From Deseret News archives:

Group of Utah soldiers serving together again

Published: Monday, April 11, 2005 10:42 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
MANTI — A group of former LDS missionaries is returning to the field — only this time it's the battlefield.

Six soldiers from a Manti National Guard unit have all returned from their LDS missions within the past 18 months. Their time home has been short. Now their country has called them back into service.

Originally, the National Guard told the soldiers they must report for duty in late February. But just a few weeks later the soldiers had the option to stay. All six volunteered to go.

"We had the option to back out, but we didn't," said Mark Parrish, of Mt. Pleasant.

The six soldiers — Parrish, Aaron Willardson, Brady Willardson, Eric Larsen, Ladd Bradley, Casey Hanson and Richard Brandt — all grew up in the closely linked towns of Manti and Ephraim in Sanpete County. All are graduates of Manti High School. All were serving LDS missions in 2002 and 2003, and now all are, once again, serving together in the 1st Battalion's 145th Field Artillery unit, Battery B.

Story continues below
In December, four Utah National Guard units from the 2nd Battalion, 222nd Field Artillery, were called up. The activated units are Battery A based in Richfield, Battery C based in St. George, Battery HHB of Cedar City and the Service Battery based in Beaver. The units are now at Camp Shelby, Miss., training for service in Iraq.

After arrival at Camp Shelby, the Army determined that the four units didn't have enough men for their missions, Lt. Col. David Thomas said. So members of other field artillery units in Utah who had not served active duty time in connection with the Iraq conflict received call-up orders. The Guard also put out a call for volunteers.

That put the six Manti-based soldiers at risk for a possible call-up.

On March 5, Guardsmen not yet at Camp Shelby who had either received activation orders or were considering volunteering met at Camp Williams. That was when the men who had received orders, including the six returned missionaries from Sanpete County, were told that the Guard had more than enough volunteers and that they didn't need to go if they didn't want to.

All six quickly volunteered after the meeting.

Four Manti unit members who had not received orders also volunteered for the deployment. Jacob Brandt signed up because his brother, who was one of the returned missionaries, was going. Ben Stilson wanted to experience the military overseas. Gavin Plumer volunteered because he wanted to serve with his friends. Shawn Berry had started out in the Cedar City unit. Then he moved to Salt Lake City and transferred to the Manti unit because it was closer to home. He volunteered because comrades in his original unit had been activated.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Andersen apologizes for Jordan hoax

Thats how they roll in orem/ provo, maybe not illigal but sure in the heck...

"Many died as a result." [of tobacco lobbying] Do you have any idea how...

Y.'s Tavernari looking for right role

I can understand that sometimes shooters have cold streeks but they get out...

It would be fun to watch the Sun Devils jump to an early lead and win going...

Williams' late jumper tops Spurs

Matthews 0 rebounds in 34 minutes. What was your point in making such a...

I am an over weight 55-year-old man. I've shoveled snow the last three...

We have religions that control government to the point of oppressing minority...

Cougars in better mood about bowl

I don't know who is more classless--Ute fans or Ute fans who pose as BYU fans...

Have you read Brandt Anderson's "apology"? Terrible, just terrible. He...

What's cooking

would like candy recipies "creamy sure fudge' (makes 5 lbs) plus all others...

Advertisements