LCPL Charles Seth Sharp

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LCPL Charles Seth Sharp Veteran

Birth
Dalton, Whitfield County, Georgia, USA
Death
2 Jul 2009 (aged 20)
Helmand, Afghanistan
Burial
Adairsville, Bartow County, Georgia, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Lance Cpl. Charles 'Seth' Sharp of Adairsville, Georgia attended Adairsville High School where he was a member of the football team his freshman year. Known to everyone by his middle name, Seth was an avid fan of sports of all kinds. He wanted more than anything to serve in the military, and so he joined the Marine Corps at age seventeen with is parents permission. Seth chose the Marines because he said it's the toughest, and he wanted to see if he could make it. He said he wanted to fight for those who couldn't fight for themselves. Anyone that knew Seth, could tell you that when he put his mind to something, he would do it. It was that kind of conviction that made him a good Marine. They could also tell you that he always thought of others before himself. Seth's unit was deployed to Afghanistan in the spring of 2009 and scheduled for a seven to 12-month rotation. Seth had previously been deployed to Iraq. While in Iraq, he asked for coloring books and crayons for Christmas for the children he'd met in Iraq. Seth and his fiancee' Katie were planning to marry after his tour in Afghanistan finished in December 2009. The pair had known each other since they were small children and Seth wanted to enroll in college and settle down. Shortly before Seth went on a mission into Afghanistan's Helmand province, he wrote a letter to his grandmother. He told her that he would soon be fighting in a mission his grandchildren would learn about in history class. Seth was among some 4,000 Marines deployed by helicopter and armored transport throughout the volatile Helmand River valley in an effort to counter the Taliban insurgency. Just days after he mailed the letter, Seth died in that battle. He was the first Marine killed in the offensive. He is survived by his mother Angie Sharp, his father and stepmother Rick and Tiffany Sharp. He was killed at age 20 during Operation Strike of the Sword in Afghanistan.
Lance Cpl. Charles 'Seth' Sharp of Adairsville, Georgia attended Adairsville High School where he was a member of the football team his freshman year. Known to everyone by his middle name, Seth was an avid fan of sports of all kinds. He wanted more than anything to serve in the military, and so he joined the Marine Corps at age seventeen with is parents permission. Seth chose the Marines because he said it's the toughest, and he wanted to see if he could make it. He said he wanted to fight for those who couldn't fight for themselves. Anyone that knew Seth, could tell you that when he put his mind to something, he would do it. It was that kind of conviction that made him a good Marine. They could also tell you that he always thought of others before himself. Seth's unit was deployed to Afghanistan in the spring of 2009 and scheduled for a seven to 12-month rotation. Seth had previously been deployed to Iraq. While in Iraq, he asked for coloring books and crayons for Christmas for the children he'd met in Iraq. Seth and his fiancee' Katie were planning to marry after his tour in Afghanistan finished in December 2009. The pair had known each other since they were small children and Seth wanted to enroll in college and settle down. Shortly before Seth went on a mission into Afghanistan's Helmand province, he wrote a letter to his grandmother. He told her that he would soon be fighting in a mission his grandchildren would learn about in history class. Seth was among some 4,000 Marines deployed by helicopter and armored transport throughout the volatile Helmand River valley in an effort to counter the Taliban insurgency. Just days after he mailed the letter, Seth died in that battle. He was the first Marine killed in the offensive. He is survived by his mother Angie Sharp, his father and stepmother Rick and Tiffany Sharp. He was killed at age 20 during Operation Strike of the Sword in Afghanistan.