the funeral people laughed, cried and shouted “Amen” after friends, family and fellow soldiers shared stories about Wilson.
At the front of the church, the coffin was draped with the American flag and surrounded by bouquets of red and white carnations and yellow daisies. Wilson’s son, Mantrell Wilson, read a poem about his dad. “Many have lost a friend, society has lost a good man. He was a wonderful father and also an irreplaceable friend,” he said.
Lai Ling Jew, a producer for NBC News who was embedded in Iraq with Wilson, said, “He was a great man, someone I see as a consummate gentleman with the physique of a gladiator.”
She and some soldiers said Wilson had a contagious smile and a gentleness like none other. Others remembered him as being a mentor. “If there’s somebody in the military better at being a coach and mentor than Command Sgt. Maj. Wilson, I haven’t met him,” said Sgt. 1st Class Julius Chambers. Wilson was Chambers’ platoon sergeant. “I will never forget that smile or his selflessness,” said Jew, crying.
Groups of people lined the road as the funeral procession passed, standing with their hands over their hearts or waving American flags. One person held up a sign that read: “American soldier, American hero.”
Command Sergeant Major Jerry Lee Wilson of Harrison Road, Thomson, entered into rest Sunday, November 23, 2003 in Mosul, Iraq. CSM Wilson was a McDuffie County native and a 1976 graduate of Thomson High School. He was a member of the Springfield Baptist Church where he had participated in Sunday School, Baptist Training Union, the Youth Choir, Vacation Bible School, Courtesy Guild and other ministries and activities. He entered the United States Army in June of 1976 and was presently serving as the 2nd Brigade, 502nd Infantry Regiment Command Sergeant Major at both Fort Campbell, Ky. and as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom in Mosul, Iraq. He received numerous awards and decorations.
Survivors include his mother, Daisy Wilson, Thomson; devoted sister, Susan Milton, Thomson; two caring sons, Mantrell (Ni Sharn) Wilson, Augusta, Sidney Wilson, Thomson; a granddaughter, JeKiya Jackson Wilson, Jonesboro; two aunts, Hattie Harris and Georgia Mae Wilson of Thomson; one uncle, Roy Lee Wilson, Newark, N.J.; and a host of cousins, other relatives and friends. Family, friends and soldiers remembered Command Sgt. Maj. Jerry L. Wilson on Dec. 3 as a mentor with a dominating presence. At least 500 people crowded into the Springfield Baptist Church in Thomson for Wilson’s funeral. At least 100 of those in attendance were uniformed soldiers. Wilson, 45, and another soldier — Spc. Rel A. Ravago IV, 21, of Glendale, Calif. — were killed Nov. 23 when their vehicle was attacked in Mosul. Initial reports said the two were pelted with concrete blocks, but the Army has said there was no evidence the men were beaten after their vehicle was shot and crashed into a wall. Wilson is survived by two sons, a granddaughter, a sister and his mother. During the funeral people laughed, cried and shouted “Amen” after friends, family and fellow soldiers shared stories about Wilson.
At the front of the church, the coffin was draped with the American flag and surrounded by bouquets of red and white carnations and yellow daisies. Wilson’s son, Mantrell Wilson, read a poem about his dad. “Many have lost a friend, society has lost a good man. He was a wonderful father and also an irreplaceable friend,” he said.
Lai Ling Jew, a producer for NBC News who was embedded in Iraq with Wilson, said, “He was a great man, someone I see as a consummate gentleman with the physique of a gladiator.”
She and some soldiers said Wilson had a contagious smile and a gentleness like none other. Others remembered him as being a mentor. “If there’s somebody in the military better at being a coach and mentor than Command Sgt. Maj. Wilson, I haven’t met him,” said Sgt. 1st Class Julius Chambers. Wilson was Chambers’ platoon sergeant. “I will never forget that smile or his selflessness,” said Jew, crying.
Groups of people lined the road as the funeral procession passed, standing with their hands over their hearts or waving American flags. One person held up a sign that read: “American soldier, American hero.”