Dustin-McGaugh-Obituary

Dustin K. "Dusty" McGaugh

Wichita, Kansas

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Wichita, Kansas

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McGaugh, Specialist Dustin K. "Dusty," 20 years old, died Sept. 29, 2003 outside of Baghdad, Iraq while serving in the United State Army. Memorial service 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 4, 2003 at the Faith Lutheran Church in Derby, KS; burial in Fayetteville Arkansas National Cemetery. Survivors:...

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I forever miss you Dusty. My first son bears your name in your honor, I knew no one and know no one I look up to more. You were the beacon of light guiding us from the darkness. Forever miss you my dear friend.

Forever may your life be celebrated for your selfless sacrifice. Never ending thanks.

To the family and friends of Spc. Dustin K. McGaugh:
Please accept my remembrance of Dustin on the anniversary of his passing and know that he will never be forgotten.

To the family and friends of Spc. Dustin K. McGaugh:
Remembering Dustin on the anniversary of his passing. May our fallen heroes never be forgotten!
Peggy Childers
"Don't Let The Memory Of Them Drift Away"
www.IraqWarHeroes.org

”Honor and Remember” - “Project Compassion” We love our Soldiers! We love our country and we cannot express enough love and compassion to the families of our fallen heroes. War does not discriminate – It breaks our hearts to see the faces of the fallen. We want to give this gift to the hero’s Mother, Father and/or spouse. We are a 501c3 nonprofit organization! Over 1,850 portraits have been completed and shipped to the parents and or spouse - at no cost as this is a gift from one...

To the family of Spc. Dustin K. McGaugh:
Dustin gave the ultimate sacrifice and will be held in the hearts of Americans forever. I cannot and will not let our fallen heroes be forgotten. My deepest sympathy to you. "Some gave all."
Peggy Childers
"Don't Let The Memory Of Them Drift Away"
www.IraqWarHeroes.org

In Memory of Dustin ~ (Debra Estep)

Holding you all in my thoughts and prayers.


The Wind on The Downs

“I like to think of you as brown and tall,
As strong and living as you used to be,
In khaki tunic, Sam Brown belt and all,
And standing there and laughing down at me.
Because they tell me, dear, that you are dead,
Because I can no longer see your face,
You have not died, it is not true, instead
You seek adventure in some other place.
That you are round about me, I believe;
I hear you...

I remember this young soldier I was at fort sill with charlie battery I remember him briefly two times right before we got deployed we all scrambled those weeks to get our equipment ready to go to the railhead.