IN MEMORY
ROBERT KNIGHT
EAGLE SCOUT
Killed by a drunk driver at age 19. Robert was not only a VMI Cadet leader, Eagle Scout, and joy to know, he was my friend. Our country has lost a man who had the brightest of futures ahead of him; a man who had the potential to be a great American Leader.
Good bye, Robert. You will be greatly missed.
From The Virginia Pilot
http://hamptonroads.com/node/476709
Carrollton man killed in crash was leader at VMI
Posted to:
News
Isle of Wight

Robert Knight, of the 13000 block of Upper Hastings Way, was pronounced dead at
the scene of the crash.
(Courtesy photo)
By
John Warren
The Virginian-Pilot
© August 17, 2008
ISLE OF WIGHT
When Robert Knight was about 8 years old, he wasn’t exactly tearing up the
baseball diamond.
Richard, his father and Little League coach, jokes that when it was time to take
the field he’d tell his son to go into the outfield and climb over the fence.
But Robert turned out to be a regular Charlie Hustle. Two years and thousands of
swings, throws and catches later, he was an All-Star.
“It was just like with everything else,” Richard Knight said Saturday. “He had
that perseverance; he was going to develop himself."
Robert Knight, 19, who was set to leave today for his sophomore year at Virginia
Military Institute, was killed early Saturday when his car was struck on U.S. 17
by a man who has been charged with driving under the influence.
Knight lettered in football, track and wrestling at Smithfield High School,
which he graduated from in 2007. He earned the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest
award in Boy Scouts .
He was in JROTC in high school and had long said he wanted to be a career
military man; both of his grandfathers had served. He was accepted to VMI, and
an ROTC scholarship gave him a full ride.
The freshman year is a trying one for a VMI cadet, who is called a “Rat” in the
first year . But Knight stood out in the field of about 450 first-year students:
He was assertive, but not loud; proud, but not a braggart.
He’d run extra laps, hit the ropes before the others and do more pushups.
“Knight was always the one being proactive,” said Jared Balsor of Suffolk, a
fellow VMI Rat last year. “He was the one going by people’s rooms, making sure
we had our shoes and our brass shined, making sure our beds were made.
“He wanted to make sure our company was the best; we need someone like that at
VMI.”
For his sophomore year, Knight was chosen to be a Cadre member, a cadet who
would guide the incoming class of cadets.
Early Saturday, Robert was returning to his Carrollton home after spending the
evening catching up with friends. State Police Sgt. Michelle Cotten said Knight
was turning left from Smiths Neck Road onto U.S. 17 when his car was broadsided.
He was a couple thousand feet from his house.
The driver of the other vehicle, Lucian Friel, 23, of Portsmouth, has been
charged with driving under the influence.
VMI, four hours away in Lexington, is bracing for the arrival of Knight’s
classmates in the coming days – many of whom will likely hear of his death for
the first time when they arrive, said Lt. Col. Stewart MacInnis, a VMI
spokesman.
“This is a tear in their ranks,” MacInnis said. “They’re going to feel it very
keenly.”
Colonial Funeral Home in Smithfield is handing Robert Knight’s funeral
arrangements. A time has not been set for the visitation and funeral yet.
“He was only 19 1/2 years old, but he achieved an awful lot in his lifetime,”
Richard Knight said.