Jason Calo


Sergeant, United States Marine Corps

January 26, 1987 – August 22, 2010
Age – 23
Mancelona, MI

Operation Enduring Freedom
2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, Camp Lejeune, NC

Died while supporting combat operations in Helmand Province, Afghanistan

SGT Calo was born in Grayling, MI Jan. 26, 1987. He graduated from Mancelona High School in 2005. He was active in high school as a quarterback for the varsity football team, along with wrestling. Jason loved the military. Ever since he was a young boy he dreamed about becoming a Marine. He followed in his grandfather’s and Uncle John’s footsteps by joining the military. Enlisting in the Marines Corps in 2006, a year after graduating from MHS, Jason learned to help guide weapons to take out enemy fire, a very technical position with precision and excellence in performance a requirement.

On his My Space page, Jason described himself as a proud parent who enjoyed country and hip hop music, as well as watching cartoons with his children. He bragged of how proud he was of his wife, doing an “amazing” job of taking care of “everything in our life, especially the two rug rats” while he was away on deployment. There was no doubt he remained in love with Sarah Lynn, commenting, “I have already met the woman I have always dreamed of…and married her! We have the two best looking kids in the world…”Jason posted his personal motto as, “Don’t worry, people, we will defend the country. USMC”

His friend Justin Trudeau recalls times when the two boys found themselves in trouble and punishment was frequently doing exercises or running, “He never gave up, kept on running, kept on pushing. That’s what I remember of Jason — a true friend that would stick by your side through thick and thin, didn’t matter the consequences or the payouts.”

High School principal Joe Clark, spoke with area media about his former student, who graduated from Mancelona High School in 2005. Mr. Clark talked about Jason who had received an honorable mention by the All Ski Valley Conference as a senior on the school’s football team. He further stated that as the football team’s quarterback, SGT Calo was instrumental in securing many football victories against other high school rivals. In addition Jason studied auto-body repair at the Traverse Bay Area Career-Tech Center. Mr. Clark also taught Calo in his science class. Calo “was just a friendly, outgoing young man. It’s just devastating. Every time I’d see him, walking down the halls, he had a big smile on his face. This is just gut-wrenching.”

Doug Derrer, Jason’s football coach expounded on the positive traits he saw in Jason. “He was more than just a player. He played with a big heart. When he was in school, he wasn’t very big, but he was a scrapper. He was definitely one of the leaders of the team.”

Ashley Pett, a Facebook friend of Sarah Lynn’s posted on her wall, “Wow just got the shock of my life…….you hear about people being killed in combat all the time…..you pray for their families and you feel terrible, but it seriously hits home when its someone you’ve known most of your life and served with in the military. Calo family I’m so so sorry for your loss, Jason will be forever missed and respected for all he has done.”

He was remembered by a fellow Marine Brian Connolly –

I met this man in the mud, in the middle of a hellacious, near pointblank gunfight, which he abruptly ended with expertly placed danger-close air support. I know a lot of Marines met Sergeant Calo in similar circumstances. Calo wasn’t just cool under fire, he thrived in it. My brief relationship with this man was purely that of combat, beginning and ending in the same exact circumstance. In that time, I saw battles won and lives unquestionably saved due to his actions as a JTAC with Golf Company. But I have to say, as young men it was his tireless smile and humor we most appreciated in the most dire of circumstances. And his apparently relentless courage and leadership by example, well beyond the call of duty. You just wanted him there with you, and he was, even if he didn’t have to be.

It has been 10 years to this day, one of the most horrific experiences of our lives. But I won’t forget, I choose not to. It would be impossible anyway to forget that many of us are living on borrowed time of which he paid for much, and our duty to somehow earn it. RIP brother.
Sergeant Jason Calo JTAC, 2/6 Golf. KIA Aug 22, 2010.