Community Corner

Street Renamed In Memory Of Hero Airman Killed In Copter Crash

The tribute comes a year after Tech. Sgt. Dashan Briggs and 6 other members of the 106th Rescue Wing were lost during a mission in Iraq.

(File photo / Lisa Finn.)

RIVERHEAD, NY — A street in Riverhead will be renamed in honor of a hero airman who lost his life in a crash last year.

At the request of the family of Tech. Sgt. Dashan Briggs, Riverhead Town officials said they have have completed the process of renaming Lewis Street to Dashan J. Briggs Way.

The Riverhead town board will host a dedication event with family and friends in front of Millbrook Gables Park on Saturday at 10 a.m.

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The tribute comes a year after Tech. Sgt. Briggs and six other members of the 106th Rescue Wing were lost during their mission in Al-Qa’im, Iraq. The Riverhead town board passed a resolution unanimously to honor and memorialize Tech.Sgt. Briggs for his dedication to keeping the community and country safe.

“By making this street renaming official we are saying to the Briggs family that Dashan will not be forgotten. That Riverhead will always remember his sacrifice on behalf of our country.” said Riverhead Town Supervisor Laura Jens-Smith.

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Briggs, 30, was one of four heroes from the NY Air National Guard's 106th Rescue Wing, located at Gabreski Airport in Westhampton, who died in the tragic crash that killed seven airmen. Since his death, scores have continued to honor Briggs; Riverhead Town began the process to dedicate the street to him, the street where he grew up, last year.

Riverhead officials added that Tech. Sgt. Dashan Briggs had shown his commitment to the community and was chosen, along with 12 local Air National Guard members, to receive the New York State Humane Service Medal in 2011 for his heroism during Hurricane Irene.

A 2007 graduate of Riverhead High School, Tech.Sgt. Briggs grew up on Lewis Street with his grandparents where the dedication will be taking place. In 2010, Tech. Sgt. Briggs joined the Air National Guard 106th Rescue Wing and was deployed to Afghanistan as a munitions system specialist.

The school where he left a long legacy retired Briggs' football jersey; while attending Riverhead High School, he was a standout football player and member of the lacrosse team, the district said.

At his funeral, inside the firehouse in Westhampton Beach, it was standing room only: Briggs' coffin was draped with an American flag; a beautiful American flag created with red, white and blue flowers also stood alongside, a testament to his patriotism, devotion and dedication.

Another spray of flowers featured the heartfelt words, "These things we do, that others may live."

The service began with "The Star Spangled Banner" as the somber crowd stood respectfully.

Lieutenant Colonel Rodney Lisec, HH-60G Pavehawk helicopter pilot from the 106th Rescue Wing of the New York Air National Guard, shared his memories of Briggs, intertwining humor and heart as he told a story about how Briggs, who came to the 106th as an ammunitions specialist, brought a fierce desire to serve coupled with a deeply ingrained work ethic. But there was only one problem — Briggs didn't know how to swim. Undaunted, he took Safety Swim classes with toddlers, never wavering in his dedication.

"Dashan is my brother," he said. His tenacity led to great success; Briggs had accrued the highest number of flying hours and was known for his volunteerism and ever-willingness to lend a hand.
"This was a very selfless man," he said. "Integrity was just a part of his life."

Next, Briggs' high school friend Andre Galarza remembered Dashan, who graduated Riverhead High School in 2007, as "cool," having a variety of cars including a Range Rover and an El Dorado.

The pair remained friends even though they attended different colleges and later, bonded again when they worked together, caring for disabled adults — and sharing an apartment for a time in Bellport.

Smiling, Galarza said his friend always kept his cars immaculate. He, too, referenced Briggs' inability to swim and said he'd once saved him from the ocean.

"I always looked up to him," Galarza said, even more so when Briggs joined the Air Force to serve the nation. "He was a straight up guy, a gentleman, a family guy. Brother, I'll miss you so much."

Galarza said when he heard the news of the crash, he didn't want to believe it could be true, kept praying he'd hear that his lifetime friend had somehow jumped to safety.

And then, he said, "I thought of Rebecca and the babies," Briggs' small children Jayden and Ava; the three live in Port Jefferson Station.

"I didn't know what to do," he said, adding that he then kicked off a GoFundMe, "In Loving Memory of Dashan Briggs." To donate, click here.

The funds, he said, will go a long way toward helping Briggs' family.

"Dashan, I'll miss you. I love you, brother," he said.

Eli Briggs, Dashan's grandfather, then spoke movingly, with love and laughter, about the young man who'd illuminated his life.

"He liked to laugh and have fun," Briggs said. His grandson was his fishing buddy, he said, but the pair more often than not ended up towing cars for people whose vehicles had gotten stuck in the sand. In fact, Briggs said, Dashan often teased him about his own truck, urging him to get a newer model.

He thanked Sharon Young and his son Gregory Briggs, Dashan's parents, "for bringing Dashan into my life." He also spoke lovingly to Briggs' widow Rebecca. "Dashan picked a lovely wife," he said.

His grandson, he said, was "a good man, a loving man. Dashan lived the life he wanted to live, and I supported him in that all the way," he said, urging the crowd, "Don't give up on life."

Having lost his own father at just two-and-a-half years old, Briggs vowed that the entire family would join together to help raise the babies his grandson left behind. "He's in our hearts," he said.

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