March 23, 2003: Private Jessica Lynch Captured by Iraqi Forces

On March 23, 2003, Private Jessica Lynch of Wirt County was captured by Iraqi forces. Soon, Lynch would be a household name throughout the nation.

Two years earlier, the 18 year old had joined the Army to earn money for college. Just days after the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, her convoy was ambushed by Iraqi forces, and her Humvee was wrecked. Lynch was seriously injured and then captured.

Nine days later, she was rescued by U.S. forces during a dramatic nighttime raid—the first rescue of a female POW in American history. Lynch was awarded the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, and the Prisoner of War medal.

Lynch couldn’t remember exactly what happened during the rescue, but the official details that emerged raised questions. Iraqi doctors claimed they had tried to hand over Lynch peacefully. Others alleged the military had staged the raid for publicity. Lynch later testified before Congress that “the American people are capable of determining their own ideals of heroes, and they don’t need to be told elaborate lies.” Lynch left the Army, returned to West Virginia, and eventually graduated from WVU-Parkersburg.

West Virginia Secretary of State's Son Receives Purple Heart

The son of new West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner has received a Purple Heart, more than six years after he was injured in Afghanistan.

The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register report that retired Army captain Steven Warner received the honor during a ceremony Monday at the state capitol in Charleston, hours after his father was sworn in as the new secretary of state.

Warner and his unit were clearing a dirt road of improvised explosive devices in April 2010 when their vehicle was hit by a Taliban IED. Warner suffered a severe concussion from the blast.

Most soldiers get the Purple Heart when they’re in-theater, but because he wasn’t evacuated, Warner says the honor got delayed.

Warner is currently studying at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton Business School.

After 47 Years Morgan County Man Awarded Purple Heart

Nearly 47 years after being injured in a land mine explosion in Vietnam, a West Virginia veteran has finally been awarded the Purple Heart.
67 year old Douglas Lyall of Morgan County, received the medal earlier this month after the U.S. Army Board for Correction of Military Records issued a decision finding there was sufficient evidence showing he was injured in a hostile act in Vietnam and entitled to the medal.  

In the fall of 1968, Lyall was 20 years old and serving in South Vietnam when his armored personnel carrier was struck by a land mine.  He was treated at a military hospital but Lyall’s injuries were not noted in Army records, creating a major impediment to his being awarded the Purple Heart.

Lyall received his medal by mail on July 10.

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