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Lakeside Church of God
Sgt. Lance Craig Springer
Spc. Springer died Friday when a bomb exploded near his unit while on combat patrol, the Department of Defense reported. He was assigned to the 1st Squadron, 40th Cavalry Regiment, 4th Airborne Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division, Fort Richardson, Alaska.


Monday 6-8:30pm visitation at Greenwood Funeral Home in Fort Worth, Funeral - Tuesday 12:00pm at Lakeside Church of God- Burial 3pm at the National Cemetary located in Dallas.


It was his first tour of duty in Iraq.



In Iraq, Spc. Springer played Santa Claus, pulling out candy, crayons and stuffed animals to give to the children, said his father, Lance Springer.


When the supply ran low, Spc. Springer called for reinforcements.


His most recent supply came from several churches and a bank that piled everything they could into boxes to send to him, his father said.


Spc. Springer gave the presents to members of his platoon to pass out, his father said.


"To show those kids we are here to make things better," he said.


Spc. Springer, born Nov. 6, 1983, was the oldest of three children born to Lance and Evanna Springer. He had a younger brother, Chris, and a younger sister, Michelle. He is survived by them all.


He graduated from Western Hills High School in 2002, where he was a saxophone player in the marching band. He was also a Boy Scout, his father said. After graduating from Western Hills, he went to Tarrant County College, where he earned an associate degree in automotive repair.


He had intended to use that knowledge to become an Army mechanic.


However, in the Army, Spc. Springer was diagnosed as colorblind, which barred him from being a mechanic, his father said.


Instead, he became a medic.


He worked on the front lines, occasionally using his weapon, his father said.


"He saw a lot of action in the five months that he was there," his father said. "He loved just being the first person there to help someone when they got hurt."


On Thursday, the day before he died, Spc. Springer called his father, a devoted member of the Lakeside Church of God, to tell him about the chaplain's sermon the previous Sunday.


"He just told me how much he enjoyed it," his father said. "A lot of time, he wasn't able to go to the service because he was out on a mission."


Spc. Springer, whom Smith remembered as a strong Christian, talked about the sermon, a meditation on the Gospel of John, from Chapter 9. The passage describes Jesus smearing mud on a blind man's eyes so he can see again.


It was the last Gospel that Spc. Springer heard before his death. And a Gospel by which the Springer family, as well as Smith, will always remember him.

Fort Rich medic dies in Iraq war
Springer believed U.S. needed to stay until the Iraqi army was able to keep peace on its own.

By KATIE PESZNECKER Anchorage Daily News

(Published: March 26, 2007)

A medic from Fort Richardson on foot patrol in Baghdad was killed in an explosion Friday, one of four casualties the Army identified Sunday.

Spc. Lance C. Springer II, 23, of Fort Worth, Texas, died of wounds suffered when an improvised explosive device detonated near his unit, the Army reported. Springer was a medic with Fort Rich's 1st Squadron, 40th Calvary Regiment, 4th Airborne Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division. The brigade's 3,500 paratroopers left Alaska in November.

Springer's father, Lance Springer, reached in Fort Worth on Sunday, said his son was proud of his military service.

"He wanted to be a soldier," the elder Springer said. "He's always loved the Army, his whole life."

The younger Springer -- who went by his middle name, Craig -- enlisted with the expectation that he would deploy to Iraq or Afghanistan, his father said.

"His view on it was, 'We don't want to still be there; we wish the mission was over and we could come home,' " Springer's father said. "But he recognizes the mission isn't over. ... His attitude is, 'We're the army for the Iraqi people until their own army is strong enough. He felt like they were supposed to still be there."

Springer was one of four Iraq casualties identified by the military Sunday. The three other soldiers died Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in separate attacks in Ramadi, Baghdad and Habbaniyah.

The identifications were announced the same day roadside bombs killed five U.S. soldiers in Iraq -- four dying in a single strike in a volatile province northeast of the capital, the military said.

Springer is the 27th Fort Richardson soldier to die from injuries suffered in Iraq since the brigade deployed there last fall, according to the Daily News listing on the deaths. At least 72 soldiers based in Alaska or originally from here have died since the war began.

Springer signed up for the military more than two years ago after graduating from high school in Fort Worth and getting mechanic's training at nearby Tarrant County College.

He joined the Army intending to put his mechanic skills to use, his dad said. But the Army made Springer a combat medic. He savored the role, his father said, and also signed up for airborne duty.

After medic training and jump school, the Army sent Springer to Fort Richardson. The Texan loved his new home.

"He had already re-enlisted for four more years and wanted all those years to be in Alaska," his dad said.

Before the brigade deployed, Springer got a weeklong visit from his father and mother, Evanna, and they toured around the region.

"We thought it was beautiful," Springer's dad said. "We did a flightseeing tour of Denali, and we also went down and did a fishing trip on the Kenai Peninsula, took a boat tour from Seward. That was last September. And they started deploying in October."

While overseas, the younger Springer talked to his parents at least once a week, by phone or e-mail. He told them about routine duties -- missions to capture insurgents or outings into Iraq neighborhoods where he'd pass out treats to kids.

"He liked to give out candy and toys to the Iraqi children," his father said. "That was something he would do on his own. A lot of soldiers do that."

Springer came home for two weeks in January.

"He'd been in combat for three straight months," his dad said. "And the first thing he did was, he went to the refrigerator to drink a glass of real milk. Then he took a shower because he hadn't had a shower in four days. Then he went out and bought an assault rifle because he felt naked without a gun in his hand."

When Springer died, the Army sent officials to tell his family. His 18-year-old sister was home alone.

"They wouldn't tell her why they were there," the elder Springer said. "But she had a bad feeling."

The family knew that if Springer was wounded, the Army would try to have him call with the news.

"So we knew he was either dead or very, very badly wounded," Springer's father said. "They came back and gave us the news. I guess it was about nine hours after he died that they were standing in our living room, telling us."

The devastating news seemed particularly abrupt for the elder Springer, since he had spoken to his son only the previous morning.

"One of the main things we'd talked about was ... he hadn't had a lot of chances to go to chapel. But he'd gone to chapel the Sunday before he was killed." The father said his son had mentioned how much that opportunity meant to him.

Springer was a member of the Church of God, both in Fort Worth and in Anchorage. His family got calls this weekend from members of the Anchorage church, grieving the death of the former Boy Scout who loved playing video games and off-roading in his Jeep.

Aside from his father, Springer is survived by his mother; sister Michelle, 18; and brother Christopher, 20. The family today plans to visit a military cemetery near their home.

"If it's as beautiful as what we've been hearing, we'll probably go with that," the elder Lance Springer said. "Because he was a soldier, and he would be happy being buried with other soldiers."

Daily News reporter Katie Pesznecker can be reached at kpesznecker@adn.com.


(CBS 11 News) BENBROOK A North Texas family learned this weekend their 23-year-old son was one of the latest casualties in Iraq.

"He was just a person you liked to be around. Craig knew he was going to Iraq when he signed up," the family's pastor Carroll Smith said. "He thought America had a moral obligation in birthing a new democracy."

Officials said Spec. Lance Springer II of Benbrook was killed by an explosive Friday in Iraq.

The Army medic treated wounded from both sides of the war, his family said shortly after they learned of the loss of their son.

The 23-year-old joined the military two and a half years ago hoping to work on Humvees, his family said.

"He believed in what he was doing and he was willing to put his life on the line for it," his father, Lance Springer said.

His father will always remember the Iraqi children his son met. The elder Springer said there was one boy in particular who represents many.

"He's going to be able to vote for his own president because of what our service people have gone over there to do," he said.

Smith praised the younger Springer and called him "a good Christian young man. The kind you want your daughter to meet."

Craig and his Parents, Alaska
Craig always loved adventures, Alaska