A Marine who cheated death in Fallujah walked into a West Virginia coal mine — and never walked out. One broken wall. One roaring wall of water. One foreman who refused to leave his men behind. As others ran for higher ground, Steven Lipscomb turned ba…
Steven M. Lipscomb’s final moments were a continuation of a life defined by service. From surviving a roadside bomb in Iraq to standing his ground in a collapsing mine, he consistently chose the dangerous place if it meant someone else could walk away. In Fallujah, that courage earned him a Purple Heart. In West Virginia, it cost him his life, but saved 17 others. Colleagues remember a steady leader who never raised his voice, a man whose calm in crisis made others believe they would make it home. At home, he was simply “Steve” — the dad who coached, listened, and showed up tired but present after long shifts underground.
His wife Heather and their daughters, Greer and Stella, now carry a legacy written in quiet choices: going back for the last man, taking the harder post, staying one minute longer in harm’s way. Leaders may call him a hero, but for his family, he was something even harder to lose — the center of their world, taken by the same instinct that defined him.