Marine Lance Corporal Ryan T. McCaughn
August 14, 1987 ~ November 7, 2006
Operation Iraqi Freedom
1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment
2nd Marine Division II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejune, NC
19, of Manchester, NH; killed in action conducting combat operations in Anbar province, Iraq.
Operation Iraqi Freedom
1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment
2nd Marine Division II Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejune, NC
19, of Manchester, NH; killed in action conducting combat operations in Anbar province, Iraq.
Ryan was born in Jacksonville, NC, the home of Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune. He spent his early years in North Carolina and Missouri and settled in Manchester, New Hampshire. He was raised by his mother Nicole and his stepfather Raymond. Even as a child, friends said that Ryan was clear in his military ambitions. Both of his parents were former servicemen; his mother served briefly in the U.S. Army and his father, Thomas McCaughn was a Marine. His older brother Chris served in the Air Force and his brother Sean Merlin served in the Navy.
Friends describe Ryan as an irrepressible comedian who used to torment his school bus driver and sometimes splashed around in puddles just for laughs. He performed on stage with Maskers, his high-school drama club, and wasn't afraid to dress up as a woman if the part demanded it. As a high schooler, he took culinary classes at the Manchester School of Technology. He and his friends, Kyle Schmidt and Greg Lake, talked of one day opening a restaurant and bar. Ryan, they said, was going to take business classes so he could be the manager. Mostly though, friends and relatives said he spoke of joining the military and later, becoming a police officer. He worked extra hard during his senior year to complete the requirements necessary for enrolling in the Marines, at one point taking three English classes in a single semester.
At 17, he asked his mother to help him sign up for duty. "He said he was going to sign up anyway when he was 18," Schmidt said, "but he would feel better if it was with her consent."
He left for boot camp at Parris Island one week after graduating in June 2005 and was then stationed in Camp Lejeune, N.C. Although he wasn't allowed to divulge most details of his mission, friends and family members said they know he was living in Ramadi, the southwestern point of the Sunni Triangle, and that he patrolled the region with a grenade launcher and M16 rifle. "He said he needed to do this," his mother recalled. "He said if he could keep one dad from going to Iraq and he could take his place instead, then he'll feel like he's accomplished something."
Ryan occasionally returned to Central High School after graduating. Once to talk to students about life in the Marines. He also came as a recruiter. Ryan is remembered fondly for his sense of humor and serious commitment to the Marines and to his country. His creative writing teacher in high school shared a poem that Ryan had written entitled “Soldier.”
Friends describe Ryan as an irrepressible comedian who used to torment his school bus driver and sometimes splashed around in puddles just for laughs. He performed on stage with Maskers, his high-school drama club, and wasn't afraid to dress up as a woman if the part demanded it. As a high schooler, he took culinary classes at the Manchester School of Technology. He and his friends, Kyle Schmidt and Greg Lake, talked of one day opening a restaurant and bar. Ryan, they said, was going to take business classes so he could be the manager. Mostly though, friends and relatives said he spoke of joining the military and later, becoming a police officer. He worked extra hard during his senior year to complete the requirements necessary for enrolling in the Marines, at one point taking three English classes in a single semester.
At 17, he asked his mother to help him sign up for duty. "He said he was going to sign up anyway when he was 18," Schmidt said, "but he would feel better if it was with her consent."
He left for boot camp at Parris Island one week after graduating in June 2005 and was then stationed in Camp Lejeune, N.C. Although he wasn't allowed to divulge most details of his mission, friends and family members said they know he was living in Ramadi, the southwestern point of the Sunni Triangle, and that he patrolled the region with a grenade launcher and M16 rifle. "He said he needed to do this," his mother recalled. "He said if he could keep one dad from going to Iraq and he could take his place instead, then he'll feel like he's accomplished something."
Ryan occasionally returned to Central High School after graduating. Once to talk to students about life in the Marines. He also came as a recruiter. Ryan is remembered fondly for his sense of humor and serious commitment to the Marines and to his country. His creative writing teacher in high school shared a poem that Ryan had written entitled “Soldier.”
Soldier
by Ryan McCaughn
“Many soldiers have had to experience the ultimate Sacrifice”
Even in death, a soldier will show Pride.
All you can do is hope that they finally found Peace.”
by Ryan McCaughn
“Many soldiers have had to experience the ultimate Sacrifice”
Even in death, a soldier will show Pride.
All you can do is hope that they finally found Peace.”
Fellow soldier and friend Cpl Brian Krenzeli was in boot camp with Ryan and “considered him a great friend. He was one of the guys there that really made the time go by faster especially with his humor. I don’t think there was a single day we spent on Parris Island that he didn’t get me quarter decked for laughing. He was an outstanding Marine and a great friend and he will be missed.”
Ryan is survived by his mother Nicole Cote and step-father Raymond Beauclair, father Thomas McCaughn, brothers Chris and Sean Merlin
Ryan is survived by his mother Nicole Cote and step-father Raymond Beauclair, father Thomas McCaughn, brothers Chris and Sean Merlin