The bond of brothers
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Elia Powers
For brothers Andy and Joey Snelgrove, milestones seem to come in
pairs.
Four years ago, Joey Snelgrove graduated from Newport Harbor High
School and Andy Snelgrove earned his degree from the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point.
Fast forward to May.
Joey Snelgrove, 22, received his diploma from the U.S. Naval
Academy, just as Andy Snelgrove was finishing his stint in the Army.
Dressed in full military regalia, Andy Snelgrove flew from
Germany, where he had been stationed, to his younger brother’s
ceremony in Annapolis, Md.
Andy Snelgrove, an Army captain, pinned a shoulder board on Joey
Snelgrove’s jacket, signifying his earning the rank of ensign.
“It was a very cool moment,” 28-year-old Andy Snelgrove said.
“It’s an honor to pin your own brother.”
IN FATHER’S FOOTSTEPS
Though the young men are separated by six years and have been
living on different continents, they are bound by a sense of pride in
serving their country.
Their father, John Snelgrove, set the tone in the late 1960s,
serving for four years in the United States Air Force.
When Andy Snelgrove graduated from Newport Harbor High School in
1995, John Snelgrove said he encouraged his son to enter a military
academy, largely for financial reasons.
Andy Snelgrove took the advice, spending two years in flight
training at Fort Rucker military base in Alabama, where he learned to
fly an Apache attack helicopter.
Andy Snelgrove was in flight school on Sept. 11, 2001, when the
facility was put on high-security watch. Joey Snelgrove was just one
month into classes at the Naval Academy. His school was shut down.
They said it was a defining day in their lives.
“It became apparent that I was going to use my Apache training,”
Andy Snelgrove said.
Added Joey Snelgrove: “It solidified what I wanted to do and
motivated me to continue to work toward earning my diploma.”
John Snelgrove, who served in the Vietnam War, said he wasn’t
overly concerned about his sons’ safety.
“At first, I thought, ‘What did I get them into?’” he said. “But
I’d been there, and I didn’t have a fear of them being hurt.”
Andy Snelgrove began his tour of duty in Katterbach, Germany. In
February 2004, he and fellow members of the 1st Battalion, 1st
Infantry Division were deployed in Iraq.
Much of his time was spent supervising helicopter maintenance
projects. He also flew security patrols in an area outside Tikrit.
“It was a great leadership experience -- a true, real-world
mission,” Andy Snelgrove said.
Truck bombs went off below him, and his base was the site of a
mortar attack. Two of his friends from the U.S. Military Academy were
killed while serving in Iraq. But Andy Snelgrove said he never
witnessed major injuries in his infantry.
A RARE VISIT
Threats of violence haven’t stopped Joey Snelgrove from continuing
on his path to becoming a Navy SEAL.
After graduation last month, he traveled with Naval Academy
friends to Nicaragua, where they built homes for the poor.
“It was a way to get an idea of how the people down there live,”
Joey Snelgrove said.
He is now in Alaska on a four-week outdoor training program that
is run in conjunction with the Naval Academy. He said it could take
more than two years for him to become a SEAL.
Last winter, during a break from school, Joey Snelgrove visited
his brother in Germany while Andy Snelgrove was still on active duty.
For the two brothers, both Newport Beach lifeguards and high school
athletes, it was a chance to reconnect.
Andy Snelgrove has returned to Newport Beach and is planning to
enter real estate or land development.
It’s a rare occurrence when the Snelgrove family is together.
A month after congregating in Annapolis, they were back in Newport
Beach in late June to celebrate another feat: the graduation of
18-year-old Mary Ellen Snelgrove from Newport Harbor High School.
After hearing President Bush speak at his ceremony, Joey Snelgrove
said his sister’s graduation was a bit anticlimactic.
Still, for John Snelgrove, the event served a distinct purpose.
“You appreciate your family more when your children leave,” he
said. “It’s good to be back together.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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