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« Rest In Peace, Captain Daniel Eggers | Main | The Council Has Spoken » June 25, 2004
On Second Thought
Posted by Bill
I decided that the idea of an INDC Pledge Week to offset my bandwith cost is ridiculous, considering the fact that my high school friend Dan Eggers (see the post below) and many other Americans have given their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan to protect us, and I've been wondering what more I can do. Every penny that's been given so far and every penny that you donate now will go to will go directly to a trust fund set up for Dan's children. I will of course verify this with some form of check/receipt. Thanks to all those that have contributed thus far. Please Donate Now! And please do it here at INDC, as all donations will go directly to the trust fund. A list of all donations and amounts will be posted at the end of the week for transparency. If you don't have a PayPal account you can send a check made out to Rebecca Eggers to: INDC Journal
UPDATE: More pictures and the full story via Florida Cracker: UPDATE: All funds will go to a trust fund that the Citadel has set up for Dan's children.
Capt. Daniel Eggers — Company C, 1st Battalion, 3rd Special Forces Group (Airborne), Fort Bragg, N.C. — had it all going for him. The 28-year-old Cape Coral High School graduate, who conquered The Citadel and went on to join the Green Berets, had a lovely wife, two rambunctious sons and a brilliant future ahead of him. Eggers’ dreams of advancement in the Army ended May 29 when his vehicle was blown up by a roadside bomb in Afghanistan. His widow, Rebecca; the couple’s sons, William and John; and Eggers’ parents, grandparents, brothers and sisters gathered at a solemn funeral Tuesday morning with at least 70 other relatives and friends in a clearing at Arlington National Cemetery. “He loved the Army so much,” said Margaret Eggers, fighting to hold back tears. “This is very fitting.” Six dark horses slowly pulled a black wooden caisson and its flag-draped casket down Eisenhower Drive then wheeled right on to York Drive. A lone drummer tapped time, the solemn notes muffled by two rows of tall oak trees. The casket team, wearing ceremonial dress blues, brought Eggers’ remains forward and placed the heavy coffin on a chrome frame. A soft breeze kicked up and the sun ducked behind some clouds as an Army chaplain recited a verse from the Bible. The roar of an airplane landing at nearby Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport faded, then gave way to the sound of chirping birds. The sun came out again, warming the air as Eggers’ family and friends said their silent goodbyes. At 10 a.m., the seven-member firing party fired three shots into the air and a bugler standing behind tidy rows of white marble headstones blew taps. The ceremonial unit of the U.S. Army Band — known as “Pershing’s Own” — struck up the familiar strains of “America the Beautiful” as the casket team carefully folded the American flag into a tight blue triangle. Rebecca Eggers, an Army captain stationed at Fort Bragg, dabbed tears from her face before accepting the flag from Lt. Gen. Philip Kesinger Jr., commanding general of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command. When the presentations and condolences had ended, a bagpiper from the Citadel stepped from behind a fir tree and played “Amazing Grace.” Eggers was buried next to a small, freshly planted holly tree in a section of Arlington National Cemetery where many of the U.S. casualties from Afghanistan and Iraq have come home to rest. Just two plots away is the grave of Sgt. 1st Class Robert Mogensen of Leesville, La., who was killed with Eggers and two other soldiers as they returned to their base near Kandahar. “This is tough, but you deal with it,” said Col. Rich Dixon, who traveled from Fort Leavenworth, Kan., to attend the funeral. Dixon met Eggers at Fort Stewart, Ga., and immediately recognized something special in the young man. “I made him my logistics officer as a 1st lieutenant and that tells you he was a top officer because those boots are usually filled by a captain,” Dixon said. “He was extremely competent and capable.” Dixon and others joined the Eggers family after the funeral for a reception at Fort Myer, a military installation next to the cemetery. Close friends occasionally chuckled while recalling Eggers’ well-known sense of humor. Eggers was able to mimic a particular history professor at The Citadel, said Chris Price, a classmate who now lives in Annapolis, Md. “He was always willing to make people laugh,” Price said. On one occasion before a major history exam, Eggers, knowing the history professor was a fan of the Confederacy, wrote on the blackboard, “Gen. Sherman, Fire Marshall,” recalled Josh Blocker, a classmate now stationed at Coast Guard headquarters in Washington, D.C. But when it came to his career, Eggers was serious and motivated, according to Capt. James Alden, also with the 3rd Special Forces Group at Fort Bragg. Alden met Eggers when the two were at Fort Stewart, the Army’s premiere East Coast tank-training site. As a quartermaster in charge of supplies, Alden was a notch below Eggers in the Army’s pecking order, but Alden said Eggers never acted arrogant. “Dan had the knack of always treating everybody with respect,” Alden said. “He would treat a private the same as he would treat a colonel.” Eventually the two men found themselves together for a month-long stint at the Army’s National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif. It was there that Alden witnessed Eggers’ skill at learning foreign languages and his drive to succeed. “Dan had a sergeant in his section who could speak French, German, Russian, Spanish and a couple of other languages,” Alden said. “He would tell this sergeant, ‘Today, when we see each other we’re only going to speak French.’ And the next day they would speak German.” Before their stint in California was over, Eggers could converse in those languages, Alden said. A graduate of West Point, Alden said it was Eggers who inspired him to enter the Army Special Forces training to become a Green Beret. “He was always looking to improve himself and he made me want to be a better person,” Alden said. Rebecca Eggers spent much of the reception standing near the entrance to the small reception room cradling her infant nephew in her arms and chatting quietly with the soldiers who were part of her husband’s life. Her two sons played nearby. Keeping their father’s memory alive will be important, she said. “I spend a lot of time reminding them their daddy taught them certain things so they remember,” she said. Please consider giving: If you don't have a PayPal account you can send a check made out to Rebecca Eggers to: INDC Journal Posted by Bill at June 25, 2004 01:03 PM | TrackBack (20) CommentsGreat move,Bill.. please see my email (not from this spam laden address) Posted by: JFH at June 25, 2004 09:23 PM Specialist Joe Jeffries (I've his story on my own blog here) was one of the four soldiers who died alongside your friend on May 29th. Thanks for the info about the Special Operations fund - I'll make sure to spread the word. Posted by: Betsy at June 25, 2004 10:59 PM Thanks for taking the time to set this up, Bill. I'm sorry for the loss of your friend, and for his family's loss of a father and husband. I hope that you get a strong response. Mine is in your PayPal pile. Posted by: Patton at June 26, 2004 02:26 AM Check written out and dropped in the mail. Made out for the amount it would cost me to take myself and a friend to the movie theatre to see Michael Moore's new film. Seeing as I've said, repeatedly, that I'd rather give the money to a good cause than to line the pockets of that windbag Moore, here's where I put my money where my mouth is. Posted by: Jen at June 28, 2004 10:56 AM Thank you all! Posted by: Bill from INDC Journal at June 28, 2004 10:57 AM Check is in the mail. Only wish I could send more. I hope you collect a lot for the trust. Posted by: Dawn W at June 28, 2004 02:22 PM Thanks Dawn! Posted by: Bill from INDC Journal at June 28, 2004 02:36 PM |
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