Ty Carter Age, Wife, Children, Family, Biography & More
Bio/Wiki | |
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Full name | Ty Michael Carter [1]US Army |
Profession | United States Army staff sergeant (retired) |
Known for | Being a Medal of Honor recipient |
Physical Stats & More | |
Height (approx.) | in centimeters- 178 cm in meters- 1.78 m in feet & inches- 5’ 10” |
Weight (approx.) | in kilograms- 75 kg in pounds- 165 lbs |
Eye Colour | Gunmetal Blue |
Hair Colour | Bald |
Career (Military) | |
Service/Branch | • United States Marine Corps • United States Army |
Service Years | • 1998–2002 (United States Marine Corps) • 2008–2014 (United States Army) |
Unit/Division | • 61st Cavalry Regiment • 4th Infantry Division • 1st Cavalry Regiment • 2nd Infantry Division • 7th Infantry Division |
Battles/Wars | War in Afghanistan - Battle of Kamdesh |
Awards and Decorations [2]White House Office of the Press Secretary | Right Breast • Valorous Unit Award • Meritorious Unit Commendation Left Breast • Combat Action Badge • Medal of Honor • Purple Heart • Meritorious Service Medal with four bronze Oak Leaf Clusters • Army Commendation Medal • Army Achievement Medal with two Oak Leaf Clusters • Army Good Conduct Medal with 2 bronze loops • Marine Corps Good Conduct Medal • National Defense Service Medal • Afghanistan Campaign Medal with 2 service stars • Global War on Terrorism Service Medal • NCO Professional Development Ribbon with award numeral 2 • Army Service Ribbon • Army Overseas Service Ribbon with bronze award numeral 3 • NATO Medal for service with ISAF • Air Assault Badge • Expert marksmanship badge with one weapon clasp Note: On 27 August 2013, he was inducted into the Pentagon Hall of Heroes. |
Personal Life | |
Date of Birth | 25 January 1980 (Friday) |
Age (as of 2023) | 43 Years |
Birthplace | Spokane, Washington, United States |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Nationality | American |
Hometown | Spokane, Washington, United States |
School | North Central High School, Spokane, Washington |
College/University | • Los Medanos Community College, California • Marine Corps Combat Engineer School • Primary Marksmanship Instructor School |
Educational Qualification | He studied Biology at a community college in Spokane, Washington. [3]The Spokesman-Review |
Food Habit | Non Vegetarian [4]Ty Carter - Instagram |
Hobbies | Cooking, Gardening |
Relationships & More | |
Marital Status | Married |
Affairs/Girlfriends | Jennifer "Jenn" Aedo (2016-present) |
Family | |
Wife/Spouse | • First Wife- April Ait (m. 2004; div. 2008) • Second Wife- Shannon Derby (m. 2009; div. 2015) |
Children | Son- None Daughter- 3 • Madison (born 2005) - with his first wife, April Ait • Sehara (born January 2013) - with his second wife, Shannon Derby • Eve (born April 2017) - with his girlfriend Jennifer "Jenn" Aedo |
Parents | Father- Mark Carter Mother- Paula Carter |
Siblings | Brother- Seth Allen Carter (11 May 1978 – 13 July 2000) Sister- Amber Carter Note: Seth Allen, at the age of 22, was killed by a drunken friend named Richard R. Sheppard who shot Seth in the chest while playing with a shotgun during a party in Spokane. [5]The Spokesman-Review |
Some Lesser Known Facts About Ty Carter
- Ty Carter is a retired American military personnel who served the US armed forces from 1998 to 2014. He is the recipient of the Medal of Honor (MOH), the United States Armed Forces’ highest military decoration.
- After a year of his birth, the family shifted to California’s Bay Area from Spokane in 1981; however, the family returned to Spokane in 1991.
- Ty Carter and his siblings, brother Seth, and sister Amber, were raised by their single mother in Spokane as their parents separated soon after Carter’s birth.
- While growing up in Spokane, Ty Carter graduated from North Central High School in 1998. He later settled in Antioch, California, which he considers his home of record. [6]White House Office of the Press Secretary
- According to Carter, while studying in high school, he was a loner, a skinny kind of guy, who didn’t really get along with anybody; he didn’t have a whole lot of good friends.
- Soon after graduating from North Central High School, Carter joined the United States Marine Corps on 13 October 1998, where he attended the Marine Corps Combat Engineer School. Soon, he was deployed to Okinawa, Japan, as an intelligence clerk.
- In 1999, based on his weapons’ marksmanship skills, he was sent to Primary Marksmanship Instructor School.
- After serving two short training deployments; one to San Clemente Island, California, and the other to Egypt, for Operation Bright Star, Ty Carter was relieved from the Marine Corps on 12 October 2002.
- After his stint with the Marine Corps ended, Carter shifted to civilian life and studied biology at Los Medanos Community College in California, where he met a girl named April Ait, and in early 2004, they started dating each other. After Ait became pregnant, the couple got married.
- After graduating from college, he travelled from place to place, looking for work and a new purpose. According to Carter, he first started out working with a yacht maintenance service. He then worked at various places and in various capacities including a motorcycle apparel store, spa, dairy mill, sawmill, security providing company, and as an assistant manager/projectionist at a theatre. He also worked with a chainsaw. [7]CNN – YouTube
- In an interview, Carter talked about his civilian life and said that he felt like he was a drone as there was no purpose in his life while he was working at these places. [8]CNN – YouTube Meanwhile, he was going through a divorce with April Ait, soon after the birth of their daughter, Madison. Amidst all these, Carter decided to return to military life and joined the United States Army as a cavalry scout in January 2008; he was trained at Fort Knox, Kentucky.
- After completing his training at Fort Knox, Kentucky, Carter was assigned to 3-61 Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, and he was deployed to Afghanistan, from May 2009 to May 2010.
- During his first deployment in Afghanistan, he was stationed at Combat Outpost (COP) Keating in Kamdesh District, Nuristan Province, where more than 300 enemy fighters attacked on the morning of 3 October 2009, which later came to be known as the Battle of Kamdesh. According to a detailed report by the United States Army, Ty Carter, as a specialist, killed enemy troops, resupplied ammunition to American fighters, rendered first aid, and risked his own life to save an injured soldier who was pinned down by a barrage of enemy fire. In the battle, eight American soldiers lost their lives, while more than twenty-five were left wounded. In an interview, Ty Carter recalled the day and said,
It was as if somebody kicked an ant hill. The bullets, the rockets, the mortars, everything, a wall of spikes — they’re pointing at you.” [9]National Public Radio
- In October 2010, Ty Carter was stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington, as a Stryker gunner with the 8th Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division.
- In October 2012, he was again deployed to Afghanistan, and after completing his second deployment to Afghanistan, Carter was stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord with the 7th Infantry Division. [10]White House Office of the Press Secretary
- On 26 August 2013, U.S. President Barack Obama placed the Medal of Honor around Carter’s neck during a White House ceremony for his actions during the 2009 Battle of Kamdesh in Afghanistan.
After receiving the honor, Carter said,
Even though this award is an awesome honor and a great privilege, in order to get such a prestigious award, you have to be in a situation where your soldiers, your family, your brothers, are suffering and dying around you. And then, you just did everything you could to save lives or prevent further loss.” [11]National Public Radio
- In September 2014, Ty Carter retired from his active military service.
- In an interview, Ty Carter talked about his struggle to relive the Battle of Kamdesh and fight to save his men, and severe Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) for not saving his fellow soldier Stephan Mace. According to Carter, when he and four others were pinned down in a Humvee under gun and grenade fire on the morning of 3 October 2009, he decided to step out of the vehicle into the hail of bullets with his fellow infantryman Specialist Stephan Mace to give cover for the others to escape to shelter; however, two of the three men were killed in that sprint, and Mace was left wounded on the ground, and when Carter tried to help Mace, his sergeant at first refused to let him go back for the injured Mace, shouting ‘You’re no good to him dead’ over the gunfire and explosions. After persuading the sergeant, Carter dodged rocket-propelled grenades and rounds, zipping over his head, to get to Mace, giving first aid and then carrying him another 300 ft to safety. Later, Mace was airlifted away for medical treatment, but he succumbed to his injuries, leaving Carter wracked with guilt over his fellow soldier’s death. Carter says,
Stephan Mace and I were not friends. But just because I don’t get along great with somebody doesn’t mean I don’t care about them or value their life. So I wasn’t going out there to save my loved one or my best friend. He was wearing the uniform so was part of my family, so I will do what I need to do. When you see someone you know can help out there, suffering, it turns your brain to lava and your stomach into acid, and then your limbs turn numb but are full of negative energy. You feel so angry you can hardly breathe. But as I was running out there I wasn’t thinking about the bullets that were hitting all around or the explosions. All I was thinking was that I need to help this person. And that’s one of the reasons I had severe post-traumatic stress — because I survived but Mace didn’t.” [12]Daily Mail
- According to Carter, when Pvt. Ed Faulkner Jr. died of an overdose of the drugs he had turned to in an attempt to deal with his trauma in September 2010, he decided to campaign to remove the stigma around seeking help for post-traumatic stress. Carter calls Faulkner the ninth victim of the battle. In an interview, Carter talked about this and said,
We need to just call it what it is: it’s just stress from the past. It’s not a disorder, it is something that’s supposed to happen.” [13]Daily Mail
Later, President Obama praised Carter for talking openly about the disorder and said,
Let me say it as clearly as I can to any of our troops or veterans who are watching and struggling. Look at this man. Look at this soldier. Look at this warrior. He’s as tough as they come, and if he can find the courage and the strength to not only seek help but also to speak out about it, to take care of himself and to stay strong, then so can you.”
- The Outpost, a 2020 American war film, is based on the book “The Outpost: An Untold Story of American Valor” by Jake Tapper. The film depicts the Battle of Kamdesh in which American actor Caleb Landry Jones portrayed Ty Carter, and Carter also made a brief appearance in the film.
- In November 2018, Netflix released an anthology documentary series titled Medal of Honor in which Ty Carter was featured in episode 8; American actor Jonny Weston portrayed Carter.
- The stories of his heroic act during the Battle of Kamdesh have been featured in many magazines.
- In his leisure time, he loves cooking and gardening, and he often shares pictures of these hobbies on social media.
- He is a dog lover and often shares pictures of his pet dog, Nala.
- He often smokes cigars and consumes alcoholic beverages on various occasions. He loves homebrewing.
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