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SPC James Manuel Cavaco

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SPC James Manuel Cavaco Veteran

Birth
Attleboro, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
3 Oct 1993 (aged 26)
Mogadishu, Banaadir, Somalia
Burial
Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.9015637, Longitude: -71.2174492
Memorial ID
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James Cavaco was born to Joseph and Barbara Cavaco on February 12, 1967, the youngest of three children. He was from Attleboro, Massachusetts, but grew up in Rehoboth and Sandwich. Cavaco attended Upper Cape Regional Vocational Technical School on Cape Cod, majoring in plumbing and heating and graduating in 1985. After graduating, he went on to attend Cape Cod Community College. He wrote music and played guitar in a band with several friends. He worked on and off doing plumbing. He also worked a number of other jobs including being a self-employed landscaper. He made some good friends and had a few girlfriends. For the last few years before joining the Army, James was unsure of himself and mainly unhappy with what he was doing with his life. He enlisted in the Army in the spring of 1991. However, he needed to wait several months before heading to basic training. He gained about twenty pounds in the interim, working out by himself. He ran while wearing a backpack filled with sand and rocks. He completed Airborne Training and earned the coveted Ranger tab. He served with the Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment at Fort Benning, Georgia.

SPC James M. Cavaco 26 Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device, Purple Heart∼Killed on the Lost Convoy during the Battle of Mogadishu as part of Operation Gothic Serpent. Awarded the Bronze Star with Valor Device, Purple Heart.

SPC James M. Cavaco could have gotten out of deploying to Somalia with his Ranger unit. But his dedication wouldn't let him, says his mother, Barbara Cavaco, James Cavaco was among the American soldiers killed in the Oct. 3-4 firefight in Mogadishu.

When James Cavaco enlisted in 1991 at age 24, he was a little older than most recruits. He decided that since he couldn't find fulfilling work in the civilian world, he could find it in the Army.

James Cavaco had an associate's degree from Cape Cod Community College and worked at several jobs, but the sagging New England economy couldn't provide him a job with a future. "He just made up his mind--'This is it, I've had enough of this, I'm not going to live like this, I'm not going to be a bum, I'm going to be the best I can be and that's it,'" his mother says.

James Cavaco not only enlisted, he volunteered for the Rangers. Barbara Cavaco says her son quit smoking and drinking and started an exercise program to meet the high Ranger standards. Ranger training didn't faze him. As brutal as Ranger School was, he loved it," Barbara Cavaco says. "He thought it was great."

To break the tension, he fell back on his hobby, playing rock music on the guitar. "He was really into that; he was quite good," his mother says, adding with a laugh, "He used to drive all the guys crazy in the barracks."

When James Cavaco got the word that his company was to deploy to Somalia, he had been notified of a death in the family. Barbara Cavaco still weeps when she recalls her son's selfless response to leaving his unit.

"He refused to come home," says his mother. "What he said was, 'I have to do what I have to do to affect mission success and to see that my men don't get hurt.'"

On Oct. 3, James Cavaco was riding in a convoy of Humvees battling through the tight streets of Mogadishu to rescue soldiers in a downed helicopter. He was killed in a rain of automatic weapons fire and grenades. He was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star Medal for valor.

Barbara Cavaco has no grudge against the Army. "He had faith in his officers, in his unit, his equipment, his training," she says. "He was totally dedicated. He felt that the men he was with were the best that the selection process was such that he was surrounded by the best he could be surrounded by. That was his thing, to do the best he could."
James Cavaco was born to Joseph and Barbara Cavaco on February 12, 1967, the youngest of three children. He was from Attleboro, Massachusetts, but grew up in Rehoboth and Sandwich. Cavaco attended Upper Cape Regional Vocational Technical School on Cape Cod, majoring in plumbing and heating and graduating in 1985. After graduating, he went on to attend Cape Cod Community College. He wrote music and played guitar in a band with several friends. He worked on and off doing plumbing. He also worked a number of other jobs including being a self-employed landscaper. He made some good friends and had a few girlfriends. For the last few years before joining the Army, James was unsure of himself and mainly unhappy with what he was doing with his life. He enlisted in the Army in the spring of 1991. However, he needed to wait several months before heading to basic training. He gained about twenty pounds in the interim, working out by himself. He ran while wearing a backpack filled with sand and rocks. He completed Airborne Training and earned the coveted Ranger tab. He served with the Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment at Fort Benning, Georgia.

SPC James M. Cavaco 26 Killed on the Lost Convoy Bronze Star with Valor Device, Purple Heart∼Killed on the Lost Convoy during the Battle of Mogadishu as part of Operation Gothic Serpent. Awarded the Bronze Star with Valor Device, Purple Heart.

SPC James M. Cavaco could have gotten out of deploying to Somalia with his Ranger unit. But his dedication wouldn't let him, says his mother, Barbara Cavaco, James Cavaco was among the American soldiers killed in the Oct. 3-4 firefight in Mogadishu.

When James Cavaco enlisted in 1991 at age 24, he was a little older than most recruits. He decided that since he couldn't find fulfilling work in the civilian world, he could find it in the Army.

James Cavaco had an associate's degree from Cape Cod Community College and worked at several jobs, but the sagging New England economy couldn't provide him a job with a future. "He just made up his mind--'This is it, I've had enough of this, I'm not going to live like this, I'm not going to be a bum, I'm going to be the best I can be and that's it,'" his mother says.

James Cavaco not only enlisted, he volunteered for the Rangers. Barbara Cavaco says her son quit smoking and drinking and started an exercise program to meet the high Ranger standards. Ranger training didn't faze him. As brutal as Ranger School was, he loved it," Barbara Cavaco says. "He thought it was great."

To break the tension, he fell back on his hobby, playing rock music on the guitar. "He was really into that; he was quite good," his mother says, adding with a laugh, "He used to drive all the guys crazy in the barracks."

When James Cavaco got the word that his company was to deploy to Somalia, he had been notified of a death in the family. Barbara Cavaco still weeps when she recalls her son's selfless response to leaving his unit.

"He refused to come home," says his mother. "What he said was, 'I have to do what I have to do to affect mission success and to see that my men don't get hurt.'"

On Oct. 3, James Cavaco was riding in a convoy of Humvees battling through the tight streets of Mogadishu to rescue soldiers in a downed helicopter. He was killed in a rain of automatic weapons fire and grenades. He was posthumously awarded the Bronze Star Medal for valor.

Barbara Cavaco has no grudge against the Army. "He had faith in his officers, in his unit, his equipment, his training," she says. "He was totally dedicated. He felt that the men he was with were the best that the selection process was such that he was surrounded by the best he could be surrounded by. That was his thing, to do the best he could."

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CPL US ARMY RANGER
75TH RANGER REGT 3RD BN B CO
KILLED IN MOGADISHU, SOMALIA

RANGERS LEAD THE WAY


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