Military Times
Honor The Fallen
Honoring those who fought and died in Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation New Dawn
Search Our Database





  





Bookmark and Share

Army Cpl. Jessica A. Ellis

Died May 11, 2008 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom


24, of Bend, Ore., assigned to the 2nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Fort Campbell, Ky.; died May 11 in Baghdad of wounds sustained when her vehicle encountered an improvised explosive device.



Campbell soldier killed in Iraq was health care worker

The (Clarksville) Leaf-Chronicle

A 101st Airborne Division soldier who was killed Sunday in Iraq was a health care specialist assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team.

Cpl. Jessica A. Ellis, 24, of Bend, Ore., died from wounds suffered when her vehicle struck an improvised explosive device in Baghdad, according to a news release from Fort Campbell.

Ellis entered the Army in September 2004 and arrived at Fort Campbell in May 2005. She is survived by her parents, Linda and Steven Ellis, of Baker City, Ore.

A memorial service for the fallen soldier will be held in Iraq. Fort Campbell holds a monthly Eagle Remembrance Ceremony the second Wednesday of each month, and today's ceremony will be 5 p.m. at McAuliffe Hall.



Governor: Lower flags for Oregon soldier killed in Iraq

The Associated Press

SALEM, Ore. — Gov. Ted Kulongoski has ordered flags at public institutions to be flown at half-staff on Thursday in memory of Army Cpl. Jessica Ann Ellis of Baker City.

The 24-year-old medic was killed in action on May 11 when her vehicle was struck by an improvised explosive device in Baghdad.

She was assigned to the 2nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 101st Airborne Division in Fort Campbell, Kentucky.

Kulongoski says Ellis was a decorated soldier who served her state and her country with courage and conviction.

Oregon, he says, “will be less than we could have been without her.”



Army Cpl. Jessica A. Ellis remembered

The Associated Press

Jessica A. Ellis was friends with everybody in high school, said Bob Nash, her former principal.

“The typical barriers that separate certain types of people did not have any impact on her,” Nash said. “Whether they were a good student, a bad student, a top-notch athlete, she got on very well with everybody.”

Ellis, 24, a medic from Bend, Ore., was killed May 11 by a roadside bomb in Baghdad. She was assigned to Fort Campbell and was on her second tour of Iraq.

“She was a joy,” said Linda Conroy, who taught Ellis jazz, tap and ballet. “She was always helping, and she was just part of the group, a team player.”

Ellis participated in cross country, swimming and track. She graduated high school in 2002 and attended Central Oregon Community College in Bend — majoring in education — for a few years before entering the Army.

“You could always count on her,” said physical education teacher Bobbie Steninger. “Some people are good in a wide variety of ways, and she was the kind of person who always had a smile on her face.”

She is survived by her parents, Steve and Linda.



Former Joint Chiefs chairman wears fallen Idaho soldier’s name

By Kathleen Kreller, The Idaho Statesman via AP

BOISE, Idaho — In an Oct. 2 interview with CBS “Sunday Morning,” Adm. Mike Mullen said he wears a bracelet with Jessica Ellis’ name in memory of all the service members who have died while he served as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“I’ve tried to keep that as close to me every single day, every waking moment,” Mullen told CBS. “It’s a reminder to others but also to myself. ... We routinely go by her grave.”

“We were not aware he was wearing that,” said Steve Ellis, the father of Ellis. “It is quite a tribute to Jessie and who she was.”

In 2008, Steve and Linda Ellis stood at the Arlington National Cemetery grave of their 24-year-old daughter, an Army corporal.

The medic from Idaho died on Mother’s Day that year, killed by explosives on an Iraqi road.

As the family mourned at Ellis’ simple white grave marker, they were joined by Mullen and his wife, Debra.

Mullen had spoken of Ellis’ sacrifice in his Memorial Day message to the nation that year.

Ellis is buried in Section 60 at Arlington, the area reserved for service members killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. Those buried there represent great sacrifice, Mullen said.

Mullen was appointed in 2007 and finished his tenure as chairman of the Joint Chiefs early this month. During those years, more than 2,000 U.S. service members died in the global war on terror. Mullen is declining all interviews.

Jessica A. Ellis was born in Burley and raised in Idaho, Oregon, Virginia and other states as her dad changed jobs with the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. He now serves as Idaho director for the BLM.

“That’s part of having a father that works for the federal government: You get moved around quite a bit,” Steve Ellis said.

Still, Jessica thrived, running cross country and participating in track.

After high school in Lakeview, Ore., Ellis earned an associate of arts degree from community college and went to work as a wildland firefighter. Eventually, she was motivated to join the Army and work as a medic, stationed with the 101st Airborne at Fort Campbell, Ky.

She was twice deployed to Iraq — both times as a combat medic with the Army’s Screaming Eagles.

Sgt. Bruce Hillway, one of Ellis’ close friends from Fort Campbell, was present on both deployments, the first time in 2005. Ellis was friends with Hillway’s then-wife.

“We both happened to be in a shopette one day, she saw me and recognized the name on my chest and just walked up an introduced herself and shook my hand,” Hillway said.

Ellis loved spending time with the couple’s young twin girls, he said. She was known in the 101st for her cheerful nature and desire to help her fellow soldiers.

“She was the type of person if she saw somebody who wasn’t smiling, she made them smile,” Hillway said. “She was that bright, friendly personality, and she made it her business to make people happy.”

Hillway would often have Ellis help train other soldiers in first aid. She was competent, funny and well-liked.

Both Ellis and Hillway deployed again in 2008.

After the first deployment, Ellis became more serious and deliberative, Steve Ellis said.

Still, she was determined to help “her boys” in the 101st.

She regularly accompanied road-clearing convoys to offer medical assistance. She witnessed several explosions, her father said.

Known as “Doc Ellis,” she had volunteered that Mother’s Day to replace another medic on a road-clearing convoy.

Such missions take hours and are dangerous because the convoys travel slowly and make easy targets.

“She wanted to look after the soldiers,” Hillway said. “Other soldiers kind of saw her as their goofy little sister.”

Ellis was sitting behind the driver in an armored vehicle when three projectile bombs detonated. She died of wounds suffered in the attack.

Hillway was on an airplane returning from leave when he heard Ellis had been killed. He was one of the soldiers who fired a rifle salute at her Baghdad service; the crowd overflowed the small chapel and its foyer.

Ellis was posthumously promoted to corporal and awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart.

The family held a funeral for Ellis in Oregon and buried her at Arlington, which was her wish, Steve Ellis said. They visit the grave as often as they can — which is how the family met Mullen.

They’ve had occasion to keep in touch with the admiral and his wife. When Mullen visited Boise earlier this year, he met with the Ellis family and other Idaho families who have lost service members.

Though Jessica Ellis lived for just 24 years, she made an impact. She is memorialized in places beyond Mike Mullen’s wrist, including Idaho’s Fallen Soldiers Memorial.
Steve Ellis is grateful for such “honorable places” as Arlington.

“The section 60 families, they understand the journey,” he said. “It’s just difficult; you don’t get over it. It’s a journey.

“It is a club you didn’t want to be in but you can never resign. Behind every headstone out there in Section 60 is a family like ours going through this.”

Every story of another Idahoan killed in action reopens the wound, Ellis said.

Jessica Ellis is one of 59 Idahoans, and one of two Idaho women who have died since Sept. 11, 2001, in the war on terror.

“We never want to forget her and her sacrifices,” Steve Ellis said. “It changes the family forever. We are the price of freedom, are we not?”

View By Year & Month

2002   2001

Military Times
© 2018 Sightline Media Group
Not A U.S. Government Publication