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West Virginia Guardsman Laid to Rest

Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, a military police officer assigned to the 863rd Military Police Company, West Virginia Army National Guard, was laid to rest with full military honors during a ceremony at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, West Virginia, Dec. 9.

A woman surrounded by other people is handed a folded American flag by a man wearing a military dress uniform.
Honoring a Hero
Evalea Beckstrom gets emotional when presented with a folded American flag by Army Maj. Gen. Jim D. Seward, West Virginia adjutant general, in honor of her daughter, Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, during her committal service at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025. Beckstrom was 20 years old and had served two years and five months in the West Virginia National Guard.
Credit: Army Officer Candidate Ayden Norcross
VIRIN: 251209-Z-IU060-1283
The top of a specialized burial vault lid is shown with an artistic portrait of a woman in a camouflage military uniform and the American flag and Army Seal. Written on the top of the lid is “Sarah Beckstrom, 2005-2025.”
Honoring a Hero
The top of Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom's specialized vault lid lays on a wooden pallet before being lowered into her grave at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025.
Credit: Army Officer Candidate Ayden Norcross
VIRIN: 251209-Z-IU060-1376
Soldiers in military dress uniforms guide a casket draped in the American flag into a hearse. On the right, uniformed police officers stand in line saluting. There are snow covered buildings in the background.
Honoring a Hero
West Virginia National Guard Military Funeral Honors Team transfer the casket of Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom into a hearse before her funeral at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025. Beckstrom was shot in a targeted attack on Nov. 26, 2025, while supporting the D.C. safe and beautiful mission in Washington.
Credit: Edwin L. Wriston, Army National Guard
VIRIN: 251209-Z-FC128-1054
Beckstrom, 20, died Nov. 27 after she was fatally wounded in the line of duty in a shooting the previous day near Farragut Square in Washington. 

"As you look across these hills and out onto the rows of headstones, each stone a brick to the foundation of freedom upon which we stand today, I encourage you to remember this," said Army Chaplain (Maj.) Christopher Bennett, 111th Engineer Brigade, as he presided over the ceremony. "No plots in the West Virginia national cemeteries can be purchased. Each must be earned, and we know Spc. Sarah Beckstrom has earned her place here among us today." 

Beckstrom is survived by her mother, Evalea Beckstrom, father, Gary Beckstrom, sisters, Nicole and Christina, and brothers, Bryan and Wesley.

A man dressed in a military dress uniform plays a bugle while others in the background are saluting.
Honoring a Hero
Army National Guard Sgt. Eric Davis plays “Taps” in honor of Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom during her committal service at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025. Beckstrom, a military police officer assigned to the 863rd Military Police Company, 111th Engineer Brigade, West Virginia Army National Guard, was laid to rest with full military honors.
Credit: Army Officer Candidate Ayden Norcross
VIRIN: 251209-Z-IU060-1244

The service was attended by family members, friends and dignitaries, including West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey; Sens. Shelley Moore Capito and Jim Justice, Reps. Carol Miller and Riley Moore; Air Force Gen. Steve Nordhaus, chief of the National Guard Bureau; Army Lt. Gen. Jon Stubbs, director of the Army National Guard; and West Virginia National Guard Army Maj. Gen. Jim Seward, adjutant general, and Army Command Sgt. Maj. James Jones, senior enlisted leader.      

Sarah Diane Beckstrom was born May 17, 2005, and was a 2023 honor graduate of Webster County High School in Upperglade, West Virginia. She enlisted in the West Virginia Army National Guard not long after graduation and completed basic and advanced training at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, that summer. 

In August 2025, she and other members of the West Virginia National Guard, including members of her unit, were mobilized for service in Washington as part of the D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force, which saw more than 2,000 guardsmen from six states provide additional security at key locations in the district.    

Unit members described her as a quiet professional who exemplified dedication and always put others above herself. Many recalled her quick smile, infectious laughter and her ability to inspire others.

A casket draped in the American flag is displayed at a funeral home with an artistic portrait of a woman in a camouflage uniform shown behind the casket.
Remembering a Hero
Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom's casket is displayed at a funeral home in her hometown of Webster Springs, W.Va., Dec. 5, 2025.
Credit: Edwin L. Wriston, Army National Guard
VIRIN: 251205-Z-FC129-1043N

She was an observant person who loved exploring and spent her off-duty hours in the district taking in museums and overall city life, her family said.    

Beckstrom was enrolled at Glenville State University in Glenville, West Virginia, and intended to pursue studies related to mental health.    

A passionate lover of animals, she was a "dog momma to one pup," said family members, and was known to often carry snacks to share with squirrels she might have encountered. She was shy, quiet and reserved until she got to know people, her family said, and she loved music. Pasta was a favorite food, and she especially enjoyed playing arcade games. 

An avid reader, she was especially drawn to poetry and was reading Rupi Kaur's "Milk and Honey."

A man dressed in a military dress uniform salutes a casket as other men wearing military dress uniforms carry the casket out of a hearse.
Honoring a Hero
Army Maj. Gen. Jim D. Seward, West Virginia National Guard adjutant general, salutes the casket of Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom as members of the 863rd Military Police carry it out of a hearse during Beckstrom's committal service at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025. Beckstrom, a military police officer assigned to the 863rd Military Police Company, 111th Engineer Brigade, West Virginia Army National Guard, was laid to rest with full military honors.
Credit: Army Officer Candidate Ayden Norcross
VIRIN: 251209-Z-IU060-1105
Seven men wearing military dress uniforms and standing in a line point rifles in the air as another man also wearing a military dress uniform stands behind them.
Honoring a Hero
The West Virginia National Guard Military Funeral Honors Team conduct the three-volley salute in honor of Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom during her committal service at the West Virginia National Cemetery in Grafton, W.Va., Dec. 9, 2025. Beckstrom died Nov. 27, 2025, from a gunshot wound received when she was ambushed by a gunman while on patrol near Farragut Square in Washington the previous day.
Credit: Army Officer Candidate Ayden Norcross
VIRIN: 251209-Z-IU060-1205
Family members described her as "a gentle soul who loved and lived deeply," and someone who sought human connections. 

"There are many understandable responses to Sarah's tragic murder," Bennett said. "Anger, grief and confusion are natural and understandable, and God is big enough to handle all of those emotions and more. We can take comfort in knowing that God is just, and that in the end, justice will be served."    

Her military awards include the Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, West Virginia Legion of Merit, the D.C. Distinguished Service Medal and the D.C. Humanitarian Service Medal.

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