Navy Cross recipient continues to help Marines
Posted : Saturday Sep 4, 2010 16:34:47 EDT
COLUMBUS, Ohio — One of the most highly decorated Marines during the war in Iraq had to drink to fall asleep.
He once tried to kill himself.
This was after Jeremiah Workman’s tour in Fallujah, where on Dec. 23, 2004, he demonstrated such extraordinary heroism that he was awarded the Navy Cross.
Workman, a retired staff sergeant, led three assaults into a house where insurgents had trapped other Marines. Injured by grenade shrapnel, he helped save many of those Marines and kill 24 insurgents.
Workman, now 27, originally is from Richwood and was a high-school football player. He tells these biographical details to current and retired Marines, including the ones he has recently spoken with in Ohio.
“I wasn’t broken before I went in,” he tells them. “I’m you.”
He still goes to counseling, he says, and he still takes medicine for post-traumatic stress disorder. If a football player, not to mention a Navy Cross recipient, admits that he needed help after a deployment, maybe other Marines will admit it, too.
“The wheels can still fall off the bus” no matter who you are, Workman said Wednesday.
Workman is a deputy program manager for the Marine Corps’ Wounded Warrior Regiment, which connects wounded, ill and injured Marine veterans with the resources they need. Workman now works for the Corps as a civilian. A lot of his job involves paperwork in a Quantico, Va., office.
But occasionally he travels to talk to Marines about his own experience with post-traumatic stress disorder and depression. He’s recently been to Dayton, Chillicothe and Lima.
On Wednesday, he spent some time with members of the Columbus-based Lima Company, 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines. Most of the company is now deployed in Afghanistan, but some staff members remain here.
“He’s got street cred,” said Maj. Jonathan Holder, the company’s inspector/instructor. “Anyone who has done the things that Jeremiah Workman has done deserves the ultimate respect.”
Workman also spoke with a current client of the Wounded Warrior Regiment, retired Lance Cpl. Joe Shearer, 24, of Columbus. Shearer deployed to Iraq in 2005. Now that combat operations there are over, the regiment is especially important, he said.
“Oh well, it’s done,” many civilians will think, Shearer said. “But there are still lots of people who haven’t gotten help.”
Maj. Eric Dent, the regiment’s injured support coordinator for much of Ohio, has spent the past couple of months handling cases that Workman has assigned him.
“He may already be a hero by the letter [of his Navy Cross citation],” Dent said. “The stuff he’s doing now, I think that makes him even more of a hero.”
More on Jeremiah Workman
Workman’s Navy Cross citation
Navy Cross recipient becomes driver for Kent
Leave a Comment
Most Viewed Stories
- Navy, Corps practice getting boots on the beach
- Marine sentenced for stealing from Iraq bases
- U.S., Japan mull sending 4,700 Marines to Guam
- New water workout is tougher than running
- The ‘Stan: An officer’s unvarnished view
- Corps needs help finding Montford Point Marines
- Marine hazing trial delayed; charges expanded
- Marine expeditionary unit possible in Australia
- Families link burn pits to health woes, debt
- Last known WWI veteran dies at 110
- Gunny’s wife named as victim of MWTC blast
- McRaven: Spec ops prepping for drawdown role
Contests and Promotions
Enter our 2012 Red Carpet Contest!
Predict who will get the statues on Hollywood's big night and win a $200 Fandango Gift Card!
Click Here To Enter.
Win Tactical Night Vision Goggles!
Enter to Win the Military Times Sweepstakes!
Click Here To Enter.
Free Stickers
Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.
Marketplace
Mil-Mall
2011 Insider's Guide To Military BenefitsThis handbook for military life includes essential information on pay and benefits, housing, education, health care and more.
Military Discounts
Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.






