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SFC Christopher Wade Phelps

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SFC Christopher Wade Phelps Veteran

Birth
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
Death
23 Jun 2005 (aged 39)
Baghdad, Iraq
Burial
Sturgis, Meade County, South Dakota, USA GPS-Latitude: 44.3678056, Longitude: -103.4765917
Plot
SECTION G SITE 2701
Memorial ID
View Source
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - An Army sergeant killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq was remembered Sunday as a gifted athlete and natural leader at his Louisville high school.Sgt. 1st Class Christopher W. Phelps, 39, died last Thursday in Baghdad after an improvised explosive device detonated near his military vehicle, the Pentagon said.The Gulf War veteran, who spent 19 years in the military, was a member of the Army's 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, based at Fort Carson, Colo.Back in his hometown, Phelps was remembered as an all-around athlete at Male High School. He played quarterback, wide receiver and defensive back on the football team, was a point guard in basketball and ran track."God, what a tragedy," his high school football coach, Wally Oyler, said Sunday when learning of his former player's death.Phelps, a 1984 Male graduate, helped lead the Bulldogs to the state playoffs, ending a long postseason drought for the school, Oyler said. Phelps earned second-team All-State honors his senior year and played in the Kentucky-Tennessee all-star game."He'd work his tail off all the time and he'd always have a smile," Oyler said. "No matter what you asked him to do, he would jump in and do it. He was just a wonderful kid."Kevin Wigginton got to know Phelps when they were seventh graders, and the two became close friends and teammates at Male and later in college. "We had a lot of good memories," Wigginton said Sunday. "He was a great leader on the football field."The two later played football together at Kentucky State University and then at a junior college in Mississippi, Wigginton said. They parted after that - Phelps joined the military and Wigginton concluded his college career at West Virginia State.Phelps didn't tell Wigginton of his decision to join the Army until the day he left. "He didn't want to tell me because he knew I would try to talk him out of it," Wigginton said.They last saw each other about a year ago, just before Phelps left Fort Knox - where he had been stationed for a few years - for his next assignment in Colorado.Phelps told his friend he expected to be sent to Iraq."I'm not going to say he was looking forward to going, but he knew that was part of his duty to his country, so he was prepared to do that," Wigginton said.Kenny Phelps said his brother enjoyed the Army, and it was through the military that he met his wife, Bobbie. Christopher Phelps left for Iraq in early April and was scheduled to get out of the military next March."I don't think he really wanted to go," Kenny Phelps said.Kenny Phelps said his brother had three children and a stepdaughter, ages 9 to 23, as well as five sisters and two brothers. His parents are deceased.Christopher Phelps drove a tank in the Gulf War.After his arrival in Iraq this past spring, he wrote to one of his sisters about his newest assignment in the Middle East, Kenny Phelps said.In those letters, he wrote he "just couldn't believe some of the things that he was seeing and that was going on," but he didn't elaborate, Kenny Phelps said.In the explosion last week, Phelps lost both legs and one arm, his brother said. He underwent surgery and was to return to the operating room as doctors tried to stabilize him so he could be transported to a hospital in Germany, but he didn't survive, Kenny Phelps said.Phelps was the 24th service member to die in Iraq with a Kentucky city listed as a hometown of record by the military.Ted Boehm, the principal at Male High when Phelps was a student, remembered him as "somebody you liked to be around. He was a leader."Boehm noted that Phelps' quote in his senior yearbook proved tragically prophetic. The quote read: "Do all you can while you can before it's too late.""It fit right in with his life - when you live your life for your country," Boehm said.

PHELPS, SFC CHRISTOPHER W., "CHRIS" 39, of Louisville, died Thursday in Baghdad, Iraq. He was a graduate of Louisville Male High School, where he played football and attended Kentucky State University and Northeast Mississippi Junior College. He was a 19-year career serviceman of the United States Army, having served in the first Gulf War and in Baghdad, Iraq. He was preceded in death by his parents, Priscilla and Herman Phelps. Survivors include his wife, Bobbi Phelps; three daughters, Taymarie Bark and Raesana and Jeyavani Phelps; one son, Christian Phelps; five sisters, Deborah Gober, Anita Phelps, Pamela Phelps-Ellis, Jacqueline Phelps and Katherine Lee; two brothers, Herman and Kenny Phelps; one aunt, Rena Duke; and five sisters-in-law. His funeral service will be held at Sioux Funeral Home in Pine Ridge, SD, with burial in Black Hills Cemetery in Sturgis, SD. A memorial service in Louisville will be held at a later date. Perryman's Mortuary, 34th and Broadway, is in charge of local arrangements.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - An Army sergeant killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq was remembered Sunday as a gifted athlete and natural leader at his Louisville high school.Sgt. 1st Class Christopher W. Phelps, 39, died last Thursday in Baghdad after an improvised explosive device detonated near his military vehicle, the Pentagon said.The Gulf War veteran, who spent 19 years in the military, was a member of the Army's 3rd Squadron, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, based at Fort Carson, Colo.Back in his hometown, Phelps was remembered as an all-around athlete at Male High School. He played quarterback, wide receiver and defensive back on the football team, was a point guard in basketball and ran track."God, what a tragedy," his high school football coach, Wally Oyler, said Sunday when learning of his former player's death.Phelps, a 1984 Male graduate, helped lead the Bulldogs to the state playoffs, ending a long postseason drought for the school, Oyler said. Phelps earned second-team All-State honors his senior year and played in the Kentucky-Tennessee all-star game."He'd work his tail off all the time and he'd always have a smile," Oyler said. "No matter what you asked him to do, he would jump in and do it. He was just a wonderful kid."Kevin Wigginton got to know Phelps when they were seventh graders, and the two became close friends and teammates at Male and later in college. "We had a lot of good memories," Wigginton said Sunday. "He was a great leader on the football field."The two later played football together at Kentucky State University and then at a junior college in Mississippi, Wigginton said. They parted after that - Phelps joined the military and Wigginton concluded his college career at West Virginia State.Phelps didn't tell Wigginton of his decision to join the Army until the day he left. "He didn't want to tell me because he knew I would try to talk him out of it," Wigginton said.They last saw each other about a year ago, just before Phelps left Fort Knox - where he had been stationed for a few years - for his next assignment in Colorado.Phelps told his friend he expected to be sent to Iraq."I'm not going to say he was looking forward to going, but he knew that was part of his duty to his country, so he was prepared to do that," Wigginton said.Kenny Phelps said his brother enjoyed the Army, and it was through the military that he met his wife, Bobbie. Christopher Phelps left for Iraq in early April and was scheduled to get out of the military next March."I don't think he really wanted to go," Kenny Phelps said.Kenny Phelps said his brother had three children and a stepdaughter, ages 9 to 23, as well as five sisters and two brothers. His parents are deceased.Christopher Phelps drove a tank in the Gulf War.After his arrival in Iraq this past spring, he wrote to one of his sisters about his newest assignment in the Middle East, Kenny Phelps said.In those letters, he wrote he "just couldn't believe some of the things that he was seeing and that was going on," but he didn't elaborate, Kenny Phelps said.In the explosion last week, Phelps lost both legs and one arm, his brother said. He underwent surgery and was to return to the operating room as doctors tried to stabilize him so he could be transported to a hospital in Germany, but he didn't survive, Kenny Phelps said.Phelps was the 24th service member to die in Iraq with a Kentucky city listed as a hometown of record by the military.Ted Boehm, the principal at Male High when Phelps was a student, remembered him as "somebody you liked to be around. He was a leader."Boehm noted that Phelps' quote in his senior yearbook proved tragically prophetic. The quote read: "Do all you can while you can before it's too late.""It fit right in with his life - when you live your life for your country," Boehm said.

PHELPS, SFC CHRISTOPHER W., "CHRIS" 39, of Louisville, died Thursday in Baghdad, Iraq. He was a graduate of Louisville Male High School, where he played football and attended Kentucky State University and Northeast Mississippi Junior College. He was a 19-year career serviceman of the United States Army, having served in the first Gulf War and in Baghdad, Iraq. He was preceded in death by his parents, Priscilla and Herman Phelps. Survivors include his wife, Bobbi Phelps; three daughters, Taymarie Bark and Raesana and Jeyavani Phelps; one son, Christian Phelps; five sisters, Deborah Gober, Anita Phelps, Pamela Phelps-Ellis, Jacqueline Phelps and Katherine Lee; two brothers, Herman and Kenny Phelps; one aunt, Rena Duke; and five sisters-in-law. His funeral service will be held at Sioux Funeral Home in Pine Ridge, SD, with burial in Black Hills Cemetery in Sturgis, SD. A memorial service in Louisville will be held at a later date. Perryman's Mortuary, 34th and Broadway, is in charge of local arrangements.

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  • Created by: Cindy
  • Added: Jun 29, 2005
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/11260363/christopher_wade-phelps: accessed ), memorial page for SFC Christopher Wade Phelps (11 Mar 1966–23 Jun 2005), Find a Grave Memorial ID 11260363, citing Black Hills National Cemetery, Sturgis, Meade County, South Dakota, USA; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by Cindy (contributor 46573079).