Fatcow Icon
Flags find home in County Clerk’s Office
by Brittany Wise
Photo/Brittany Wise
Decker received a hug from Judge Executive Gary Logsdon, who was on hand for the presentation.
Photo/Brittany Wise Decker received a hug from Judge Executive Gary Logsdon, who was on hand for the presentation.
slideshow
Photo/Brittany Wise
Vietnam veteran Randall Clemmons, Ladies Auxiliary member Judy Clemons, Decker, and Air Force veteran Jackie Richardson took a photo opportunity after the flags were hung.
Photo/Brittany Wise Vietnam veteran Randall Clemmons, Ladies Auxiliary member Judy Clemons, Decker, and Air Force veteran Jackie Richardson took a photo opportunity after the flags were hung.
slideshow
Photo/Brittany Wise
Naval officer Adam Decker, who recently returned from Afghanistan, hung two flags in the County Clerk's Office which he had flown in Jalalabad, Afghanistan during his deployment.
Photo/Brittany Wise Naval officer Adam Decker, who recently returned from Afghanistan, hung two flags in the County Clerk's Office which he had flown in Jalalabad, Afghanistan during his deployment.
slideshow
Photo/Brittany Wise
Employees of the County Clerk's Office, who sent care packages and two flags to Decker during his service in Afghanistan, surrounded him and his wife, Alex.
Photo/Brittany Wise Employees of the County Clerk's Office, who sent care packages and two flags to Decker during his service in Afghanistan, surrounded him and his wife, Alex.
slideshow

Two dirty flags were proudly displayed in the County Clerk’s office at the top floor of the old courthouse on Public Square Thursday morning.

The flags – one an American flag and the other a Commonwealth of Kentucky flag – were presented to the office by local resident Adam Decker, who just returned from a tour in Afghanistan with the Navy’s Mobile Construction Battalion 14.

The flags were proudly flown by Decker at the Jalalabad, Afghanistan base where he was stationed, “and they’ve got the dirt to prove it,” he laughed.

During Decker’s eight months away from home, he said he received a deluge of support, largely in the form of care packages, from Grayson County friends, family, churches, businesses, and the County Clerk’s office.

In one beaten and battered box, he and the eleven other men in his group found the two large, folded flags along with an assortment of other items, like packages of peanut butter crackers.

When the package arrived, Decker said, “four other guys beat me to it.”

He laughed as he attempted to explain the excitement felt by each of them anytime a box came in from the states. He said the entire group divvied up the contents of the box and that not an item was wasted.

He said that one fellow Navy man from Puerto Rico asked him, ‘Decker, how do you get all these boxes?’ to which he replied, ‘People love you.’

“He didn’t understand that,” Decker said.

He went on to say, “If it wasn’t for the people back here, I don’t know how a guy could make it. I wouldn’t have made it.”

“I’m happy I’m from here.” Decker added, “Kentucky is a fine place. I’ve been to four countries and a lot of states, and I’m glad I live here.”

Of his time in foreign service, he said, “We’re trained to do what we have to do. That’s easy. But it’s hardest on the people back home. They didn’t know if we were coming home, if we were hurt.”

Decker’s wife, Alex, stood by his side at the presentation holding their youngest daughter, a well-mannered almost-two-year-old with blonde curls. The couple has an older daughter in kindergarten as well.

Alex Decker said that when her husband shipped out, it was very difficult “taking everything on by myself.”

Decker’s mother, Susan, said, “as a mother, it was hard, but it was something he really, really wanted to do.” She said that her son’s departure was made even more difficult from having already lost a brother in Vietnam.

The group of family, friends, and veterans present at Thursday’s presentation was all smiles, however, as Decker was passed around from person to person, receiving hugs, handshakes, and most of all gratitude for his service to our country.

Visitors to the Clerk’s office can see the dirt-spattered flags hanging proudly as a reminder of the men and women from Grayson County and across the nation who put their own lives at risk to protect the liberties which make our country truly great.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Leitchfield Fire Fighters battled the blaze that destroyed this home on Blackrock Road
Traffic accident and house fire send several to hospital
Shortly after Leitchfield Firefighters were called to a four-vehicle accident on HWY 62, just wes...
Feb 22, 2012 | 0 0 comments | 48 48 recommendations | email to a friend
full story


News
Caneyville to enter trust agreement with KLC
The Caneyville City Commission elected to enter a Trust Service Agreement with the Kentucky League of Cities (KLC), during its regularly scheduled meeting on Monday, May 13. The trust agreement would be for health, life, and dental insurance during the 2013-2014 fiscal year, should the City ac...
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Lee, Meredith named health department directors
Both the Medical Director and Interim Director for the newly independent Grayson County Health Department were named on Tuesday, May 7. The Health Department Board voted to name Gigi Meredith, the current Clinical Director, as the Interim Director to handle the clinical aspects of the health d...
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More News
Sports
Jessika Young ripped a double down the left field line to drive in the first run of the game in the Cougars' 7-1 win over Hancock County on Thursday.
Cougars surge late; swat Hornets 7-1
A five-run outburst in the bottom of the sixth inning broke open a tight game and sent the Cougar softball team to a 7-1 win over the visiting Hancock County Hornets on Thursday. Before the game...
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Junior right-hander Joseph Anthony was nearly untouchable for the Cougars against Meade County last Wednesday. Anthony allowed just three hits and struck out six in a 4-0 shutout of the Green Wave.
Cougars win one, lose one last week
Fall to North Bullitt 2-0, beat Meade 4-0
May 17, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Sports
Opinion
Don Brown
A Mother’s Day Retrospective
On Thursday, purely by accident, I happened across Matt Lasley’s ode to his mother, which also appears here, and it started me thinking about my own mother, Ann Brown, who passed away back in Nove...
May 13, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Letters to the Editor
Choice would bring cheaper cable rates
Jan 09, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Opinion
Weather
Sponsored By:

RSS Feeds
All articles feed
News feed
Sports feed
Videos feed
Obituaries feed
Opinion feed
Local Features
Art_in_the_Park0_1368559860.jpg
Art in the Park
Brittany Wise | News-Gazette Area artists and vendors displayed their goods at the county’s first Art in the Park event on Saturday in an effort to raise funds for the Grayson County Community A...
May 14, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 1 1 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Photo/Submitted
The store today
The little yellow building
Ever wondered about the little yellow building on West Main in Leitchfield, located diagonally across the street from the Bel Cheese Plant? Over 60 years ago the building functioned as a store, bu...
Apr 02, 2013 | 0 0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend
full story
Read More Local Features
Poll
Sponsored By:

NCAA Men's Basketball Championship
Apr 03, 2013 | 736192 views | 0 0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print

Who will win the NCAA Men's Basketball Championship?

View Previous Polls
Special Sections
9-11 Special Section
Fall Sports
Grayson County 2011 Fair Book