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First Lt. Thomas Heemer, the logistics officer for Combat Logistics Battalion 24, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, poses with his Marine Corps Marathon bib on “Broadway,” a passageway aboard the USS New York, Oct. 26, 2014. Due to pre-deployment training with the 24th MEU, Heemer ran the MCM on a treadmill aboard the New York, finishing under the four-hour mark. The 24th MEU is conducting its final pre-deployment training exercise before a deployment at the end of the year.

Photo by Courtesy Photo

24th MEU Marine runs MCM aboard warship at sea

27 Oct 2014 | 1st Lt. Joshua Larson The Official United States Marine Corps Public Website

He was perhaps the very first finisher of the 39th Marine Corps Marathon, but he didn’t finish anywhere near Arlington, Virginia. Instead, he finished at sea aboard the USS New York - on a treadmill.
First Lt. Thomas Heemer, the logistics officer for Combat Logistics Battalion 24, 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, finished the 2014 edition of the Marine Corps Marathon at 12:30 a.m., Oct. 26, hours ahead of the official beginning of the annual run. Instead of running alongside tens of thousands of fellow Marines, service members and competitors on a cool Virginia morning, he ran mostly alone, on a treadmill crammed into an out-of-the-way corner just off one of the New York’s passageways, cleverly named and affectionately known as “Broadway.”

Although this was Heemer’s first marathon on a ship or on a treadmill, it wasn’t his first MCM. His first was in 2009, and the 25-year-old Penn State graduate has run the annual event every year since.

“I knew I might be embarked on ship this year, but I signed up anyway just in case,” he said. “I thought it would be silly to let the Marine Corps break my Marine Corps Marathon streak, so I decided I would run it aboard the ship.” 

He said the hardest part was running without the camaraderie of other participants and without the spectators, who have always been there to cheer him on during the last five years. Still, he wasn’t without his share of support.

“I had some friends there with me. A lot of the other lieutenants took turns helping me out, running alongside me, and my logistics chief, Gunnery Sgt. Pangelinan, was there to push me through also,” he said. 

Heemer started the marathon before midnight, so he could finish on the actual day of the marathon and still perform his duties the following morning. Aside from being MCM day, Sunday was also the day of a large-scale amphibious assault, the culminating event of the 24th MEU’s pre-deployment training program. As if that wasn’t enough for the Philadelphia native, his battalion was also in the final planning stages of a massive debarkation from the ships of the Iwo Jima Amphibious Ready Group to Camp Lejeune, where CLB 24 was scheduled to spend a week conducting an additional training exercise in the field.

The 24th MEU has been in a near-constant training cycle since its composite at the end of May, so the schedule has not been conducive for marathon training. 

“Not one second,” Heemer answered without hesitation when asked how often he trained for this year’s marathon. “But that didn’t matter. Last year, I met a guy who had patches from over 25 consecutive years of running the marathon, and I decided I wanted to do the same.”

There is one other reason for his dedication to the MCM.

Three years ago, Heemer decided to run the marathon as a part of Team Travis & Brendan, named after two Naval Academy roommates who were killed in separate events while supporting combat operations overseas. Marine 1st Lt. Travis Manion was killed by sniper fire in Al Anbar Province, Iraq, in 2007, and Navy Lt. Brendan Looney, a SEAL, was killed in 2010 when his helicopter crashed while conducting an operation in Afghanistan.

At The Basic School in Quantico, Virginia, where every Marine officer spends six months learning how to lead infantry Marines in combat, there is a barracks named after Manion. 

“Manion Hall was being built while I was at TBS, and I remember reading the plaque in front of the building,” Heemer said. “I did some research and really liked what the foundation stood for, so I decided to join the effort.”

Considering the USS New York was built with seven-and-a-half tons of steel from the World Trade Center, perhaps it’s fitting that at least one Marine ran all 26.2 miles of the MCM within her hull, representing a Marine and a Sailor who died fighting those who would bring her harm. And even though it was on a treadmill crammed into an out-of-the-way corner off “Broadway,” Heemer still managed to finish under the four-hour mark.

Heemer and the rest of the 24th MEU will take a couple weeks of well-deserved time off during the month of November before their deployment at the end of the year. The 24th MEU is scheduled to support operations in the U.S. Africa and Central Command areas of responsibility.