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LCPL Matthew Kenneth “Fat Matt” Serio

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LCPL Matthew Kenneth “Fat Matt” Serio

Birth
Death
5 Apr 2004 (aged 21)
Al Anbar, Iraq
Burial
Cranston, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section 52, Lot 7, Grave 1
Memorial ID
View Source
Serio was killed by shrapnel in an ambush in Anbar province April 5. He was remembered as a fun-loving ladies' man whose "Fat Matt" nickname stuck even after Marine service turned him lean and strong. He was on his second tour of duty in Iraq. After his first tour, he went back to his old high school and showed students slides from Iraq, explaining how years of dictatorship and war had left the country poor. In his last e-mail home, he'd asked his family to send him cookies and chewing tobacco.

North Providence Marine killed in Iraq remembered as upbeat

By Brooke Donald
Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — In Lance Cpl. Matthew Serio’s last e-mail to his parents from the desert of Iraq, he requested homemade cookies and chewing tobacco.

“The guys had run out,” his father, Anthony, explained. “It was dry, dirty and hot, and he was looking out for his friends.”

Serio, 21, was killed near Fallujah, Iraq, on April 5, after his unit, the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, 3rd Platoon, Charlie Company, arrived to help quell an uprising in that city west of Baghdad, his father said.

His parents were contacted a day later by the Marines, who told them Serio was hit by shrapnel.

A former high school football player who was considering a career in law enforcement, Serio enlisted in the Marines in 2001, after graduating from North Providence High School.

“He wanted to be a part of a team. He found that in the Marines,” Anthony Serio said.

After boot camp, Serio was ordered to Camp Pendleton, Calif. As a recruit, he watched the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, on television. His father said the attacks didn’t deter him from service.

“My wife would say she tried to talk him out of it. But patriotism was high. He wanted to be a Marine,” the elder Serio said.

Matthew Serio’s unit was one of the first into Iraq at the start of the war, his family said. Photos he sent home show him standing with his company atop the ruins of one of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s Baghdad palaces last April.

Serio returned to North Providence a few times after President Bush declared an end to major combat last May. His last trip home was around Thanksgiving, his father said.

Serio brought Iraqi cigarettes home as gifts. He told funny stories about combat, ruined cities and life as a soldier.

“He was always good to have around. He was always upbeat and could get along with anybody,” his father said.

Serio was the second of three boys. His older brother, A.J., 23, is in the Navy, serving aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. His younger brother, Chris, 19, is a freshman at Franklin Pierce College in New Hampshire.

“We’re proud,” the elder Serio said. “He was a Marine and he had a job to do and he did it.”






Serio was killed by shrapnel in an ambush in Anbar province April 5. He was remembered as a fun-loving ladies' man whose "Fat Matt" nickname stuck even after Marine service turned him lean and strong. He was on his second tour of duty in Iraq. After his first tour, he went back to his old high school and showed students slides from Iraq, explaining how years of dictatorship and war had left the country poor. In his last e-mail home, he'd asked his family to send him cookies and chewing tobacco.

North Providence Marine killed in Iraq remembered as upbeat

By Brooke Donald
Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — In Lance Cpl. Matthew Serio’s last e-mail to his parents from the desert of Iraq, he requested homemade cookies and chewing tobacco.

“The guys had run out,” his father, Anthony, explained. “It was dry, dirty and hot, and he was looking out for his friends.”

Serio, 21, was killed near Fallujah, Iraq, on April 5, after his unit, the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, 3rd Platoon, Charlie Company, arrived to help quell an uprising in that city west of Baghdad, his father said.

His parents were contacted a day later by the Marines, who told them Serio was hit by shrapnel.

A former high school football player who was considering a career in law enforcement, Serio enlisted in the Marines in 2001, after graduating from North Providence High School.

“He wanted to be a part of a team. He found that in the Marines,” Anthony Serio said.

After boot camp, Serio was ordered to Camp Pendleton, Calif. As a recruit, he watched the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, on television. His father said the attacks didn’t deter him from service.

“My wife would say she tried to talk him out of it. But patriotism was high. He wanted to be a Marine,” the elder Serio said.

Matthew Serio’s unit was one of the first into Iraq at the start of the war, his family said. Photos he sent home show him standing with his company atop the ruins of one of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s Baghdad palaces last April.

Serio returned to North Providence a few times after President Bush declared an end to major combat last May. His last trip home was around Thanksgiving, his father said.

Serio brought Iraqi cigarettes home as gifts. He told funny stories about combat, ruined cities and life as a soldier.

“He was always good to have around. He was always upbeat and could get along with anybody,” his father said.

Serio was the second of three boys. His older brother, A.J., 23, is in the Navy, serving aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. His younger brother, Chris, 19, is a freshman at Franklin Pierce College in New Hampshire.

“We’re proud,” the elder Serio said. “He was a Marine and he had a job to do and he did it.”







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  • Created by: Cindy
  • Added: Nov 16, 2004
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/9912132/matthew_kenneth-serio: accessed ), memorial page for LCPL Matthew Kenneth “Fat Matt” Serio (22 Jul 1982–5 Apr 2004), Find a Grave Memorial ID 9912132, citing Saint Ann Cemetery, Cranston, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by Cindy (contributor 46573079).