Sammamish Wall of Honor
Marciano Lopez
John Fremont High School
Los Angeles, CA
Class of January, 1953
Research done by Claradell Shedd.
Marciano Lopez
Marciano graduated from John Fremont High School, Los Angeles, CA. At the time, his next of kin was Mr. and Mrs.Elias A. Lopez, 16th Place, Los Angeles, CA. His service number is ER 56 311 268.
Marciano Lopez
Year   Rank   Status
December 26, 1934 x Family x Born in Los Angeles, CA of Mr. and Mrs. Elias A. Lopez.
January, 1953 x x Graduated from John Fremont High School, Los Angeles, CA.
June, 1954 x Education x Los Angeles City College for two years.
1956 x x UCLA. Graduated. BS in engineering.
1958 x Military x Drafted into US Army.
1958 x US Army x *Basic Training at Fort Ord, CA
August 31, 1958 x Family x Married Irene Sepulveda at Bethesda Presbyterian Church, Los Angeles, CA.
January, 1959 x US Army/Pvt x **Fort Huachuca, AZ. US Army Signal Corps. Private. Evaluated airborne surveillance radar.
March, 1959 x Family x Wife joined Marciano at Fort Huachuca.
November 28, 1960   Family   Daughter Sara born in Los Angeles, CA.
December 1, 1960 x US Army/SP4 x Discharged at Fort Huachuca, AZ; Specialist 4, US Army Signal Corps.
August 21, 1964 x Family x Daughter Marci Ann Lopez born in Los Angeles, CA.
1960-1996 x Employment x Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Principal electrical power engineer. Had 600 employees reporting to him. Retired in 1996.
1998 x Relocated x Moved to Seattle, WA.
1998-2008 x Employment x FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency). Assisted utilities, electrical, water, telephones, gas, municipal facilties, road departments in preparing disaster cost reimbursement documents.
February 23, 1996-Present x Residence x Relocated to house on Pine Lake in Sammamish, WA.
*Fort Ord, CA
Fort Ord was a United States Army post where approximately 1.7 million soldiers trained from the beginning of World War II through Operation Desert Storm. Along with the soldiers, many family members and civilians lived and worked there.

Fort Ord was considered one of the most attractive of all U.S. Army posts, because of its weather and proximity to the beach. The Fort occupied roughly 28,000 acres, about the size of San Francisco. Fort Ord was appreciated as a training facility because of its wide variety of drill environments that incuded beach, forest and the ‘Impossible City”, a mock urban city that is still used for training by police and military forces.

In 1917, it was a field-artillery target range. In 1933, the artillery field became Camp Ord, named in honor of Union Army Maj. Gen. Edward Otho Cresap Ord, (1818-1883) a leader during the Civil War. In 1941, Camp Ord was officially named Fort Ord. During World War II, the concept of combat readiness training was introduced there and soldiers practiced attacking a small simulated German village called Krautville . After the D-Day invasion, POW German soldiers were interned at the Fort. During the 50s it was a staging area for units departing for the Korean War. During the Vietnam war, Fort Ord was a major training facility, that included drills in a mock Vietnamese village. The post continued as a center for instruction of basic and advanced infantrymen until 1976, when the training area was deactivated and the Fort again became the home of the The 7th Infantry Division, following their return from South Korea after twenty-five years in the Demilitarized Zone.

The final basic training classes were held in 1990. In 1994, Fort Ord was officially closed. The Fort was the largest U.S. military base to be closed at the time.

**Fort Huachuca, AZ
On 1 February 1954, Huachuca was reactivated after a seven-month shut-down following the Korean War. It was the beginning of a new era for this one-time cavalry outpost, which saw Huachuca focused on electronic warfare. The army's Electronic Proving Ground opened in 1954, followed by the Army Security Agency Test and Evaluation Center in 1960, the Combat Surveillance and Target Acquisition Training Command in 1964, and the Electronic Warfare School in 1966. Also in 1966 the U.S. Army established the 1st Combat Support Training Brigade, whose mission was to train soldiers in the specialties of field wire and communication, telegraph communications (O5B wired and wireless), light tactical vehicle driving, wheeled vehicle maintenance, and food service and administration due to the expanding need for these skills in Vietnam.

Ford Ord, CA for Basic Training Fort Huachuca, AZ
August 31, 1958; Los Angeles, CA:
Marciano & Irene Sepulveda Lopez
1959: Los Angeles, CA 2023: Sammamish, WA
Marciano Lopez
Specialist 4th Class
Signal Corps
US Army


US Army Seal

US Army Signal Corps Patch


US Army Specialist Patch





Fort Huachuca Insignia

Fort Huachuca, AZ


US Army Specialist 4 Patch
03/10/23: Living in Sammamish, WA since 1996.
Music: "Wind Beneath My Wings"
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