Ijamsville Lieutenant Was Always a Soldier
By JOE PALAZZOLO
Capital News Service
WASHINGTON, D.C. ---- Ryan Dennison's friends envied his
intensity. Adults said he was mature. It was as though he had
always been a soldier -- disciplined, prepared, sharp. No one
was surprised when he went to war.
1st Lt. John Ryan Dennison, 24, of Ijamsville, who was
killed in Iraq Wednesday by small arms fire, died doing his job,
according to his friends.
"He didn't want to be martyred," said Stew Alcorn, his
longtime friend and football and wrestling teammate in high
school.
Dennison, a 2000 graduate of Urbana High School, died east
of Baghdad after suffering gunshot wounds, his family told The
Associated Press. The Department of Defense has not yet
publicized his death.
As a Cub Scout, Alcorn recalled, Dennison brought in a box
his father, Jack Dennison, who also served in the Army, had
brought home from his stint in Desert Storm.
"He was so proud. He wouldn't stop talking about how he
was going to be a soldier someday," Alcorn said.
Dennison, who would become a platoon leader in a cavalry
regiment of the 82nd Airborne Division, certainly acted like
one.
Before he left for West Point, John Ryan Dennison's
friends "threw what is to my knowledge the biggest party Urbana
has ever seen," said Alcorn.
The next time Alcorn saw Dennison, he noticed a change.
"He grew up a lot, I guess you could say. He was always a
soldier. He had wanted to be a soldier his whole life, but he
was a man," Alcorn said. "I think Haley had a lot to do with
that."
Dennison's wife, 1st Lt. Haley Dennison, also 24, who he
met at U.S. Military Academy at West Point, is serving in
Afghanistan.
The two were engaged at a restaurant in Baltimore while in
their junior year at West Point and married in July 2004, Alcorn
said.
Dave Carruthers, who coached Dennison and his teammates to
two state football championships in 1998 and 1999, said
Dennison's performance on the field was rigorously consistent.
He trained harder than anyone, Carruthers said.
"He was very, very intense," Carruthers said.
Dennison, who played offensive guard and linebacker,
wasn't the most imposing at around 6'1", 170 pounds, but what he
lacked in size, he made up for in smarts, grit, and strength,
Carruthers said.
"He was someone we could always rely on," Carruthers said.
"He always prepared hard. He was very smart. He knew his
assignments and executed very well. Whatever he did, he gave it
his all."
Urbana High School Principal George Seaton II and his
colleagues heard of Dennison's death in Friday's Frederick News
Post.
"It hit us hard," Seaton said.
He said Dennison very a popular student and was always
"very respectful and engaging." Dennison's ferocity on the field
and the mat never spilled over into the school's hallways,
Seaton said.
In fact, in his four years at Urbana, Dennison was never
summoned to Seaton's office for discipline, he said.
"If I was going to see Ryan, it was going to have to be in
an honors class or during wrestling or football practice,"
Seaton said. "He was a very mature student."
He took courses for college credit as a junior in high
school, and he loved history, Seaton said.
"Ryan had direction," he said.
Dennison's direction tracked north, to West Point, where
he indulged his passion for military history -- particularly the
Civil War -- and majored in international relations.
Haley Dennison shipped out to Afghanistan last March.
Dennison shipped out, first to Kuwait and then to Iraq, a couple
months later.
Dennison is survived by his wife, parents, Jack and
Shannon Dennison, a brother, Christopher Dennison, and a sister,
Colleen Dennison.
Plans for services will not be made until Haley Dennison
arrives in the United States, Alcorn said. |