This past Saturday marked the tenth annual Mountain Man Memorial March for Gold Star Families. The event takes place in the Great Smoky Mountains town of Gatlinburg, Tennessee. There are marathons all over the world. This one honors those military personnel killed in action and the loving families they left behind.
The first Mountain Man Memorial March was held in honor of University of Tennessee graduate Frank Walkup, Jr. From the Mountain Man Memorial March Facebook page:
The Mountain Man Memorial march was created to honor one of our fallen UT alumni, 1LT Frank Walkup who was killed in Iraq when an improvised explosive device detonated near his position. The 2005 graduate was assigned to the 25th Infantry Division and was a Ranger School Graduate. The event has now grown to a tribute which honors all of our fallen American Heroes and Veterans, past, present, and future.
Members of the University of Tennessee Army R.O.T.C Rocky Top Battalion who had been cadets with Lt. Walkup ran the very first Mountain Man Memorial March in 2008. Since the event has grown to about a thousand marchers and runners with many categories, The American Legion Post 2 in Knoxville handles the March organization and logistics. The Mountain Man Memorial March consists of a marathon, half-marathon and 10K. The March is further divided into categories such as Military Heavy. In Military Heavy, the individual or team marches the mountain course in boots, utes (military camouflage) and a ruck (a weighted backpack). For non-military types, there are civilian light categories.
Amy Keene is the Gold Star Mother of Specialist Christopher Fox, United States Army, killed in action on September 29, 2008. Spc. Fox was killed by small arms fire in a Baghdad neighborhood. Here is Amy telling the story of how she asked Lt. Cmdr. Robert Cosby, U.S. Navy (ret.), then a Senior Naval Science Instructor at the high school where Miss Keene taught, to run in honor of her son.
This year, in addition to Commander Cosby, Caithlin Frost marched the half-marathon distance in honor of her nephew. Miss Frost has a possibly torn meniscus from the Knoxville Half Marathon three weeks earlier. That is why she marched/walked the Mountain Man Memorial March.
There are not that many military families and we tend to clump. We speak the same language. Three years ago, Commander Cosby’s wife, my friend and fellow Citadel and Army mom Rachel, said, as you would to a friend, “Let’s do the 10k”. I was 40 pounds overweight, but I knew some of those Gold Star Families, so I said, “Sure”.
There are no words to explain the gravity of the honor that is afforded these Gold Star Families. Every year, I am in awe of their bravery and sacrifice, to say nothing of the sacrifice their children have made so that those of us who don’t serve are free.
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