Article snippet: They were young men, petty officers all, whose lives were lived at sea and then almost certainly lost there. John Henry Hoagland III grew up in Killeen, Tex., and he spoke about serving his country when he was just 5 and still confronted with kindergarten. His family said he had joined the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps in high school, and then visited recruiters for different branches of the military before deciding on the Navy, where his uncle and a grandfather had also served. Aboard big ships plowing waters far from land, he found serenity and exhilaration. Cynthia Kimball, his mother, shared one of her son’s Facebook posts, written in June, that captured his feelings. “I’ve been to a few gorgeous places since I’ve made it out to the Fleet,” he wrote. “But man,” he added, “I still can’t get over just looking out at the ocean, or staring up at all of the stars at night. I think those two things are at the top of my list of favorite reasons for going Navy over any other branch.” Ms. Kimball last spoke with her son, 20, an electronics technician, third class, last Friday afternoon. He let her know “that they were going to dock soon and he would call me when they did,” she said. “He was headed to bed. Told me good night and he loved me.” The destroyer John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker in the waters near Singapore on Monday. Ten sailors, including Petty Officer Hoagland, are presumed to have died despite the slim odds survivors could be found, said... Link to the full article to read more
10 Who Served at Sea: The Sailors Who Went Missing in the Navy Collision - The New York Times
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