Decorated Surf City Marine dies in Iraq
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Dave Brooks
William C. James spent his childhood searching for his calling, and
when he decided to join the Marine Corp. after graduating from
Huntington Beach High, he felt like he finally found a match.
Friends and neighbors said James took an immediate liking to the
discipline and honor of military life and planed to make a career for
himself in the service. Sadly his life ended Nov. 10 during heavy
fighting in Iraq. He was 24 years old.
Officials with the Camp Pendleton Marine Base said James died
fighting alongside two other American soldiers. The circumstances
surrounding James’ death have not been made public, but the al-Anbar
province where he was killed is known as the Sunni Triangle and
includes Fallouja, a city where the U.S. military is wrapping up a
bloody offensive to retake the city from insurgents.
James was a highly decorated soldier who friends said eagerly
planned to make a career out of his service with the Marines. His
achievements include the Navy and Marine Corp Achievement Medal for
exemplary service beyond the normal call of duty. He was a rifleman
assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine
Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force.
Neighbors described James as a polite man who generally kept to
himself. A California native, James and his family eventually moved
to North Carolina and then Huntington Beach during his senior year of
high school.
Former Neighbor Jeff McMullens who used to live next door to James
on Constitution Drive in Huntington Beach, said James was friendly
but generally shy.
“He didn’t say to much, but I always thought he was a good kid,”
McMullens said. “I knew him because he bred a Rottweiler that I later
bought.”
James graduated from Huntington Beach High School in 1998, but
felt lost and decided to follow in his families’ footsteps and enlist
in the Marine Corps. His grandfather was a former merchant marine,
McMullens said, and his father was enlisted in the Army during the
Vietnam War.
“I think he really found something that he enjoyed in the
Marines,” McMullens said. “He planned to make a career out of his
service.”
His parents, C.J. and William James Sr., moved to Oceanside after
their son left for the military.
“This is a really difficult time for our family, I have lost my
only son,” said C.J. James, who added that she was too distraught to
go into the details of James’ life. James is also survived by his two
sisters Lynn and Leah, and his brother Shy.
A private service will be held for James on Saturday.
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