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Joseph J. Fenty, Jr.
Lieutenant Colonel Joseph J. Fenty,
Jr., was among 10 soldiers killed
when their Chinook helicopter
crashed in Kunar Province,
Afghanistan, on 5 May 2006, while
conducting combat operations in
support of Operation Enduring
Freedom. He was the commander of 3rd
Squadron, 71st Cavalry Regiment,
10th Mountain Division (LI), Fort
Drum, New York. He was
41.
A
native of New York, Fenty was
commissioned an infantry officer in
June 1986 after graduating from
Belmont Abbey College in Belmont,
NC. with a degree in business
administration.
After
completing the Infantry Officer
Basic Course, he was assigned to the
506th Infantry Regiment at Fort
Kobbe, Panama. In 1990, Fenty was
assigned to Fort Wainwright, Alaska,
where he served as a company
commander and battalion staff
officer. In June 1996, Fenty was
reassigned to Fort Benning, Georgia,
to the 14th Infantry Regiment and
later to the 75th Ranger Regiment
headquarters in July 1997.
Fenty
was assigned to the 10th Mountain
Division in 1997 and deployed to
Bosnia is support of multi national
operations. In March 2000, he was
assigned to the Division’s 2nd
Brigade and later deployed with 2nd
Brigade to Afghanistan. In June
2002, he was assigned to the U.S.
Army’s Human Resources Command in
Alexandria, Virginia.
Fenty
returned to the 10th Mountain
Division in June 2004 and took
command of the 3rd Squadron, 71st
Cavalry Regiment.
In
1994, Fenty was selected to serve
for two years as an exchange officer
with the British Army as an
instructor at Royal Military Academy
Sandhurst, the United Kingdom ‘s
equivalent of the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point.
Fenty’s military education includes
the Command General Staff College,
Training Development Course,
Combined Arms and Services Staff
School, Infantry Officer Advanced
Course, Pathfinder Course,
Jumpmaster Course, Ranger School,
Jungle Warfare School, Infantry
Officer Basic Course and Infantry
Mortar Platoon Officer Course.
In
1998, Fenty received a master’s
degree in education from Troy State
University.
His
awards and decorations include the
Legion of Merit, Bronze Star,
Meritorious Service Medal, Army
Commendation Medal, Army Achievement
Medal, National Defense Service
Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary
Medal, Global War on Terrorism
Expeditionary Medal, Global War on
Terrorism Service Medal, Army
Service Ribbon, Overseas Service
Ribbon, NATO Medal, Combat
Infantryman Badge, Expert
Infantryman Badge, Master
Parachutist Badge, Pathfinder Badge
and the Ranger Tab.
Lieutenant Colonel Joseph J. Fenty
was born a soldier. And during his
20-year military career, his quiet
passion inspired others to live the
way he did. “We all wanted to be
more like Joe Fenty,” said
Lieutenant Colonel Chris Gibson, who
served with Fenty. “We all were in
awe of him.”
Friends said Fenty was an elite
athlete, citing his remarkable
marathon times (under three hours)
and his proclivity for
ultramarathons -- races of 60 to 70
miles. He was also a cross-country
skier, mountain biker and kayaker.
“If he wasn’t in the Army, he could
have been a professional endurance
athlete,” said Lieutenant Colonel
Fred Johnson, a longtime running
buddy. Johnson said Fenty’s
post-military plans incorporated his
love of the outdoors. “He wanted to
work in Outward Bound and teach kids
to enjoy fitness as much as he did.”
Fenty
is survived by his wife, Kristin,
his daughter Lauren and his parents. |


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