MEADVILLE —
Having one child serving in the military in Iraq or Afghanistan may cause both pride and anxiety for a parent — but for Mark and Lori Putman of Atlantic, those feelings are three times greater.
Three of their six children are in the military — with the three each doing tours in either Afghanistan or Iraq during 2009.
And this is the first summer in several years the three military siblings have been able to get together face-to-face for a couple of weeks. The Tribune caught up with the family recently at Pymatuning State Park.
Daughter Jessica Putman, 33, a medic with the U.S. Air Force in Oklahoma, was at a forward base in eastern Afghanistan in 2009. Her assignment at the military hospital in Khwost City, Afghanistan, was teaching Afghan medics first aid.
Son John, 30, a topographer (or map maker) with the U.S. Army at Fort Hood, Texas, was stationed near Taji, Iraq, while son Matt, 23, an infantryman and vehicle driver with the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s 56th Stryker Brigade at Cambridge Springs, also was in Taji during a recent National Guard deployment.
In fact, John and Matt’s paths crossed at the base at Taji last spring. Matt had finished a 72-hour mission and he was sleeping in temporary quarters when there was a knock at the door.
“The door busted open and John walked in,” Matt said. “There were a lot of hugs and handshakes.”
While neither parent said the kids’ military service has caused them sleepless nights, there is a noticeable sense of anxiety when talking to the elder Putmans.
“You pay attention to the news with a lot more heightened interest,” said Mark Putman. “Your thoughts are always with them.”
“You don’t worry about one more than the other,” their mom, Lori Putman, said. “It’s easier to take since they’re home.”
Communications with parents during their overseas tours was tough for the three since they each were thousands of miles from home and at or near the front lines. Communicating by e-mail rather than by phone was the easier method, but computers were not always readily accessible for the Putman kids.
Plus, there were military restrictions on what could be told.
“You can’t tell them anything before you’re going on a mission,” Jessica said. “(Afterward), you don’t want to tell anything that will scare them. You reassure them by telling them everything is fine and you’re fine.”
“I’d just tell them ‘something interesting happened north of Baghdad (today) and to watch the news,’ ” John said.
John admits, though, that he wasn’t very good at communicating with home, even when he had access to a phone.
“I’m quiet,” he said with sly smile.
Mrs. Putman said all three children don’t talk about their service much.
“They’ve not shared a lot,” she said.
There is one story though that has them all smiling.
It’s when Matt got a traffic ticket in Iraq — for speeding.
“I didn’t think it was possible,” Matt said. “I was driving a humvee (a transport vehicle) doing 65 (miles per hour) in a 45 zone.”
Matt got six points on his military driver’s license for the incident. A maximum of 12 causes a license suspension.
But that wasn’t the worst of it, according to Matt.
After his sergeant learned of Matt’s ticket, the two took a slow walk around the base.
“Every speed limit sign he saw, we stopped and he made me do that many pushups,” Matt said. “It was 25 here, 15 there, 25 again. It was a long walk — and my arms were tired after that.”
Being part of the military is something Jessica, John and Matt all said is something they want. Their grandfather was a World War II veteran, having served in the U.S. Army Air Corps.
“I wanted to be part of the Air Force ever since I can remember,” said Jessica, a 15-year veteran of the Air Force who joined in 1995 right out of high school. She intends to put in 20 years.
Like Jessica, Matt joined the military at 18 and has been a member of the Army National Guard since 2005.
“I’ve loved military stuff since I was little. I was always drawing pictures of planes and tanks,” Matt said. He, too, hopes to retire from the military.
John joined about 10 years after high school, signing up with the Army in 2007.
“I was a bit later in life,” he said. “One of the reasons, I was looking to get more education and I thought this was a good way to do it. I also like to travel.”
A common thread running through each of the children and their parents as well is pride.
“When we all got together and went to church recently, our grandfather was there proud and Mom and Dad were proud,” Matt said smiling. “It’s a unique feeling to be part of a select group of people — veterans.”
“I’m just so proud of them and what they’ve done,” Lori Putman said. “It makes simple things like patriotic music that much more touching when I hear it.”
Mark Putman said he often gets questions from strangers about which service branch he’s more loyal to when he’s seen wearing an Army jacket with an Air Force hat.
“I tell them I’ve got two in the Army and one in the Air Force — I’m supporting both,” he said with a grin.
Keith Gushard can be reached at 724-6370 or by e-mail at kgushard@meadvilletribune.com.
Local News
Pride and anxiety as Putmans see three children off to war
- Local News
-
-
Conneaut Lake Park roars into 120th season
Conneaut Lake Park’s 120th season is officially under way with its in-keeping-with-tradition, four-day Memorial Day weekend opening, and the “crowds are coming in,” Jack Moyers said Saturday.
-
Area communities ready to celebrate Memorial Day
Editor’s note: The following Memorial Day events have been reported for publication in The Tribune. All events are Monday, except those in Edinboro and Shermansville, which are planned for Sunday. -
Remembering Civil War Bucktails
A glimpse into daily life of the Civil War era is easy to see in Crawford County.
-
Area Memorial Day events
The following Memorial Day events have been reported for publication in The Tribune. All events are on Monday, except the one at Edinboro that is planned for Sunday.
-
Civil War soldiers highlight Meadville Memorial Day events
A courageous Meadville man — wounded three times but remaining on a Civil War battlefield until he was too weak to continue — is being remembered this Memorial Day as the Meadville Area Memorial Day Committee continues its mission of observing the 150th anniversary of the War Between the States.
-
Police: Locals admit to killing Ohio woman
Two Cochranton women were arrested and jailed on homicide charges early Thursday after allegedly admitting they killed an Ohio woman and buried her body in a shallow grave near their residence recently.
-
Reader 'Faces' are coming in
Mom's car dash, Meadville, PA
Lucy Kedzierski, 12, looks at the face every morning waiting for school bus!
She took this with a cell phone. -
North Street Project sure to be 'very disruptive'
With the preliminary traffic control plan for Pennsylvania Department of Transportation’s North Street Project complete, Meadville City Manager Joe Chriest summed up the anticipated impact of the project, which is expected to span the entire 2013 construction season. “This is going to be very, very disruptive,” he said Wednesday.
-
Boat business booming in warm weather
It’s been a booming business in boats this spring, according to some area boat dealers.
-
City leaders not concerned after financial downgrade
During the past five years, Moody’s Investors Service has assigned three different ratings — all within the range of “upper medium grade” to the City of Meadville’s bonds. In 2007, the city was given a rating of A3, the lowest of the trio. In 2010, the city’s bond rating was raised to A1, the highest ranking in the “upper medium” category. Monday, Moody’s gave the city’s $10,000,000 General Obligation Bonds, Series of 2012, which went on the market Monday, the middle rating of A2.
- More Local News Headlines
-


