GRANTSBURG, Wis. -- A picture of Carson Holmquist in his Marine uniform was already hanging on the Hall of Honor at Grantsburg High School, one of several dozen alumni recognized for their military service by the tiny Wisconsin community.
On Friday, the picture took on more meaning after news broke that Holmquist, 26, a 2008 graduate, had been one of four Marines killed at a Navy operational center in Chattanooga, Tenn., on Thursday.
Every year, several Grantsburg graduates enlist in the military, but the town of 1,300 about 80 miles northeast of the Twin Cities had largely escaped suffering casualties after more than a decade of war.
So the news of one of their own dying in uniform, not in Iraq or Afghanistan but on home soil, hit especially hard.
"It's a very patriotic community, it's a difficult day in Grantsburg. A lot of people are hurting," said Grantsburg High School Principal Josh Watt. "It's shocking, this whole series of events."
About two dozen observers gathered Friday in front of the high school, where the flag was lowered to half-staff. A line of tea candles and votives were lit in front of the flag, as community members held white candles in a moment of silence.
Tom and Carol Searing of nearby Frederic, Wis., sat with a Marine Corps flag draped over their laps. As a Marine, Tom did two tours in Vietnam. Although the couple didn't know Holmquist or his family, Tom came with his wife to the vigil to pay respects to a brother in arms.
"The circumstances of this tragedy were senseless," Searing said. "It wasn't even in battle."