Court D. Haugen
PFC
Army
Date of Birth:
Date of Death:
May 24, 1985
March 11, 2009
Place of Death:
Cemetery:
Cemetery Location:
Grave site:
Germany
Not Listed
Not Listed
Not Listed
Court D. Haugen, 23, of the Wenatchee Valley, died Wednesday, March 11, 2009, in Germany.
He was a longtime resident of Wenatchee and East Wenatchee and had worked for Safeway in Wenatchee.
He was serving with the U.S. Army in Germany and had previously served for 15 months in Iraq with the Stryker Brigade.
Survivors include his parents, Robin and Keith Huffaker of Wenatchee and Russ and Kate Haugen of Wenatchee; his brothers, Shane Huffaker of Iraq, Neil Huffaker of Wenatchee, Chris Huffaker of Cashmere and Ben Carrow of East Wenatchee; and his sisters, Kelli Christoferson of Prosser, Kelsey Haugen of Spokane and Hannah Graves of East Wenatchee.
A memorial service will be held at a later date. Arrangements are by Telford's Chapel of the Valley, East Wenatchee.
WENATCHEE — Court Haugen had joined the Army in 2005 and was preparing for a second tour, this time in Afghanistan, when he died in March. Robin Huffaker, his mother, remembers the excitement she felt when she heard the doorbell ring late at night on March 11. She thought it was a surprise visit to Wenatchee from her 23-year-old son, Court Donovan Haugen, who'd just finished a military tour of 15 months in Iraq, patrolling Baghdad streets looking for insurgents. And when Robin saw a man in military garb standing at her front door, she thought maybe her son brought home a friend. Instead, she heard the man tell her Court had been killed in Germany. But no matter how Court died, the U.S. Army is short a soldier and a family has lost a loved one.
The gathering, which also included Robin's husband, Keith Huffaker, and Russ' wife, Kate Haugen, Court's grandparents and a brother, shared memories of him: his tender-hearted personality, his love for the outdoors, his compassion for others, his aloof teen years and how he'd matured into a man from his time in the military. Court received a 15-gun salute by the Army during a military service at Wenatchee City Cemetery. Donations have poured in so the Wenatchee Valley cross that hovers above the city could be lit as a 10-day memorial, from March 19-28. And the governor directed Tuesday that flags at all Washington state agencies be lowered to half-staff through the close of business Thursday or through Friday morning. Gregoire and assistant Dennis Clark presented the flags and a letter from the governor that read "We are humbled by Court's willingness to put himself at risk to protect our nation's cherished freedoms. … He will always be a hero in our eyes."
13/12/2010 Kelsey Haugen Love and miss you :(
27/11/2010 Keith Huffaker Rest in peace Court. We miss you and will always love you!