Dressed in his best black suit and wearing a broad grin, Mike Nagel couldn't hide his jitters.
Most everybody he loved was filing into the Navy Operational Support Center in Minneapolis on Tuesday, where his youngest boy would be awarded the Silver Star for heroism in Afghanistan. The proud papa couldn't have been more excited.
"It's just so overwhelming," Nagel said shortly before the U.S. Marine color guard kicked off a moving, half-hour ceremony. "It's almost like having a new baby."
Minutes later, Cpl. Ethan Nagel, decked out in Marine dress blues and standing against the backdrop of a giant U.S. flag, was pinned with the Silver Star, the third-highest honor in the U.S. armed forces, given in recognition of "gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States."
As Nagel's former captain told the harrowing tale of how the wounded Nagel rescued a fallen comrade in a 2009 ambush by Taliban fighters and kept him from being captured, more than 120 friends, relatives and military comrades rose from their seats and delivered a standing ovation.
The proud Marine beamed, then embraced his captain in a lengthy hug.
"I'm so proud of him," said Wendy Bradshaw, a longtime family friend who has known Nagel since he was a toddler. "If anybody was going to do it, it was going to be him. He always had such spunk.
"I never heard the story, the whole story. We knew he saved lives, but we didn't know he was that close."