U N I T E D S T A T E S A I R F O R C E

CAPTAIN MATTHEW B. MARGGRAF

Captain Matthew B. Marggraf is the Education Flight Commander, Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps Detachment 475 at the University of New Hampshire. Captain Marggraf was born in Connecticut and grew up in Dover, New Hampshire, and commissioned into the Air Force after graduating from the ROTC program at the University of New Hampshire in

2012.

Captain Marggraf is an Air Liaison Officer. He spent his first four years as an Assistant Flight Commander and Brigade ALO supporting the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, NC. Captain Marggraf earned combat mission readiness status and was deployed with the 82nd Airborne Division to and Erbil as a Division ALO and Joint Terminal Attack Controller. Upon returning to Pope AAF in 2016, Captain Marggraf was assigned to Camp Red Cloud, ROK where he served as the Chief of Scheduling and Division ALO supporting the 2nd Infantry Division.

EDUCATION 2012 Bachelor of Arts in Psychology, Justice Studies, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 2013 and Control Specialist School, , FL

ASSIGNMENTS 1. October 2012 – May 2016, Assistant Flight Commander, 14th ASOS, Pope AAF, NC (May 2015 – February 2016, Air Liaison Officer, 72nd Expeditionary Air Support Operations Squadron, Baghdad, Iraq) 2. May 2016 – February 2017, Chief of Scheduling, 604th ASOS, Camp Red Cloud, ROK 3. February 2017 – Present, Education Flight Commander, AFROTC Northeast Region, Detachment 475, University of New Hampshire

MAJOR AWARDS AND DECORATIONS Joint Service Commendation Medal Air Force Commendation Medal with oakleaf cluster Army Achievement Medal Meritorious Unit Award with two oakleaf clusters Air Force Outstanding Unit Award Combat Readiness Medal National Defense Service Medal Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal Global War on Terrorism Service Medal Korean Defense Service Medal

EFFECTIVE DATES OF PROMOTION Second Lieutenant 18 May 2012 First Lieutenant 26 July 2014 Captain 26 July 2016

(Current as of 19 September 2017)