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This article was published 1 year(s) and 11 month(s) ago
Bradley J. Campus was one of 241 U.S. Marines killed in the Beirut barrack bombing in 1983. (Brian Hurley)

Lynn Marine Bradley J. Campus honored with monument

Emily Pauls

June 21, 2023 by Emily Pauls

LYNN — Bradley J. Campus was killed in the Beirut barracks bombing on Oct. 23, 1983 in Lebanon. Now, 40 years later, the marine is being honored with a new monument at Clark Street Playground.

A fundraiser for the monument will take place Saturday at Metro Bowl in Peabody from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. Brian Hurley, a friend of Campus’, is helping to organize it. He said that food will be provided at the event and no registration is required.

“There’s no cost to anyone who wants to bowl. All we ask is that maybe they can make a one-time donation,” Hurley said. “We’re not looking for anything overly-large, $5 or $10.”

There will be another fundraiser later this year for the monument as well, he added.

“We’re going to do something more formal in September, involving a live band and renting a hall and stuff like that, but just to keep people’s minds fresh,” Hurley said. “Forty years is a long time; people tend to forget.”

The attack that killed Campus also killed 240 other American service members when two suicide bombers detonated two truck bombs that hit the U.S. Marine Corps barracks in Beirut, which housed hundreds of U.S. and French military members. It was the deadliest single-day attack against U.S. Marines since the 1945 Battle of Iwo Jima.

Friend and fellow Marine Charlie Griffin — who escorted Campus’ body home from the airport and attended the funeral — told The Daily Item in October 2022 that he had been planning to host a rededication for the 40th anniversary of Campus’ death.

Griffin has been working on improving Campus’ memorial at Clark Street Playground by replacing the current plywood that displays his name with a more detailed, granite stone.

Hurley said that Griffin met with city leaders as well as contractors and landscapers for the monument and that it is on track to be ready in October 2023.

Griffin told The Item in 2022 that he wants the monument to be educational.

“They’ll look at the stone and they’ll see information about Brad and how he was killed … You don’t want to forget that somebody made the ultimate sacrifice like that,” Griffin said. “So it’s not just some young Lynn kid who died, but it tells where it happened, why it happened, and different things like that.”

  • Emily Pauls

    Emily Pauls is a staff reporter at The Daily Item covering Lynn. Pauls graduated from Boston University in 2022 with a degree in journalism. Before joining the Item, Pauls wrote for The Daily Free Press, Boston University News Service and The Boston Globe.

    View all posts

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