We Honor and Remember:
Lt. Seth J. Dvorin
Hometown: East Brunswick, New Jersey, U.S. Age: 24 years old. Died: February 3, 2004 in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Unit: Army, Battery B, 3rd Battalion, 62nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment, Fort Drum, N.Y. Birth: Dec. 22, 1979, Freehold, Monmouth County, New Jersey, USA. First Lieutenant Seth J. Dvorin, U.S. Army, died near Iskandariyah, Iraq, when a remote-control device exploded. Born in Freehold, he was raised in East Brunswick and South Brunswick. He was a 1998 graduate of South Brunswick High School, where he played football and baseball. Seth received his B.S. degree in administrative justice in 2002 from Rutgers University, New Brunswick. After graduation from Rutgers, he joined the Army, and received basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C. He graduated from Officer Candidate School at Ft. Benning, Ga., and received his commission on Jan. 17, 2003. He also graduated from airborne and air-defense artillery schools and was stationed at Fort Drum, N.Y., as part of the 10th Mountain Division, Battery B, 3rd Battalion, 62nd Air Defense Artillery Regiment. Surviving are his wife, Kelly Harris Dvorin, whom he married on Aug. 26, 2003, five days before leaving for Iraq; his mother, Sue Niederer; his father, Richard Dvorin; his sister, Rebekah Dvorin, and many other relatives and friends. Dvorin. Burial: Marlboro Memorial Cemetery Marlboro, Monmouth County, New Jersey, USA. EAST BRUNSWICK, N.J. — When Army Lt. Seth Dvorin flew home from Iraq for two weeks of R&R last month, his family didn’t think it would be the last time they’d see the 24-year-old officer alive.
“I never thought my son was going to get killed,” Richard Dvorin said Wednesday, 24 hours after learning that his son had been killed while trying to disarm a bomb on an Iraqi roadside. “I’m an optimist. I knew my boy was coming back.” Seth Dvorin was killed Feb. 3 — 17 days after returning to Iraq — near Iskandariyah, 35 miles south of Baghdad, his family told The Star-Ledger of Newark. He was the only soldier killed in the blast and the 17th soldier with New Jersey ties to die in Iraq. The family learned of the soldier’s death, when an Army colonel and a chaplain from Fort Monmouth arrived at their East Brunswick home with the news. The officers told sister Rebekah Dvorin that Seth’s unit had been ordered to clear the area of the homemade mines and bombs that have killed dozens of troops. “They told us they were in a convoy and saw something in the road,” she said. “My brother, the hero, told his driver to stop. That’s when the bomb detonated, when they were trying to dismantle it.” Dvorin, a South Brunswick High School graduate, was part of the 10th Mountain Division based at Fort Drum, N.Y. Richard Dvorin, 61, an Air Force veteran and retired New Brunswick police officer, called his son a loyal, responsible commander who sought to make life as easy as possible on the soldiers he oversaw. Offered two weeks’ leave in December, the father said, Dvorin refused to go because so many of his platoon members had not yet had the chance. “He was a good human being,” the father said, tears rolling down his face. Dvorin leaves behind a 25-year-old widow, Kelly Harris. The 2002 Rutgers graduate married his college sweetheart on Aug. 26, a week before his Sept. 2 deployment |
New Jersey Run for the Fallen 2023 ~ Click on photos below to enlarge...
New Jersey Run for the Fallen 2022