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Trevor J Diesing

Reading about the war in the newspaper, Al Langer always worried about Trevor J. Diesing, the boy he watched grow up to become a man who wanted to serve his country. “He was one of those guys you always want on your side and always wish there was more of,” said Langer, a neighbor. Diesing, 30, of Plum City, Wis., died Aug. 25 in a bomb blast in Husaybah. He was based at Fort Bragg. Paul Churchill, Diesing’s high school basketball coach, said the young man’s background helped form him: “He led by the work ethic he had developed on the farm.” The day after he graduated from high school in 1993, the western Wisconsin farmboy who had enlisted in the Army Reserve while still a senior left for basic training. “He was always very committed. He was definitely very proud of what he was doing,” said Langer, who hired Diesing to work for his construction company. “He was one of those you wish they would keep the mold for. He was a great guy.” Said Diesing’s mother, Debra: “For one of his birthdays, all he wanted was a flag.” He also is survived his wife, Lori, and three children.

Army Sgt. 1st Class Trevor J. Diesing
Died August 25, 2005 Serving During Operation Iraqi Freedom
30, of Plum City, Wis.; assigned the Army Special Operations Command, Fort Bragg, N.C., killed August 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his position in Husaybah, Iraq.
A Fort Bragg soldier killed in a roadside bomb attack in Iraq had no doubts about the war, his mother said.

“He believed in what he was doing for our country and for our families,” said Debbie Diesing, the mother of 30-year-old Trevor Diesing. “He knew that we had to do something and that what he was doing was right.”

Diesing, of Maiden Rock, said her son was killed in the attack and added that the military provided few other details.

Diesing joined the Army Reserves in 1992 before he graduated from Plum City High School, where he played basketball and baseball. Diesing joined the Army full-time in 1997, bouncing from base to base before landing at Fort Bragg, N.C., about three years ago.

He leaves behind a wife in Cameron, N.C., and three children, including a 3-month-old baby.

Paul Churchill, principal of Plum City High School, remembered Diesing as a competitive athlete who led by example.

“He was one of these kind of guys you’d want to have on your team,” he said. “The whole community is saddened by this.”

He said Diesing left for boot camp the day after he graduated. “He knew what he wanted to do,” Churchill said.

Debbie Diesing said the family also learned he had been promoted, from staff sergeant to sergeant first class. She would not say what unit he was serving with, but said he had been in Iraq for about three weeks.

Al Langer, who lives next door to Diesing’s parents and knew him for 16 years, said he would get together with Diesing when he returned to his hometown. Langer said Diesing loved hunting and fishing and was “an all around great guy.”

“He was one of those people who, no matter what, gave 110 percent,” Langer said. “If you needed a hand, he would give it to you.”

Debbie Diesing said the family was still making funeral arrangements. She said her son was a hard worker who always tried to improve himself and was always patriotic.

“For one of his birthdays all he wanted was a flag,” she said.

Army Sgt. 1st Class Trevor J. Diesing, 30, of Plum City, Wis.; was assigned the Army Special Operations Command, Fort Bragg, N.C., killed August 25 when an improvised explosive device detonated near his position in Husaybah, Iraq.

He had no doubts about the war. He believed in what he was doing for our country and for our families. He knew that we had to do something and that what he was doing was right. He joined the Army Reserves in 1992 before he graduated from Plum City High School. He joined the Army full-time in 1997, bouncing from base to base before landing at Fort Bragg, N.C. He left for boot camp the day after he graduated. He leaves behind a wife in Cameron, N.C., and three children, including a 3-month-old baby and his mother, Debbie Diesing. He was 30.

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Plum City
08/25/2005
Age: 30
Incident Location: Husaybah, Iraq
Branch: Army
Rank: Sgt. 1st Class
Unit: U.S. Army Special Operations Command
Units Base: Fort Bragg, North Carolina