Saturday, August 04, 2007

Army Pfc. Jaron D. Holliday

Remember Our Heroes

Army Pfc. Jaron D. Holliday, 21, of Tulsa, Okla.

Pfc. Jared Holliday was assigned to the 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska; died Aug, 4, 2007 in Hawr Rajab, Iraq, when the vehicle he was in struck an improvised explosive device during combat operations. Also killed were Sgt. Dustin S. Wakeman and Cpl. Jason K. Lafleur.

Tulsa soldier dies in Iraq
The Associated Press

TULSA, Okla. — An Oklahoma soldier and two others died in combat in Iraq, the Department of Defense announced August 6.

Pfc. Jaron D. Holliday, of Tulsa, and two other soldiers died when the vehicle in which they were riding hit an explosive device near Hawr Rajab during combat operations, defense officials said.

Also killed were Sgt. Dustin S. Wakeman, 25, of Fort Worth, Texas, and Cpl. Jason K. Lafleur, 28, of Ignacio, Colo. Department of Defense officials didn’t say when the explosion occurred.

Holliday and the others were members of the Army’s 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, based in Fort Richardson, Alaska, according to defense officials.

The 21-year-old always wanted to be in the armed forces and began researching which branch he wanted to go into when he was 11, his mother, Kelly Holliday, said. He joined the Army in 2005, when he was 19.

“That was always his desire — to go into the military and serve,” Holliday said. “When 9/11 happened, he was 15, and he said, ‘If I were old enough to serve, I would.’ ”

The oldest of eight siblings — seven boys and one girl — Holliday was home-schooled and graduated through the Christian Home Education Fellowship of Oklahoma in 2004, his mother said. At his graduation, he played the piano and received a standing ovation, said his mother.

“He was a people-watcher,” she said. “He loved people. He was the kind of person who, if he saw someone sitting by themselves looking depressed or upset, he made it his mission to make them smile before he left, and usually accomplished that goal.”

Army Pfc. Jaron D. Holliday was killed in action on 8/4/07.

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