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Salutes Pvt. 1st Class Samuel R. Bowen
Without regard for
himself, without regard for his own injuries, he saved the life of one of his fellow
soldiers.
Pvt. 1st
Class Samuel R. Bowen, 38, of Cleveland, Ohio, died July 7, 2004, in Samarra, Iraq, when a
rocket-propelled grenade exploded near his vehicle. Bowen was assigned to the Army
National Guard's 216th Engineer Battalion, Akron, Ohio. The attack killed three
soldiers and wounded 25 people, including two civilians.
"Pvt.
Samuel Bowen,
I am really
going to miss you. God has taken a really great person from me. I will see you again where
we both know that there will be peace, joy, love, and fun times. Love Ya, Darla Bailey,
Berlin, Maryland."
22 July 2004
BERLIN, Md. An Eastern Shore native
was killed in Iraq when a rocket-propelled grenade exploded near his vehicle, the Army
announced Friday.
Pfc. Samuel R. Bowen, 38, died Wednesday in
Samarra, the Defense Department said in a news release. Two other soldiers were wounded in
the attack.
Bowen lived in Cleveland but was from
Berlin, Md., where he graduated in 1983 from Stephen Decatur High School.
He was assigned to the 216th Engineer
Battalion, a unit of the Ohio National Guard that is based in a Cleveland suburb.
Three weeks before his death, Bowen helped
rescue a fellow Guardsman wounded in a rocket attack. Ron Eaton, of Lakewood, Ohio, was
carrying a box of Gatorade out of a commissary at a military base about 50 miles north of
Baghdad on June 16 when the men came under attack. Eaton, 35, said a grenade knocked both
soldiers off their feet and sprayed shrapnel that cut him in the abdomen, liver and arm.
A second round came in within a second
after that, and that round landed behind us, Eaton said. While I was still
laying on the ground, Sam actually grabbed me by the collar and pulled me away from the
building.
The attack killed three soldiers and wounded
25 people, including two civilians. Eaton said Bowen was not seriously injured and helped
tend to the wounded.
He was one of the first people to call
me after I got out of surgery, he said. He wanted to hear my voice because he
didnt believe that I was OK he called me his battle buddy.
Eaton, who is recuperating at home, said
Bowen was a cook and had managed several restaurants in the Cleveland area. He said the
two became close friends.
He was a big man with a big
heart, Eaton said. He was very intimidating in size, but very soft-spoken and
very kind.
Bowen had a wife, Melanie, three children
and two stepchildren.
A lot of people were praying for
him, said his wife, Melanie Bowen. They all wanted him to come home, and I
just wanted to thank them for praying for him.
Though Bowen had lived in the Cleveland area
with his wife and children for a few years, many of his relatives remained on the Eastern
Shore, said his sister, Consuella Bowen.
She remembered her brother as a fun-loving
person who kept in contact with his family.
He always had a smile on his
face, Consuella said. You could never tell when he was having a down
day.
It was Bowens second stint in the
military, she said. He had originally enlisted after high school, but later left the
service before joining the Army Reserves. National Guard officials said Bowen had been in
Iraq since December.
Other survivors include his mother, Ealseie
Bowen of Berlin.
Family, friends bid final farewell to Ohio
soldier killed in Iraq
CLEVELAND An Ohio soldier who died in
Iraq was remembered as a hero by family, friends and the military at his funeral Saturday.
At the service in Cleveland for Pfc. Samuel
Bowen, a soldier rescued by Bowen during a rocket attack was among those who eulogized
him. Bowen was serving with the Hamilton, Ohio-based 216th Engineer Battalion when he was
killed last week. He leaves behind his wife, three children and two stepchildren.
Bowen was killed when a rocket-propelled
grenade exploded near his vehicle. The 38-year-old restaurant cook known to friends as
Smokey was credited with pulling a wounded fellow soldier from the line of
fire in June, even as he also was wounded.
Without regard for himself, without
regard for what injuries he had, Sam grabbed me and pulled me to safety, said Spc.
Ronald Eaton, an Ohio National Guardsman from Lakewood. Eaton said both he and Bowen were
hit by shrapnel during the June attack. But shortly after Eaton was wheeled out of surgery
in Iraq, a battalion commander handed him a cell phone. It was Bowen on the other end,
asking how he was doing.
Associated Press |