[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E430-E431]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE LIFE AND SERVICE OF MARINE CORPS CAPTAIN MICHAEL QUIN
______
HON. FRANK R. WOLF
of virginia
in the house of representatives
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Mr. WOLF. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to honor the life and service of
Marine Corps Captain Michael Quin, who tragically lost his life, along
with others, during the final training mission before his unit's
scheduled deployment to Afghanistan. Captain Quin is a native of
Purcellville, Virginia where his parents, Brad and Betsy still reside.
Captain Quin graduated from Loudoun Valley High School and received
an appointment to the United States Naval Academy, where he graduated
in 2006. Michael went on to successfully complete flight school and
receive his wings in 2008, graduating at the top of his flight school
class. Michael rose quickly as a pilot from 2nd Lieutenant to Captain
and was in command of a helicopter.
On February 22, Captain Quin was conducting a training mission at the
Yuma Training Range Complex in Arizona when his helicopter collided
with another, killing six out of the seven pilots in his squadron.
Captain Quin was remembered by the commanding officer and gunnery
sergeant of the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing as ``one of those rare young
captains'' who inspired admiration from all those with whom he served.
Captain Quin's service has been reported on by the Leesburg Today,
which I submit for the record, as well as the Loudoun Times Mirror,
Purcellville Gazette, and the Blue Ridge Leader. Captain Quin was
honored by residents of Purcellville when his body made the return trip
from Arizona to Reagan National Airport and finally back home to his
family. Marines old and young, police, firefighters, and Boy and Girl
Scouts turned out to show their respects for Captain Quin and to show
support for his parents, siblings and fiancee.
Captain Quin was an example of leadership and patriotism of which we
all can be proud. He chose to serve his country during extremely
difficult times and was prepared to wear the uniform of the United
States Marine Corps into battle to protect his family and his country.
That he lost his life in service to his country is a testament to his
bravery.
Mr. Speaker, I ask that the thoughts and prayers of the full House of
Representatives go out to the Quin family as they honor the exceptional
life of their son, Marine Corps Captain Michael Quin.
Capt. Quin Remembered: ``He Was the Best''
The tragic impacts of the nation's war effort again are
being felt in Loudoun, with the death of U.S. Marine Corps
Capt. Michael Quin. The Purcellville resident and 2002
Loudoun Valley High School graduate was
[[Page E431]]
killed last week when two helicopters collided while training
in Arizona in advance of a deployment to Afghanistan.
Mourned by his parents, sisters and fiancee, the death of
the 28-year-old naval aviator also has hit the Purcellville
community, one that just two years ago paid tribute to
another fallen serviceman, Army Specialist Stephan Lee Mace,
who was killed in Afghanistan in a fierce firefight with the
Taliban. Flags in town will fly at half staff until Quin's
burial service at Arlington Cemetery. As of Tuesday, plans
for services in Purcellville and at Arlington had not yet
been finalized.
Michael lost his life, along with six others, in a remote
area of the 1.2 million-acre Yuma Training Range Complex in
Arizona during the two-week ``Scorpion Fire'' training
mission that was to have been his last before being deployed
to Afghanistan in April.
After graduating Loudoun Valley High School, he graduated
from the U.S. Naval Academy in 2006 and joined the Marine
Corps.
The tragedy of Quin's death was compounded in that he was
in the last stages of his training before his deployment to
Afghanistan. It was the last qualification that he needed to
emerge with ``top gun'' status for helicopters.
Quin had recently become engaged, and had planned to spend
a week away with his fiancee before coming home for four or
five days with his family before leaving in early April for
Afghanistan.
His parents Brad and Betsy Quin had seen the report of the
fatal crash and when they didn't get a reassuring phone call
from their son that all was well, they began to worry.
When the Marine officers were sent to deliver the news,
both parents were at work, his father in Reston, and his
mother in Leesburg.
Brad Quin was at lunch, so the officers waited. When he was
told there were officers waiting to see him: ``I knew,'' he
said.
The town has rallied around the Quins and their daughters,
Phoebe and Sarah. Brad Quin is a former president of the
Locust Grove Homeowners Association and Betsy Quin serves on
the board of the HOA's Architectural Review Board. He has
been in the college and university world all his life and in
admissions and worked for the College Board. Betsy Quin was
in the reference department at Rust Library in Leesburg.
Mayor Bob Lazaro and his wife Carolyn are friends and
neighbors of the Quins, whom Lazaro called ``pillars of the
community.'' He credited Brad Quin with being ``the horse
power'' behind the Purcellville Volunteer Fire Department's
recruitment effort that has led to a doubling of the size of
the company.
This week, the support of the 100-strong company, the town
and area residents are helping the Quins deal with the loss
of their first-born child.
Capt. Quin's squadron will have a memorial service for him
Friday, which his parents will attend before returning to
Purcellville. Brad Quin said he hopes the Corps will release
his son's body soon. He will return home with a Marine Corps
escort, flying into Reagan National Airport where the
Washington detachment of the Marine Corps will hold an
arrival ceremony before the long trip back to Purcellville to
Hall Funeral Home.
Looking back on his son's life, ``He was the kind of kid
who didn't really require much correction from us,'' his
father said, noting Michael Quin seemed to have the ability
to naturally make good choices in life. Before 9/11
patriotism welled up in the country, Michael was like other
kids of his generation--dedicated to his family, sisters,
studies and his soccer team.
Brad Quin has been in the college world all his career, but
was somewhat surprised by his son's choice of the Naval
Academy, not the most obvious fun and typical fraternity
college opportunity. ``But he wanted to express what he
wanted to be as a person,'' he said.
Michael Quin seemed to have this sense of looking at
``something else down the road,'' to his decision to join the
Marine Corps, his father said. When Brad Quin asked him why
he had applied to join the Corps, his son seemed to
appreciate the support system the force represented, the way
its members gave each other total support no matter their
function or level within the Corps.
At the Naval Academy, it was tough going at first. The
curriculum is heavy on science, and students graduate with
bachelors of science degrees, even if you're studying history
and Spanish, as Michael Quin did. But he sucked it up, did
what he was supposed to be as a plebe--invisible.
``I could see he was growing, and he had this sense of
something else coming down the road,'' his father said,
noting that perception has been borne out by statements
posted on the website set up to collect memories and
tributes, www.michael
quin.com.
As a 2nd lieutenant, Michael Quin chose to be a naval
aviator. He learned to fly planes first at the naval base at
Pensacola, FL, before moving on to helicopters.
Intermittently, during training, he hooked up with a
squadron in Atlanta, GA, and there was a mutual adoption.
When after two years the young 2nd Lieutenant was ``winged''
Dec. 2, 2008, they all supported him. His parents' pride in
those naval aviator's wings of gold ``is more than you can
imagine,'' Brad Quin said.
From there, Capt. Quin immediately went to the West Coast
where the Marine Corps were forming new squadrons. He rose
through the ranks to 1st Lieutenant in command of his first
ship, then to captain. He was No. 1 in the Marine Corps'
flight school, where he chose to fly Hueys.
His closeness to and support of others was noticeable
during a tough time in which additional training and
certifications were needed to join a helicopter ``fraternity
of very capable guys,'' his father said.
His commanding officer was a ``tough, square-jawed Marine,
with a call sign of `Beast,' '' Brad Quin said. When the CO
called him last Friday, after introducing himself, he
revealed he had lost six of seven pilots from his squadron.
There were 100 Marines working on the aircraft. When the
lieutenant colonel said he had asked the crews to tell him
about Capt. Quin, the officer himself became choked with
emotion. There was enormous support and liking for Michael
Quin, whom the crews thought one of ``those rare young
captains,'' who didn't denigrate them but lived out the
tradition that everyone supports those who do the dirty work.
For Brad and Betsy Quin, it is comforting to know that a
wizened gunnery sergeant told his CO that in all his life in
the force, ``he was the best.''
For now, it is the support of the Purcellville community
that is a huge comfort. Brad Quin is a volunteer certified
firefighter, vice president and chairman of membership for
the company.
``How supportive everyone has been, the fire department and
the town, just like a big family.''
The loss has hit home in Purcellville and in the fire
company. To lose your life when you're ``training to do what
you do is horrific,'' Purcellville Volunteer Fire Company
Chief Bob Dryden said. To be one of the top students in
flight school, as Michael Quin was, and ``this is the way you
go out after spending all that time--it's not fair.''
Dryden has been in constant touch with the Quins. ``Once we
know the final date [for burial in Arlington], the company
will begin its planning in earnest,'' something along the
lines of the plans and ceremony for Mace two years ago.
``We'll welcome him home in the proper way,'' Dryden said.
Mace was killed Oct. 3, 2009, along with seven other U.S.
soldiers, defending the Camp Keating outpost in the Nuristan
province of Afghanistan against more than 300 Taliban and
other insurgents. Mace was a 2005 Loudoun Valley graduate.
____________________