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Couple makes front-lawn memorial for fallen soldiers

Barbara Morris has placed a white cross and American flag in her front yard for each of the 269 Fort Bragg soldiers who have died since Sept. 11, 2001.

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FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — A Fayetteville couple has turned their front yard into a memorial dedicated to every Fort Bragg soldier killed in combat since Sept. 11, 2001.

Officials say 269 soldiers stationed at Fort Bragg have fallen in Iraq or Afghanistan during the past seven years.

Barbara Morris, a stylist in a local hair salon, said seeing the face of a fallen soldier on the news motivated her to do something to honor the troops.

"He was so young, and it touched me really deep. And I wanted to do something for the family," said Morris, who nearly 40 years ago, waited for her Army husband to return from Vietnam.

"My heart was just so filled up," she added. "I know that feeling of, 'Will he come home? ... I kept thinking, 'What can I do, what can I do?'"

She and her husband made 269 white crosses. With the help of neighbors, they planted planted the crosses, each accompanied by a small American flag, on the front lawn of their house at Bahama Loop and Paradise Court, off Morganton Road.

Morris wrote the name of a deceased soldier on each cross, and many also bear a newspaper photograph of the solider. Nailed to two pine trees, signs read, "Faith. Love. Our heroes."

"I just wanted to the families to know that civilians really cared about them, too," Morris said.

First Lt. Andrew Kelly had to see the memorial for himself after returning home from Iraq last week. He said his buddy, Staff Sgt. Laurent West, did not come home.

"To see each individual cross lined up kind of gives you the sense of the enormity of it," Kelly said. "It's pretty sobering to see this many guys just from Fort Bragg and Pope (Air Force Base)."

Morris said the wife of a fallen soldier cried while visiting the memorial on Thursday night.

"There were at least 10 of us hugging her, and we were all crying," Morris said. "And she was smiling as she left, and that's what I wanted to accomplish."

Morris said her initial plans are to keep up the display for two weeks and then set it up again on Memorial Day. However, she said the memorial will stay up as long as military families want to see it.

"I think it's a great gesture. It's nice," Kelly said. "I guess you can take whatever you want to take from it."

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