Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Maryland's Sixty-Eighth Hero


gwilymjnewman
Originally uploaded by Randuwa
Army 1st Lt. Gwilym J. Newman, 24, of Waldorf, Md.; assigned to the 2nd Battalion, 8th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; died April 12 in Tarmiyah, Iraq, of wounds sustained from enemy small-arms fire while on dismounted patrol.

HE WAS A PROUD FATHER, EAGER SOLDIER

His son was born on his birthday, and 1st Lt. Gwilym J. Newman could not have been more proud. The baby, who will turn 2 on April 27, was given his father's name -- which is Welsh for William -- and looked a lot like him.

This April, the family is in mourning: The proud father and Army officer who spent his high school years in Waldorf was killed Thursday after he came under small-arms fire while on patrol in Tarmiyah, Iraq, according to the Pentagon. Newman would have turned 25.

"He had a very, very good sense of humor, and family was the most important thing to him," said his sister, Brittany Newman.

"He was ready to go," she said. "He wanted to go with his guys and make sure they were okay and be there with them."

In December, Newman was quoted in an Army news story about his unit's work in Tarmiyah -- catching insurgents who set up roadside bombs in the darkness. It was work that he and other soldiers thought would help save troops.

"He was very big on holidays because it was all about family," his sister said, also recalling him as "a goofy guy. He could make anyone smile when they were upset. He could just cheer you up."

Now, his young son, Gwilym Alexander, "is looking more and more like him," she said.

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