Advertisement

LTC Paul Wayne Kimbrough Sr.

Advertisement

LTC Paul Wayne Kimbrough Sr.

Birth
Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas, USA
Death
3 Oct 2003 (aged 44)
Türkiye
Burial
North Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section I, Site 411
Memorial ID
View Source
Army Lt Col Kimbrough was assigned to the 416th Engineer Command, Team 28, U.S. Army Reserve, Fort Benning, Georgia. Kimbrough was medically evacuated from Bagram, Afghanistan, to Incirlik, Turkey. He was taken to the 39th Medical Squadron where he remained hospitalized until his death of a non-combat related cause. Exact cause of death is unknown. Paul attended Parkview High School and graduated from the University of Central Arkansas. After graduating college, he went into the Army on active duty for several years before going to the University of Arkansas to earn his law degree. At the Fayetteville campus, he became the head of the Black Law Students Association. He later moved to Washington D.C. where he worked in the inspector general’s office of the Department of Transportation. He was involved in politics as an aide to former Congressman Ray Thornton and ran for the Democratic nomination for the state House of Representatives in 1996, but lost the primary.
Army Lt Col Kimbrough was assigned to the 416th Engineer Command, Team 28, U.S. Army Reserve, Fort Benning, Georgia. Kimbrough was medically evacuated from Bagram, Afghanistan, to Incirlik, Turkey. He was taken to the 39th Medical Squadron where he remained hospitalized until his death of a non-combat related cause. Exact cause of death is unknown. Paul attended Parkview High School and graduated from the University of Central Arkansas. After graduating college, he went into the Army on active duty for several years before going to the University of Arkansas to earn his law degree. At the Fayetteville campus, he became the head of the Black Law Students Association. He later moved to Washington D.C. where he worked in the inspector general’s office of the Department of Transportation. He was involved in politics as an aide to former Congressman Ray Thornton and ran for the Democratic nomination for the state House of Representatives in 1996, but lost the primary.

Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement