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SGT Steven Daniel Conover

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SGT Steven Daniel Conover

Birth
Wilmington, Clinton County, Ohio, USA
Death
2 Nov 2003 (aged 21)
Iraq
Burial
Corwin, Warren County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Wilmington, Ohio Sgt. Steven D. Conover shared stories with the family about the dangers in Iraq, including one in which a Humvee blew up in front of him and killed a man Conover had trained with."He was the sergeant, so he had to prepare the man for sending him home to his wife and children. That affected him greatly," said his stepfather, Michael Earley.Conover, 21, was among 16 soldiers killed in the Nov. 2, 2003, downing of an Army helicopter carrying soldiers home on leave. He was stationed at Fort Sill."They were ambushed quite often, and he just said he knew the hand of God was on him," Earley said. "Now, he was on his way home, but he got to go all the way home. My boy was a Christian, and I know he's in heaven right now."Conover, of Wilmington, Ohio, graduated from high school in 2000 and attended Laurel Oaks Career Development Campus, where he studied aviation. He was a cadet officer in Laurel Oaks' Air Force Junior ROTC program."I saw him as a very mature, genuinely nice guy that automatically, when he spoke, other people listened," ROTC instructor Howard Vosburgh said. "His fellow students looked up to him. I admired him. He was just a cut above his peers."He is also survived by his mother, Lorraine Earley.
Wilmington, Ohio Sgt. Steven D. Conover shared stories with the family about the dangers in Iraq, including one in which a Humvee blew up in front of him and killed a man Conover had trained with."He was the sergeant, so he had to prepare the man for sending him home to his wife and children. That affected him greatly," said his stepfather, Michael Earley.Conover, 21, was among 16 soldiers killed in the Nov. 2, 2003, downing of an Army helicopter carrying soldiers home on leave. He was stationed at Fort Sill."They were ambushed quite often, and he just said he knew the hand of God was on him," Earley said. "Now, he was on his way home, but he got to go all the way home. My boy was a Christian, and I know he's in heaven right now."Conover, of Wilmington, Ohio, graduated from high school in 2000 and attended Laurel Oaks Career Development Campus, where he studied aviation. He was a cadet officer in Laurel Oaks' Air Force Junior ROTC program."I saw him as a very mature, genuinely nice guy that automatically, when he spoke, other people listened," ROTC instructor Howard Vosburgh said. "His fellow students looked up to him. I admired him. He was just a cut above his peers."He is also survived by his mother, Lorraine Earley.

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