LEWISTOWN,
Md. – They rode together for five months in a truck
in the heat of western Iraq. On Aug 4, four Marines flew to
Maryland from Camp Pendleton where they were recovering from
combat injuries to walk with Lance Cpl. James W. Higgins Jr.
on his final journey.
Higgins’
former platoon commander, 1st Lt. Byron Owen said, “I
watched his back and he watched mine.”
Semper
fidelis. Always faithful.
“I
know he watches my back still from his post on high,”
said Owen.
Hundreds
of family, friends, classmates and servicemen turned out
on an overcast Friday morning at the Lynfield Events Complex
to say goodbye to Higgins.
“One
week ago today, I woke up with a funny feeling. I didn’t
know what it was,” said Marine Private James Michael
Campbell.
What
it was was that his best friend, Higgins, had been shot
and killed in Al Anbar Province in Iraq on July 27. He was
buried with full military honors at Resthaven Memorial Gardens
on Aug. 4.
“My
brother James was one of the bravest men I’ve ever
known; one of the best men I’ve ever known, and he
loved this country dearly,” said Joseph Higgins during
the funeral.
James
Higgins Sr. called his oldest son “majestic.”
“He was regal in thought, mind, actions, the way he
treated people and his view of the world.”
But
it may be the four Marines who rode with Cpl. Higgins in
Iraq who will miss him the most. As Owen said, they are
part of “a brotherhood that can’t be explained
outside of combat.” Besides Owen, the other three
are Sgt. Scott Martin, Cpl. Joshua Bates and Pfc. Phillip
Grillo.
Though
the Marine Corps had been reluctant to allow the four Marines
to attend the service because they were listed as wounded,
they worked with Deborah Higgins, James’s mother,
to get to Thurmont.
Why
their insistence?
Some
of them credit James Higgins for their being alive.
On
April 25, three months before he would be killed, Higgins
was driving in a line of trucks in Iraq when a 125-mm tank
round exploded under the trucks.
“It
engulfed the first two vehicles,” Owen said. “Higgins
was in the second vehicle.” Owen was in the first
vehicle.
Owen
and many of the others in the first two trucks were wounded
and knocked unconscious. The first vehicle was burning badly.
“You
could see the fire from Baghdad and that was 30 miles away,”
Owen said.
“They
said they heard the explosions, too,” added Martin,
who had been in the second vehicle.
Higgins was still conscious. He saw his comrades in danger
and drove his burning truck into the “kill zone.”
“He
drove right up next to the truck and put himself between
it and shielded them from enemy fire,” Martin said.
He
then helped get the wounded to safety and radioed for additional
help.
“Because
of James, we are here alive today,” Owen said.
For
his actions, Higgins received the Navy and Marine Corps
Achievement Medal with Combat V (for valor).
Chaplain
Commander Robert McGaha, who officiated at the funeral service,
said Higgins followed the teachings of the Bible, which
says, “Greater love has no man than this: that he
lay down his life for his friends.”
According
to his fellow Marines, Higgins seemed to know this almost
instinctively, for he did not shirk the duty and he did
not hesitate from action.
“He
will be remembered through stories that we tell our children
and grandchildren,” Joseph Higgins said.