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LCpl Richard Patrick Slocum

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LCpl Richard Patrick Slocum

Birth
USA
Death
24 Oct 2004 (aged 19)
Iraq
Burial
Newhall, Los Angeles County, California, USA GPS-Latitude: 34.3633, Longitude: -118.51334
Plot
Garden of Veterans
Memorial ID
View Source
Richard P. Slocum joined the Marine Corps right after high school because he wanted to become a man, his father says.
Always a "tough guy," the 19-year-old viewed the military as a way to serve his country while gaining new skills and discipline, his father, Robert, said. "Ricky felt the Marines would make a man of him," he said. "It definitely did." The lance corporal was killed in a noncombat accident when a Humvee he was riding in rolled over near Abu Ghraib, Iraq, his father said. Slocum was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii. Slocum had been manning a machine gun in the turret when the Humvee swerved to avoid a barrier in the road. He was fatally ejected when the vehicle rolled over, his father said. Robert Slocum and his wife, Kay, supported their son's decision to join the Marines shortly after his graduation from Saugus High School last year even though no one else in the family had served in the military since the Korean War. Slocum played football and baseball and enjoyed bodybuilding in high school, his father said. After straying from religion, Slocum began quoting Bible verses in letters home as he approached his duty in Iraq, his father said. "He had a tough-guy image," Robert Slocum said. "But deep down inside, he had a soft heart and would do anything for family and friends."
Richard P. Slocum joined the Marine Corps right after high school because he wanted to become a man, his father says.
Always a "tough guy," the 19-year-old viewed the military as a way to serve his country while gaining new skills and discipline, his father, Robert, said. "Ricky felt the Marines would make a man of him," he said. "It definitely did." The lance corporal was killed in a noncombat accident when a Humvee he was riding in rolled over near Abu Ghraib, Iraq, his father said. Slocum was assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, 3rd Marine Expeditionary Force in Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii. Slocum had been manning a machine gun in the turret when the Humvee swerved to avoid a barrier in the road. He was fatally ejected when the vehicle rolled over, his father said. Robert Slocum and his wife, Kay, supported their son's decision to join the Marines shortly after his graduation from Saugus High School last year even though no one else in the family had served in the military since the Korean War. Slocum played football and baseball and enjoyed bodybuilding in high school, his father said. After straying from religion, Slocum began quoting Bible verses in letters home as he approached his duty in Iraq, his father said. "He had a tough-guy image," Robert Slocum said. "But deep down inside, he had a soft heart and would do anything for family and friends."

Inscription

LCPL US MARINE CORPS
OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM


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