GODFREY, CHARLES ★ 20 MAR 45 - 1 JAN 70 REDDICK, WILLIAM ★ 20 SEP 49 - 1 JAN 70 BASTIAN, MICHAEL ★ 27 MAY 46 - 2 JAN 69 DEAL, WILLIAM ★ 15 NOV 27 - 2 JAN 63 FRYAR, BRUCE ★ 28 MAR 44 - 2 JAN 70 JACOBUS, WILLIAM ★ 24 FEB 46 - 2 JAN 68 MORRIS, ROBERT ★ 19 DEC 47 - 2 JAN 69 PINE, FREDERICK ★ 9 MAR 43 - 2 JAN 68 COLASURDO, JOSEPH ★ 18 OCT 47 - 3 JAN 69 LONG, RICHARD ★ 6 MAR 44 - 4 JAN 68 RAND, DWIGHT ★ 4 NOV 45 - 4 JAN 68 LOPEZ, JOSE ★ 18 APR 50 - 6 JAN 69 FLAHERTY, PAUL ★ 17 OCT 48 - 7 JAN 69 HAYES, JOSEPH ★ 30 JAN 48 - 7 JAN 67 JACOBS, VINCENT ★ 16 NOV 46 - 7 JAN 69 PETRONE, LOUIS ★ 6 MAY 45 - 7 JAN 68 WHITE, LOWELL ★ 2 JUN 41 - 7 JAN 66 BROWN, STEVEN ★ 13 SEP 48 - 8 JAN 70 COVINGTON, LAWRENCE ★ 18 AUG 49 - 8 JAN 68 KIRSCHNER, STEPHEN ★ 22 JUN 47 - 8 JAN 68 MORGAN, RAINER ★ 1 SEP 44 - 8 JAN 68 STEFKO, WILLIAM ★ 15 JUN 47 - 9 JAN 70 FORD, DOUGLAS ★ 18 FEB 42 - 10 JAN 71 FRANCISCO, WILLIAM ★ 2 SEP 48 - 10 JAN 69 JORDAN, ARTHUR ★ 18 AUG 41 - 10 JAN 68 LOSPINUSO, JAMES ★ 1 AUG 40 - 10 JAN 72 RAM, CORNELIUS ★ 18 JUL 31 - 10 JAN 71 SEIBERT, RICHARD ★ 28 SEP 42 - 10 JAN 68 RYAN, TERRENCE ★ 31 JAN 44 - 11 JAN 70 SWENSON, SWANTE ★ 6 OCT 42 - 11 JAN 68 BUSCH, JOHN ★ 11 FEB 47 - 12 JAN 67 CASTALDI, JAMES ★ 31 DEC 42 - 12 JAN 68 LAW, EUGENE ★ 26 MAY 48 - 13 JAN 68 MARSHALL, WILLIE ★ 8 APR 47 - 13 JAN 69 SICKLER, CHARLES ★ 18 NOV 48 - 13 JAN 68 HICKMAN, VINCENT ★ 20 MAR 33 - 14 JAN 64 RODGERS, JOHN ★ 25 MAY 47 - 15 JAN 67 BAUER, ALFRED ★ 6 MAR 47 - 16 JAN 69 CUMMINGS, DANIEL ★ 26 SEP 45 - 17 JAN 67 KELLY, CHARLES ★ 11 JAN 28 - 17 JAN 67 MCFADYEN, BRUCE ★ 12 JAN 43 - 17 JAN 69 MELADY, RICHARD ★ 20 DEC 38 - 17 JAN 69 MIRRER, ROBERT ★ 5 FEB 39 - 17 JAN 71 OSTENFELD, OTTO ★ 9 MAR 50 - 17 JAN 70 BROWN, TYRONE ★ 27 MAY 49 - 18 JAN 68 DANIELS, JOSHUA ★ 21 DEC 48 - 18 JAN 71 FORD, RICHARD ★ 29 DEC 48 - 18 JAN 70 SOLARI, STEVEN ★ 13 JUL 48 - 18 JAN 68 DE CROSTA, JOSEPH ★ 14 AUG 45 - 19 JAN 68 EHRLICH, DENNIS ★ 3 JAN 42 - 19 JAN 67 GERWATOWSKI, JOSEPH ★ 28 FEB 47 - 19 JAN 68 HALPIN, MICHAEL ★ 28 FEB 46 - 19 JAN 68 MILLER, ROBERT ★ 2 DEC 46 - 19 JAN 69 YAWORSKY, MICHAEL ★ 20 DEC 46 - 19 JAN 68 ABRAMOFF, ARTHUR ★ 1 MAR 41 - 20 JAN 67 BOYCE, JAMES ★ 30 MAR 48 - 20 JAN 69 GASKO, ROBERT ★ 16 SEP 49 - 20 JAN 70 KUBISKY, EDWARD ★ 30 DEC 44 - 20 JAN 68 SKODMIN, ANTHONY ★ 10 JUL 45 - 20 JAN 66 EGAN, JAMES ★ 31 MAY 43 - 21 JAN 66 RAMSAY, CHARLES ★ 8 JUN 32 - 21 JAN 68 ALBIETZ, RAYMOND ★ 11 MAR 43 - 22 JAN 67 BINGER, GERALD ★ 7 JUN 27 - 22 JAN 65 CARLOUGH, GEORGE ★ 19 DEC 48 - 22 JAN 69 LAIRD, JERRY ★ 4 JAN 36 - 22 JAN 69 MOKUAU, KENNETH ★ 19 AUG 48 - 22 JAN 69 COLES, ALEXANDER ★ 15 JAN 46 - 23 JAN 67 GRIM, MALCOLM ★ 7 APR 49 - 23 JAN 70 MOORMAN, FRANK ★ 8 SEP 48 - 23 JAN 69 PEARCE, HENRY ★ 3 APR 49 - 23 JAN 69 SWAYKOS, WILLIAM ★ 4 SEP 43 - 23 JAN 65 COX, EDWARD ★ 14 DEC 30 - 24 JAN 66 HERMANSON, GARRY ★ 17 JAN 51 - 24 JAN 75 NEAL, JOHN ★ 4 MAR 46 - 24 JAN 68 COATS, JAMES ★ 26 SEP 34 - 25 JAN 66 CONLAN, BRIAN ★ 6 FEB 43 - 25 JAN 67 ELICHKO, DEAN ★ 23 JAN 45 - 25 JAN 66 EVERETT, NORMAN ★ 23 NOV 47 - 25 JAN 70 HECK, RONALD ★ 2 JUL 48 - 25 JAN 70 VENABLE, WESTOVEL ★ 4 DEC 44 - 25 JAN 66 BAXTER, DENNIS ★ 18 MAY 47 - 26 JAN 67 CRAIG, EDWARD ★ 28 JAN 48 - 26 JAN 68 GEIB, ALLEN ★ 7 MAY 45 - 26 JAN 68 LANGER, ALAN ★ 21 OCT 46 - 26 JAN 69 REGO, ARTHUR ★ 2 AUG 44 - 26 JAN 66 SNAITH, THOMAS ★ 23 OCT 43 - 26 JAN 67 CHRISTMAS, PAUL ★ 11 JUL 46 - 27 JAN 68 HUNTER, DONALD ★ 24 AUG 49 - 27 JAN 68 MOORE, LEON ★ 24 AUG 49 - 27 JAN 69 RIVERA, EUCLIDES ★ 10 NOV 42 - 27 JAN 69 BATTEL, ANTHONY ★ 20 JUL 47 - 28 JAN 70 DEVLIN, THOMAS ★ 26 JUN 46 - 28 JAN 66 HADDOCK, EDWARD ★ 3 APR 47 - 28 JAN 68 RICKS, JAMES ★ 6 MAY 46 - 28 JAN 66 SOROKA, DOUGLAS ★ 4 AUG 48 - 28 JAN 68 WEEDO, VINCENT ★ 14 OCT 46 - 28 JAN 67 ZICCHINO, DARRON ★ 9 OCT 48 - 28 JAN 69 BAKER, GEORGE ★ 31 MAY 45 - 29 JAN 69 HARDIN, WILLIAM ★ 2 MAR 32 - 29 JAN 66 SHAW, JOHN ★ 21 JUL 45 - 29 JAN 67 BAUMANN, LUDWIG ★ 19 APR 31 - 30 JAN 69 JONES, CLIFFORD ★ 24 OCT 47 - 30 JAN 68 LE BRON, LUIS ★ 18 DEC 49 - 30 JAN 70 OCHS, TIMOTHY ★ 6 DEC 46 - 30 JAN 68 BOROSS, LASZLO ★ 13 OCT 47 - 31 JAN 68 CROWELL, ROGER ★ 16 AUG 47 - 31 JAN 68 KRAMER, LEON ★ 11 APR 33 - 31 JAN 63 MAYER, FRANCIS ★ 19 MAY 48 - 31 JAN 68 MORRIS, JAMES ★ 7 NOV 45 - 31 JAN 68 PREZIOSI, JOHN ★ 22 AUG 47 - 31 JAN 68 SHARP, BRUCE ★ 5 MAR 48 - 31 JAN 68 GODFREY, CHARLES ★ 20 MAR 45 - 1 JAN 70 REDDICK, WILLIAM ★ 20 SEP 49 - 1 JAN 70 BASTIAN, MICHAEL ★ 27 MAY 46 - 2 JAN 69 DEAL, WILLIAM ★ 15 NOV 27 - 2 JAN 63 FRYAR, BRUCE ★ 28 MAR 44 - 2 JAN 70 JACOBUS, WILLIAM ★ 24 FEB 46 - 2 JAN 68 MORRIS, ROBERT ★ 19 DEC 47 - 2 JAN 69 PINE, FREDERICK ★ 9 MAR 43 - 2 JAN 68 COLASURDO, JOSEPH ★ 18 OCT 47 - 3 JAN 69 LONG, RICHARD ★ 6 MAR 44 - 4 JAN 68 RAND, DWIGHT ★ 4 NOV 45 - 4 JAN 68 LOPEZ, JOSE ★ 18 APR 50 - 6 JAN 69 FLAHERTY, PAUL ★ 17 OCT 48 - 7 JAN 69 HAYES, JOSEPH ★ 30 JAN 48 - 7 JAN 67 JACOBS, VINCENT ★ 16 NOV 46 - 7 JAN 69 PETRONE, LOUIS ★ 6 MAY 45 - 7 JAN 68 WHITE, LOWELL ★ 2 JUN 41 - 7 JAN 66 BROWN, STEVEN ★ 13 SEP 48 - 8 JAN 70 COVINGTON, LAWRENCE ★ 18 AUG 49 - 8 JAN 68 KIRSCHNER, STEPHEN ★ 22 JUN 47 - 8 JAN 68 MORGAN, RAINER ★ 1 SEP 44 - 8 JAN 68 STEFKO, WILLIAM ★ 15 JUN 47 - 9 JAN 70 FORD, DOUGLAS ★ 18 FEB 42 - 10 JAN 71 FRANCISCO, WILLIAM ★ 2 SEP 48 - 10 JAN 69 JORDAN, ARTHUR ★ 18 AUG 41 - 10 JAN 68 LOSPINUSO, JAMES ★ 1 AUG 40 - 10 JAN 72 RAM, CORNELIUS ★ 18 JUL 31 - 10 JAN 71 SEIBERT, RICHARD ★ 28 SEP 42 - 10 JAN 68 RYAN, TERRENCE ★ 31 JAN 44 - 11 JAN 70 SWENSON, SWANTE ★ 6 OCT 42 - 11 JAN 68 BUSCH, JOHN ★ 11 FEB 47 - 12 JAN 67 CASTALDI, JAMES ★ 31 DEC 42 - 12 JAN 68 LAW, EUGENE ★ 26 MAY 48 - 13 JAN 68 MARSHALL, WILLIE ★ 8 APR 47 - 13 JAN 69 SICKLER, CHARLES ★ 18 NOV 48 - 13 JAN 68 HICKMAN, VINCENT ★ 20 MAR 33 - 14 JAN 64 RODGERS, JOHN ★ 25 MAY 47 - 15 JAN 67 BAUER, ALFRED ★ 6 MAR 47 - 16 JAN 69 CUMMINGS, DANIEL ★ 26 SEP 45 - 17 JAN 67 KELLY, CHARLES ★ 11 JAN 28 - 17 JAN 67 MCFADYEN, BRUCE ★ 12 JAN 43 - 17 JAN 69 MELADY, RICHARD ★ 20 DEC 38 - 17 JAN 69 MIRRER, ROBERT ★ 5 FEB 39 - 17 JAN 71 OSTENFELD, OTTO ★ 9 MAR 50 - 17 JAN 70 BROWN, TYRONE ★ 27 MAY 49 - 18 JAN 68 DANIELS, JOSHUA ★ 21 DEC 48 - 18 JAN 71 FORD, RICHARD ★ 29 DEC 48 - 18 JAN 70 SOLARI, STEVEN ★ 13 JUL 48 - 18 JAN 68 DE CROSTA, JOSEPH ★ 14 AUG 45 - 19 JAN 68 EHRLICH, DENNIS ★ 3 JAN 42 - 19 JAN 67 GERWATOWSKI, JOSEPH ★ 28 FEB 47 - 19 JAN 68 HALPIN, MICHAEL ★ 28 FEB 46 - 19 JAN 68 MILLER, ROBERT ★ 2 DEC 46 - 19 JAN 69 YAWORSKY, MICHAEL ★ 20 DEC 46 - 19 JAN 68 ABRAMOFF, ARTHUR ★ 1 MAR 41 - 20 JAN 67 BOYCE, JAMES ★ 30 MAR 48 - 20 JAN 69 GASKO, ROBERT ★ 16 SEP 49 - 20 JAN 70 KUBISKY, EDWARD ★ 30 DEC 44 - 20 JAN 68 SKODMIN, ANTHONY ★ 10 JUL 45 - 20 JAN 66 EGAN, JAMES ★ 31 MAY 43 - 21 JAN 66 RAMSAY, CHARLES ★ 8 JUN 32 - 21 JAN 68 ALBIETZ, RAYMOND ★ 11 MAR 43 - 22 JAN 67 BINGER, GERALD ★ 7 JUN 27 - 22 JAN 65 CARLOUGH, GEORGE ★ 19 DEC 48 - 22 JAN 69 LAIRD, JERRY ★ 4 JAN 36 - 22 JAN 69 MOKUAU, KENNETH ★ 19 AUG 48 - 22 JAN 69 COLES, ALEXANDER ★ 15 JAN 46 - 23 JAN 67 GRIM, MALCOLM ★ 7 APR 49 - 23 JAN 70 MOORMAN, FRANK ★ 8 SEP 48 - 23 JAN 69 PEARCE, HENRY ★ 3 APR 49 - 23 JAN 69 SWAYKOS, WILLIAM ★ 4 SEP 43 - 23 JAN 65 COX, EDWARD ★ 14 DEC 30 - 24 JAN 66 HERMANSON, GARRY ★ 17 JAN 51 - 24 JAN 75 NEAL, JOHN ★ 4 MAR 46 - 24 JAN 68 COATS, JAMES ★ 26 SEP 34 - 25 JAN 66 CONLAN, BRIAN ★ 6 FEB 43 - 25 JAN 67 ELICHKO, DEAN ★ 23 JAN 45 - 25 JAN 66 EVERETT, NORMAN ★ 23 NOV 47 - 25 JAN 70 HECK, RONALD ★ 2 JUL 48 - 25 JAN 70 VENABLE, WESTOVEL ★ 4 DEC 44 - 25 JAN 66 BAXTER, DENNIS ★ 18 MAY 47 - 26 JAN 67 CRAIG, EDWARD ★ 28 JAN 48 - 26 JAN 68 GEIB, ALLEN ★ 7 MAY 45 - 26 JAN 68 LANGER, ALAN ★ 21 OCT 46 - 26 JAN 69 REGO, ARTHUR ★ 2 AUG 44 - 26 JAN 66 SNAITH, THOMAS ★ 23 OCT 43 - 26 JAN 67 CHRISTMAS, PAUL ★ 11 JUL 46 - 27 JAN 68 HUNTER, DONALD ★ 24 AUG 49 - 27 JAN 68 MOORE, LEON ★ 24 AUG 49 - 27 JAN 69 RIVERA, EUCLIDES ★ 10 NOV 42 - 27 JAN 69 BATTEL, ANTHONY ★ 20 JUL 47 - 28 JAN 70 DEVLIN, THOMAS ★ 26 JUN 46 - 28 JAN 66 HADDOCK, EDWARD ★ 3 APR 47 - 28 JAN 68 RICKS, JAMES ★ 6 MAY 46 - 28 JAN 66 SOROKA, DOUGLAS ★ 4 AUG 48 - 28 JAN 68 WEEDO, VINCENT ★ 14 OCT 46 - 28 JAN 67 ZICCHINO, DARRON ★ 9 OCT 48 - 28 JAN 69 BAKER, GEORGE ★ 31 MAY 45 - 29 JAN 69 HARDIN, WILLIAM ★ 2 MAR 32 - 29 JAN 66 SHAW, JOHN ★ 21 JUL 45 - 29 JAN 67 BAUMANN, LUDWIG ★ 19 APR 31 - 30 JAN 69 JONES, CLIFFORD ★ 24 OCT 47 - 30 JAN 68 LE BRON, LUIS ★ 18 DEC 49 - 30 JAN 70 OCHS, TIMOTHY ★ 6 DEC 46 - 30 JAN 68 BOROSS, LASZLO ★ 13 OCT 47 - 31 JAN 68 CROWELL, ROGER ★ 16 AUG 47 - 31 JAN 68 KRAMER, LEON ★ 11 APR 33 - 31 JAN 63 MAYER, FRANCIS ★ 19 MAY 48 - 31 JAN 68 MORRIS, JAMES ★ 7 NOV 45 - 31 JAN 68 PREZIOSI, JOHN ★ 22 AUG 47 - 31 JAN 68 SHARP, BRUCE ★ 5 MAR 48 - 31 JAN 68

Seymour Bass - Major

Hometown:
Springfield
D.O.B.:
April 20, 1928
County:
Union
Rank:
Major
Branch:
Air Force
Date of Casualty:

May 14, 1968

Casualty Status:
Killed In Action
Country of Incident:
Thailand

Seymour R. Bass was born on April 20, 1928, to Isidore and Mamie Bass, who immigrated to the United States from the Ukraine. His home of record is Springfield, NJ. He had one sister, Lillian, and two brothers, William and Daniel. Seymour attended Dover High School in Dover, NJ, and graduated in 1946. He enjoyed all types of music, especially classical and folk, and he played the clarinet, saxophone and flute. You could also find him bicycle riding, gardening and talking politics.

Bass continued his education and received a degree from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in 1950. In 1964, he received a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of New Hampshire in Electrical Engineering.

Seymour and his wife, Lillian, had two children, Carol Ann and Harvey.

He enlisted in the US Air Force and attained the rank of Major (MAJ).

Bass was killed in action on May 14, 1968. He was buried at Dover Military Cemetery in Dover, NJ. He was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.

The following was written by Carol Ann Bass, the daughter of Seymour R. Bass, and appeared in the New York Times on May 29, 1988.

While all war memorials list the names of those who died, or who fought in a conflict, I have never heard of a structure for any war commemorating families of the deceased. Surely their suffering was almost as great as that of those who gave their lives or saw combat. I know because I belonged to one of those forgotten families.

Growing up in a small New England town similar to the one I live in now, I never saw a battle except on television, never saw a gun except in the museum and never really cared what my father did for a living. Until 1968.

That year, a month after my 13th birthday, my father was killed in a military jet over Thailand. He was 39 years old. To all my school friends at the time, and for many years to come, Vietnam was a place far away, a story on television, a topic for rock songs and a pivotal issue on which a generation could focus its anger and its fear of growing up.

For my mother, my brother and me, Vietnam was a real place that would damage our lives forever.

The summer before my father left, I asked him why we never put a flag in front of our house on Independence Day, like many of out neighbors did. His answer foretold what we would endure.

“We don’t need one,” he said. “My life is serving our country. I wear the flag on my heart every day.” It was not until the chaplain handed the flag to my mother at my father’s funeral that I understood what he meant.

Because of his sacrifice, I lost my last years of childhood and much joy after that. While most girls in junior high school were thinking about clothes and boys, I relived the memory of a rainy day in November when my father drove me to school. He held me tightly and said goodbye, with both of us knowing we might never see each other again.

I remember people joking weeks later about the shape of the negotiating table at the peace talks in Paris. “Please,” I prayed, “Hurry up.” For my father, peace came too late.

In high school, I never went to a party because rock music was often anti-war and it mocked what my father had done. I had nothing in common with classmates whose worst problems were convincing their parents to let them stay out later. I would have given anything for a father to tell me when to come home!

Instead of turning toward life and the adventures of youth, I spent those years in my room reading. My father had remodeled it just before he left, and it was there I felt safe from the war, the 60’s generation and the pain and conflict, which pitted me in the middle.

Later, in college, I found myself defending my father’s actions in dormitory discussions as well as in political science courses. European exchange students became my best friends because they saw what war had done to their homeland and to the lives of their parents and grandparents.

My father’s death left us with little money. Many things I would have had if he were alive I did without. I felt the strain so keenly that I chose a career in business to recapture a sense of financial stability. Since that profession was ill-suited to my temperament or talents, I have not yet experienced the satisfaction of a rewarding career.

At my wedding, there was no one to give me away. At the birth of my sons, I could not see that special joy of their grandfather. It is going to be so difficult to tell them someday why they will never see their mother’s daddy.
I want my boys to grow up with the same qualities he had, but maybe that would mean they, too, would become soldiers and, perhaps, die. As a daughter, I barely survived the loss. As a mother, I am not sure if I could.

Those who died in the Vietnam War deserve the appreciation of this country for making such a sacrifice. They deserve the recognition of a monument. But those families that experienced the horror of war back in the Untied States deserve something, too.

Maybe not a monument. There are too many of us for that. Maybe we should just be remembered in the prayers of Americans on this and future Memorial Days.

Sources: Carol Ann Bass (daughter) and NJVVMF.
12/17/2024

Other Heros From Springfield

Coll, Dennis - Specialist 4

Hometown: Springfield