McAnulty, Brian, MSgt

Deceased
 
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 Service Details
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Last Rank
Master Sergeant
Last Primary MOS
0369-Infantry Unit Leader
Last MOSGroup
Infantry
Primary Unit
2006-2006, 0369, 3rd Bn, 4th Marines (3/4)
Service Years
1988 - 2006
Official/Unofficial USMC Certificates
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Enlisted Collar Insignia
Master Sergeant
Four Hash Marks

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 Personal Details 

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Home State
Mississippi
Mississippi
Year of Birth
1967
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by SgtMaj Chris Garza to remember Marine MSgt Brian McAnulty.

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Contact Info
Last Address
Vicksburg
Date of Passing
Dec 11, 2006
 

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Last Known Activity:

Master Sergeant killed in helo crash

A Marine was killed Monday when the CH-53 helicopter he was in crashed just after takeoff in Iraq's Anbar province, according to the Defense Department. The cause of the crash was under investigation.

Master Sgt. Brian McAnulty, 39, of Vicksburg, Miss., was assigned to Twentynine Palms, Calif.-based 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines. "There was no foul play or cause for investigation for the cause of death," 2nd Lt. Jill Leyden, a Corps spokeswoman, said Wednesday.

It was unclear which model of CH-53 was involved.

McAnulty is the second non-hostile Marine death reported in Anbar province in less than a week.

   
Other Comments:

Vicksburg Marine, WC grad dies in Iraq
By Sam Knowlton

[12/14/06] A 19-year U.S. Marine who grew up in Vicksburg died in Iraq Monday. He was described by friends and family as dedicated to the Marines and his mission.

Master Sgt. Brian P. McAnulty was aboard a CH-53 that crashed just after takeoff in Anbar Province, the U.S. Department of Defense said Wednesday afternoon.

The crash was under investigation, but was not due to hostile action, the Defense Department said. Three other Marines were also killed in Anbar the same day by improvised explosive devices.

Total U.S. deaths in Iraq are at 2,937 with 39 from Mississippi. Previous fatalities have been from Utica, Port Gibson and Hollandale. McAnulty was the first from Vicksburg to die in the war that started in March 2003.

He was a 1985 graduate of Warren Central High School, where he was a soccer standout.

Two days before Christmas of the year of his graduation, McAnulty was a passenger in a car wreck in which a good friend and fellow soccer player, Dennis Mlakar, was killed.

Dennis Mlakar's father, Dr. Paul Mlakar of Vicksburg, was among those saying he had kept up with McAnulty and admired his dedication.

Mlakar, a veteran of the U.S. Army and a top research scientist for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said he and Bob McAnulty, Brian's father, had seen many young men "find themselves" through military service.

"But neither of us had seen anyone find themselves so quickly as Brian had," Mlakar said. "By the end of basic training, I mean, he was there. That was his life."

McAnulty's parents, Bob and Fran McAnulty, lived in Vicksburg from the mid- to late-1970s. Bob McAnulty, a retired U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer, worked in the construction of the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station in Claiborne County and stayed to help operate it, Mlakar said.

The McAnulty's and the Mlakar's were among the parents who helped lay the foundation for Vicksburg's youth-soccer program, said Brian McAnulty's soccer coach for four years at WCHS, Lucy Young. Bob McAnulty officiated soccer games for the then-young Vicksburg Soccer Organization, and Brian McAnulty's class of players spent many Saturdays traveling and playing games together, Young said.

"Brian was a dedicated player," Young said. "He was quiet. They were a real close-knit group."

Brian McAnulty played on the WCHS team for four years, playing a mainly defensive position. During those years the team lost just five games and had two perfect seasons, one 10-0 and the other, in McAnulty's senior year, 13-0.

After graduating from WCHS, McAnulty attended Hinds Community College for three semesters before enlisting, Mlakar said.

"I kept up with him through his parents," said Young, who described McAnulty as 'a good student' and 'a scholar-athlete.' "I know he believed in what he was doing," she said. "He was a young man with a bright future in front of him."

As a Marine, McAnulty, about a year short of retirement eligibility, had been posted to U.S. Embassies in Paraguay; Seoul, South Korea; Budapest, Hungary; Bujumbura, Burundi; and, most recently, Bogota, Colombia, said his brother, Brett McAnulty. From about late 2003 until 2005, McAnulty had taught at the USMC's Security-Guard school in Quantico, Va.

After Bob McAnulty retired from Grand Gulf about 10 years ago, he and his wife became frequent travelers in their motor home, settling near Brett and his family in Kernersville, N.C., where, today, services for Brian were being planned at Pierce-Jefferson Funeral Home.

In addition to his parents and brother, McAnulty is survived by his sister-in-law, Stacy; and their two daughters, Cora and Lily.

Earlier this year, McAnulty had been assigned to the USMC base at Twentynine Palms, Calif., from which he was deployed to Iraq in August or early September as a member of the 3rd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force.

He also had served a combat deployment during Operation Desert Storm in 1991 and served as a security guard aboard the aircraft carrier the USS John F. Kennedy. Other postings included to Camp Pendleton, Calif., and Japan.

"He loved what he was doing," Brett McAnulty said of his brother. "He wouldn't have rather been anywhere else."

Mlakar said he visited McAnulty at McAnulty's posting in Hungary in 1996, while Mlakar was on a Corps special assignment.

"He was proud to be serving his country, as I'm sure he was to the end," Mlakar said. "Brian was the type of leader that any parent would want to have leading their son or daughter into harm's way."

Anbar province encompasses much of west-central Iraq, from near Baghdad to the country's borders with Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The province includes the Euphrates River cities of Hadithah, Ramadi and Fallujah.

They called him 'Top'

In an e-mail message to Brian McAnulty's brother, a fellow noncommissioned officer in Iraq and his roommate for the three months before he died says Brian McAnulty was known to all as simply 'Top'.

"Top had an infectious personality and was loved by all," the Marine wrote. "If there was a group of Marines gathering on the LZ, it was because Top was entertaining. He would tell stories and jokes. He smiled and laughed. When he was 'on', everyone wanted to be in on the action.

"He was the most passionate Marine I have ever been in contact with. He was emotional to a fault. He loved Marines and would do anything for HIS Marines. He always sacrificed his own comfort to provide for others. He was kind, unselfish, honest and brave. The one quality which I treasured most was his loyalty."

   

   
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  Navy Unit Commendation - 2006



Name of Award
Navy Unit Commendation

Year Awarded
2006
   
   
This ribbon will display Multiple Award devices automatically based on the total number of awards listed.
   
Details Behind Award
Not Specified
   
My Photos From This Award
No Available Photos

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