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Lizbeth Robles

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Rank
  
Specialist

Battles and wars
  
Iraq War


Name
  
Lizbeth Robles

Awards
  
Purple Heart

Lizbeth Robles httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
April 4, 1973 Vega Baja, Puerto Rico (
1973-04-04
)

Place of burial
  
Puerto Rico National Cemetery in Bayamon, Puerto Rico

Battles/wars
  
Operation Iraqi Freedom

Died
  
March 1, 2005, Tikrit, Iraq

Unit
  
68th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion, 43rd Sustainment Brigade

Service/branch
  
United States Army

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Lizbeth Robles #12 Volley Fest Puerto Rico


SPC Lizbeth Robles (April 4, 1973 – March 1, 2005) was the female Puerto Rican female soldier to die in combat when she perished in the Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Contents

Lizbeth Robles CAETE Lizbeth Robles denunciar penalmente a Elard Melgar

Early years

Robles was born into a close knit working-class family in the small town of Vega Baja, Puerto Rico. In 1978, her parents moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where she received her primary education. The family returned to Vega Baja, in 1983, where her father was a church pastor and Robles the leader of the church's youth group. She was an accomplished athlete who was well liked by those who knew her. After graduating from high school led the life of a normal fun loving girl of her age and attended the American University of Manatí. After one year at the university, she was unable to pay the tuition and transferred to the Arecibo campus of the University of Puerto Rico. There she was able to receive financial aid and complete her degree.

Military service

Robles was dissatisfied with the jobs available to her before being hired by Bristol Myers Squibb, in the town of Barceloneta. The events that occurred on and after September 11, 2001, changed her life forever. Robles, like so many others, joined the Armed Forces of the United States. She joined the U.S. Army and received her basic training in Fort Leonard Wood, where she was sent to Fort Hood and assigned to the 46th Chemical Company. Later, she was sent to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, and was assigned to the 659th Maintenance Co. Robles was sent to South Korea, where she was assigned to the 4th Chem Co. at Camp Casey. She also served in Uzbekistan before being assigned to Fort Carson in Colorado.

Robles, who enjoyed driving tankers and trucks, was then assigned to the 360th Transportation Company, 68th Corps Support Battalion. There she lived with her husband Stokey Smith. She volunteered to be part of a new group with the 43rd Area Support Group, one that rides in convoys and secures the dangerous roadways so that the Fort Carson's trucks in Iraq can deliver fuel.

She received her deployment orders, but before she left for Iraq Robles went to Puerto Rico where she spent the Thanksgiving of 2004 with her friends and family. After that last Thanksgiving with her family, she went to Iraq where she reported to her company.

On March 1, 2005, SPC Lizbeth Robles and Sgt. Julio Negron were riding in a Humvee by the town of Bayji, when they had an accident and the vehicle flipped over. They were rushed to the 228th Command Support Hospital in Tikrit where both of them later died of the injuries sustained from the accident.

Lizbeth Robles' remains arrived in Puerto Rico on March 6, 2005. She was buried with full military honors in the Puerto Rico National Cemetery located in Bayamón, Puerto Rico. Her name along with the others who have perished in Afghanistan and Iraq, was engraved in "El Monumento de la Recordación" (Monument of Remembrance), dedicated to Puerto Rico's fallen soldiers and situated in front of the Capitol Building in San Juan, Puerto Rico and unveiled by Puerto Rico Senate President Kenneth McClintock and PR National Guard Adjutant General Col. David Carrión Baralt on Memorial Day, 2007.

Awards and decorations

Among SPC Lizbeth Robles' decorations and medals were the following:

References

Lizbeth Robles Wikipedia