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- The People Behind The Sacrifice
Army Sgt. Robert E. Colvill Jr.
Died July 8, 2004 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom
31, of Anderson, Ind.; assigned to 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, Schweinfurt, Germany; killed July 8 during a mortar attack on the Iraqi National Guard Headquarters in Baghdad.
Indiana soldier killed in Iraq
Associated Press
ANDERSON, Ind. — A soldier from Anderson was killed in fighting in Iraq, family members told The Herald Bulletin.
Army officials notified Lt. Robert Colvill’s family of his death on Thursday, said his sister Angela Seward.
Colvill, 31, had served in Iraq for four months and had been in the Army for two years, family members said. He previously had served eight years in the Marine Corps.
Colvill was not listed among the latest casualties on the Defense Department’s Web site early Friday.
“My father said he was killed when he was fighting with the troops on the border — in hand-to-hand combat basically,” said Seward. “They were attacked. There were four people that were killed and he was one of them.”
Colvill graduated in 1991 from Madison Heights High School in the city about 35 miles northeast of Indianapolis. His sister said he had wanted to serve in the military since ninth grade.
He joined the Marine Corps after graduation and left as a sergeant in 1999, family members said. After a couple years as a civilian, he enlisted in the Army.
“He came home and he didn’t like civilian life,” said Colvill’s stepfather, Daniel Walker.
Colvill’s wife, Chris, and two of his children live in Germany, where he served before he was deployed to Iraq in March. His other son lives in California.
“He was a leader. He was always eager to try new challenges,” said another sister, Melanie L. Smith, 34. “Mom says he was a good kid. He always tried to please everybody.”
Funeral service held for Indiana soldier killed in Iraq
ANDERSON, Ind. — The 2-year-old son of an Army sergeant killed in Iraq played on the steps at the front of the church sanctuary during his father’s funeral service Tuesday.
Sgt. Robert Colvill, 31, of Anderson, died along with four other soldiers July 8 when a mortar round hit the Iraqi National Guard headquarters in Baghdad.
As a video tribute played during the memorial service at the North Anderson Church of God, Colvill’s son, Zachary, played with a pencil and a pad of paper near the flag-draped coffin.
“I’m going to do something a little unorthodox here,” Colvill’s uncle, Marine Corps Master Sgt. Moses Beaman, said in his eulogy. “Robbie is a hero and he deserves an Indiana hero’s welcome. So I’m going to ask that you would all stand up and applaud our hero.”
Mourners joined Beaman in a standing ovation.
Colvill graduated in 1991 from Madison Heights High School in the city about 25 miles northeast of Indianapolis.
He joined the Marine Corps after his high school graduation and left as a sergeant in 1999, family members said. He enlisted in the Army a couple of years later.
He was the 24th person from Indiana to die in the Middle East since the buildup for the invasion of Iraq began in early 2003.
Colvill’s wife, Chris, and two of his children live in Germany, where he was stationed before being deployed to Iraq in March. His other son lives in California.
— Associated Press