Gene Arden Vance Jr.

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Gene Arden Vance Jr.
West Virginia Distinguished Unit Award

Gene Arden (“Buddy”) Vance Jr. (November 30, 1963 – May 18, 2002) was an American

War on Terrorism as well as in the ABC reality series "Profiles from the Front Line".[1]

Vance was the first member of the

U.S. Army graduate of Goodfellow Air Force Base's cryptography training to be killed in action while taking part in Operation Enduring Freedom.[4] Vance was the first alumni of The Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center Presidio of Monterey to be killed in combat since the terrorist attacks on the US of September 2001.[5]

Both

honor, city/mountain bike path, trademarked coffee label, and memorial drive have been named in his honor. He received 17 awards and decorations including the US Army Purple Heart, two Bronze Star Medals with and the Legion of Merit
that recognizes exceptionally meritorious conduct in the performance of sustained, superior achievement.

Early, family and personal life

Vance was born on November 30, 1963, in Frankfurt, Germany. He was the first born son of the late Gene Arden Vance Sr., a retired US

McDowell County, WV who is a retired registered nurse teaching nursing in the United States. The Vance's also had two younger children, Gene Jr.’s siblings, David and Jamie.[8]

Vance is a member of a multi-generational US military family spanning four generations of service. His great uncles William ‘Bittle’ Steele, US Army 4th Infantry Division Bravo Company and Clarence 'Buck' England served in the

US Navy. During his life Gene actively sought to continue his family's military legacy.[10]

Gene A. Vance Jr. was described as a 6-foot-4 inches tall "mountaineer"- an avid

enthusiast.[6][11] He kept much of his military life a secret from friends and family who believed he led what was described as two lives - a different life than people saw.[12]
He loved the
NSA
.

Vance was a student at West Virginia University and a 1981 graduate of Oceana High School (West Virginia) in Wyoming County, where he was voted "most quiet" in his high school senior class. From all accounts he was a strong, shy, selfless, pleasant, gentle and quiet man who loved a wide variety of rock and roll music, and dark roast coffee.[18][19]

Vance had a daughter, Amber, from a previous marriage, and was married to Lisa Selmon Vance at the time of his death.[20] Vance's personal communications with his wife during wartime service were featured in a book entitled ‘Behind The Lines’ by author Andrew Carroll.[21] [22][23][24]

9/11

At the time of the

September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, Vance was living in Morgantown, West Virginia. He was newly married and about to go on his honeymoon. He was also just beginning a new semester at West Virginia University and managed one of West Virginia's largest sporting goods stores in the city.[25]

Among the U.S. Army responses to the

West Virginia Army National Guard element of the battalion. Vance cancelled his honeymoon and put his studies on hold to go to war. Vance's Persian language, cryptologic and special forces skills, harnessed at the start of the war in Afghanistan, were rare and distinguished him from the majority of the US Army.[27]

Vance's skills became vital to operations against the Taliban and Al-Qaeda terrorists.[28]

Military career

Vance attended Basic and Advanced Individual Training at Fort Gordon, Ga., for Communications Systems Circuit Controller in 1983. In 1988, he completed the Primary Leadership Development Course at Fort Ord, Ca. and then served in various active-duty assignments both in the United States and overseas from June 1983 until June 1990.

Vance's military education included:

  • The Communication System Circuit Course
  • The Primary Leadership Development Course
  • The Petroleum Supply Specialist Course
  • The Basic Airborne Course
  • The Special Forces Command Basic Non commissioned Officer Course
  • Advanced International Morse Code
  • The Persian Language Course

Vance was awarded his first Bronze Star

Persian Gulf War then joined the Army Reserves as a supply specialist in the 646th Quartermaster Company, Kingwood, W.Va., from January 1992 until October 1992. During this period, he completed the Petroleum Supply Specialist Course. He then joined Company C, 2nd Battalion, 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne), in October 1992. In 1994, he transferred to Support Company, 2nd Battalion, 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne). He was later awarded the military occupational skill of voice interceptor in 2001. After the events on September 11, 2001, Vance's special forces unit was activated.[15]

According to the US Military, Staff Sergeant Vance's patrol was ambushed on 18 May 2002 by Taliban fighters in the vicinity of

Shkin, Paktika Afghanistan while taking part in Operation Mountain Lion.[30]
Although critically wounded in the initial attack, Staff Sergeant Vance continued to translate battlefield intelligence for Afghan forces in the area, directing them out of danger. For his actions Vance received multiple awards and decorations. He had also played a critical role in developing his detachment's communications capabilities in the US-led efforts to capture Osama Bin Laden.

Death, memorials and tributes

Awards and decorations

References

  1. ^ Warner Bros. and Jerry Bruckheimer Television. "Profiles from The Front Line". Richard Mackenzie. on YouTube
  2. .
  3. ^ "Fallen National Guardsman Vance remembered as quiet, dedicated soldier". West Virginia University. 28 May 2002. Archived from the original on 28 August 2022.
  4. ^ a b Gutierrez, Luis Loza (24 April 2007). "Honoring two great American Soldiers". Goodfellow Air Force Base. Archived from the original on 6 March 2017.
  5. ISBN 978-1507686119. Archived from the original
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  6. ^ a b 2006 Congressional Record, Vol. 152, Page E2083 Archived
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  21. .
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Works cited

  • "C.A.R.E. Summit 2013". Comprehensive Aesthetic Restorative Effort Summit 2013. Navy Medical Center San Diego. 5 December 2013.

External links