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Old 01-29-2007, 06:56 PM
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Default Yakima Guardsman Killed In Iraq

Yakima Guardsman Killed In Iraq

Story Published: Jan 29, 2007 at 3:20 PM PST
By The Associated PressBISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - Alan Johnson was raised to be a farmer but became a soldier instead.

Johnson, 44, a major in the Washington National Guard, was killed Friday by a roadside bomb in Iraq, said Mary Hanson, his mother, who lives in Sanborn, North Dakota, west of Valley City.

Hanson said her son lived in Yakima, Wash., with his wife, Victoria, and a stepdaughter. She last spoke to him on Christmas. "We didn't have time to talk about an awful lot," she said.

Johnson said his son worked as corrections officer at the Yakima County Jail in Yakima.

Johnson is the eighth serviceman from the Yakima Valley to die while on duty in Iraq.

"It's still a bad dream, and it's getting worse," Hanson said Monday. "He was a good son."

The military did not immediately release details of Johnson's death. Hanson said she was notified of her son's death on Saturday.

Four others were injured in the bomb attack, some seriously, she said.

Johnson grew up in Montpelier, North Dakota, and graduated from high school there in 1981.

"He grew up raising crops and horses and running tractors, and then he went to college," said his father, Sonny Johnson, of Montpelier.

Alan joined the Guard in North Dakota while in high school, his mother said.

"He was in 26 years," Hanson said. "He lived for the service."

It was his first tour of duty in Iraq, Hanson said.

"He ordinarily would have been coming home in April," his mother said.

Sonny Johnson said his son "was a good kid, good in school and got good grades. And he loved the Guard."

The two last spoke on Alan Johnson's birthday on Dec. 30.

"We talked about what he was doing, and he said they were doing a good job out there," Sonny Johnson said.

Johnson will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington, D.C. A memorial service is being planned in Jamestown, his mother said.

Maj. Alan Johnson is shown in this undated photo released by the Army.
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Old 01-30-2007, 05:31 PM
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RIP Maj. Alan Johnson may you cross that stream and rest under the spreading Oak with some of the other gallant officers that crossed before you i.e. Stonewall Jackson and Blackjack Pershing
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Old 01-30-2007, 06:26 PM
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Old 02-04-2007, 08:18 PM
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Maj. Alan Johnson -- Last call for a 'true hero'
By MARK MOREY
YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC


KRIS HOLLAND/Yakima Herald-Republic


"Major Johnson."

"Major Alan Johnson."

"Major Alan R. Johnson."

Three times, Army National Guard Capt. Tim Ozmer called out the roll.

The major had answered in the past, for the military, his family and his civilian job.

But Saturday afternoon, only the echo of the call rang out in the Yakima Armory.

With that symbolic end to Johnson's military service, next came three volleys from the military riflemen posted outside.

Inside, two other honor details -- from the Yakima Police Department and the Yakima County Sheriff's Office -- stood watch as Johnson's family was then presented with the American flag.

Johnson, who was activated from the Army Reserve to support Operation Iraqi Freedom, died Jan. 26 in Iraq from injuries suffered when his civil affairs team ran across an insurgent bomb.

The 44-year-old Johnson, who spent more than 25 years in the Army, National Guard and Army Reserve, was due to return from combat this spring. Instead, he became the eighth soldier or Marine with ties to the Yakima Valley to die in the Iraq war.

Although he performed multiple missions "outside the wire" of fortified bases, it was the first time he encountered enemy ordnance, an Army representative said.

More than 500 relatives, friends and military and civilian colleagues crowded the armory to remember Johnson. Many in the audience represented the Yakima County Department of Corrections, where Johnson worked for 15 years.

Martin Lopez, the department chaplain, read an e-mail in which a specialist remembered talking with Johnson as they both waited for a helicopter ride to Johnson's next post.


Members of an honor guard carry the U.S. and Washington state flags at the start of Saturday's memorial service for fallen soldier Maj. Alan Johnson at the Yakima Armory.

From that two-hour conversation, the specialist learned what many others said they already knew about Johnson -- that he was a man of God who loved his country and his family.

In the midst of war-torn Iraq, Johnson said he could see the hand of God at work, and he conveyed a sense of humility to the enlisted man before they parted.

After learning of his death, the specialist felt compelled to let Lopez know how he felt about meeting Johnson.

"He was a true warrior, and he was an honorable man," the specialist wrote, adding that he would always think of the major as a "true hero of this tour."

Johnson's colleagues in the military and the Corrections Department recalled how he was always willing to accept each new responsibility.

"When he was given a task, no matter how big or small, he would always respond, 'Roger -- I'll take care of it," said Army Lt. Col. Steven Davis, who saluted the casket of his former tanker platoon member before leaving the deck.

Steve Robertson, director of the Corrections Department, described Johnson as "loyal, hardworking, dependable and every other Boy Scout trait you can manage to come up with."

Johnson willingly sacrificed himself, Robertson said.

"Now it's our turn to let go of something that was so dear to us, and not expect anything back from God," he said, recalling the biblical phrase "Well done, my good and faithful servant."

"I'm sure Alan heard those words," Robertson said.

Corrections officers who had worked with Johnson recalled that he was always trying new assignments or taking more training, but not because he was seeking glory.


Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire hugs Victoria Johnson, wife of Army Maj. Alan Johnson, after presenting her with the state flag at the Yakima Armory during Saturday's memorial service.


"He really believed he had a duty to perform and do the best he could for whoever he was working for," Cpl. David Rossignol said.

Sgt. Karen Kelley thought of her fellow supervisor more as a brother and co-conspirator.

"The best thing I can say about Alan is that I respected him. After all, how many men can say that they have a sticker that says 'I love my wife' on their truck?"

Those comments harkened back to the start of the service, when a slide show displayed the final text message Johnson sent to his wife from the field: "Good morning, my queen ... loving you more and more every day."

Other slides showed Johnson posing with a gun behind a military vehicle and kissing his wife on a beach near a heart drawn in the sand.

Victoria Johnson, a former jail corporal, and the couple's 19-year-old daughter, Megan, received a series of hugs from the speakers and from Gov. Chris Gregoire, who attended the service at the recommendation of her husband, a Vietnam veteran.

Johnson was not always perfect, those who knew him said. But he always tried to do his best, and he went willingly when called to serve his country.

As corrections officer Andrew Martin said:

"Sometimes good men have to go to war. Sometimes those good men don't come home. There's nothing that can be said to lessen our loss but this: Sgt. Johnson loved us, and he knew that we loved him."

Johnson will be buried Feb. 14 at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

Victoria Johnson is escorted out of the Yakima Armory after Saturday's memorial service for her husband, Army Maj. Alan Johnson. Johnson died Jan. 26 in Iraq from injuries sustained when a roadside bomb detonated next to his Humvee.
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