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- The People Behind The Sacrifice
Army Spc. Nicholas S. Hartge
Died May 14, 2007 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom
20, of Rome City, Ind.; assigned to the 1st Battalion, 26th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, Schweinfurt, Germany; died May 14 in Baghdad of wounds sustained when his unit came in contact with enemy forces using grenades and an improvised explosive device.
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Soldier from northeast Indiana killed in Iraq
The Associated Press
ROME CITY, Ind. — A soldier from northeastern Indiana was killed while serving in Iraq, his family said.
Spc. Nick Hartge, 20, was killed at 1:03 a.m. May 14, according to his father, Dave Abbott, of Rome City. The family was notified by Army officials late that afternoon.
“It’s terrible,” Abbott said this morning. “It’s your worst fear.”
Abbott said his son was either on patrol or performing a raid when Hartge’s unit met with heavy resistance.
“A heavy battle ensued, and he was killed,” Abbott said.
Hartge served with the 1st Infantry Division and was deployed to Iraq in August. He was stationed in Baghdad.
“He believed in what he was doing,” Abbott said. “He felt they were really helping the people.”
His son enlisted in the Army before graduating from East Noble High School two years ago. He was from Rome City, about 30 miles northwest of Fort Wayne.
Hartge had returned home for a two-week leave in March, and Abbott said the family had been in consistent contact with him during his service in Iraq, once every couple of weeks.
Abbott spoke proudly May 15 of how much his son had grown up since enlisting.
“He’d turned into such a man,” Abbott said.
Abbott said the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, had a profound effect on Hartge, and led to his enlistment.
“It’s all about 9-11,” Abbott said. “It was the driving force behind his decision.
“He always wanted to do something special. He was adamant about being in the Army. There was nothing going to stop him.”
Since February 2003, 82 Indiana military personnel have died after being sent to the Middle East for the war in Iraq. Nine men from Indiana have been killed in the country since April 1.
Ind. post office being named for slain soldier
The Associated Press
ROME CITY, Ind. — A soldier killed during the war in Iraq will have the post office in his northeastern Indiana hometown named for him.
The Postal Service plans a ceremony Tuesday at the Rome City post office to formally designate it for Army Spc. Nicholas Hartge, who was 20 when he was killed in 2007 during combat near Baghdad.
Hartge enlisted in the Army while still a student at East Noble High School and left for basic training a week after graduation.
The U.S. House and Senate this summer approved resolutions naming the office for Hartge, which President Barack Obama signed into law.
Rep. Marlin Stutzman sponsored the resolution and is scheduled to attend the renaming ceremony along with Postal Service officials in the town about 30 miles north of Fort Wayne.