1st Cav, operational testers, host Florence, Texas
Elementary School students at Horse Platoon
by Mr. Michael M Novogradac (Hood)
Sgt. 1st Class Robert D. Grawburg, NCOIC of the U.S. Army
Operational Test Command's Maneuver Test Directorate, greets
Florence, Texas Elementary School students, as they arrive to
the 1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment Thursday under
Fort Hood's Adopt-A-School program, as a reward for their
participation in the Academic University Interscholastic League.
(Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M Novogradac (Hood))
1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment Troopers (from
left to right) Sgt. Michael Mascunana, riding Rome; Sgt. Chance Barlow,
riding Jedi; and 1st Sgt. Romerick Whiteing, riding Dragoon, perform
during a demonstration of mounted battle drills of the 1880s, during a
Fort Hood Adopt-A-School program visit by Florence, Texas Elementary
School students to the Horse Platoon stables Thursday. (Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M Novogradac (Hood))
Sgt. 1st Class Benito A. Santos, a Research,
Development, Test & Evaluation NCO from the U.S. Army Operational
Test Command's Maneuver Test Directorate, signs autographs for
Florence, Texas Elementary School students Cooper McAnelly,
3rd-grader, and Shelby Hutchinson, 4th-grader, during a Fort Hood
Adopt-A-School program visit to the 1st Cavalry Division Horse
Cavalry Detachment Thursday. (Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M Novogradac
(Hood))
Sgt. 1st
Class Benito A. Santos, a Research, Development, Test & Evaluation
NCO from the U.S. Army Operational Test Command's Maneuver Test
Directorate, snaps a group photo of Florence, Texas Elementary
School students during a Fort Hood Adopt-A-School program visit to
the 1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment Horse Platoon
Thursday. (Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M Novogradac (Hood))
FORT HOOD, Texas -- Students from
Florence, Texas' Elementary School hitched up with 1st
Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment Troopers here
Thursday as a reward for their participation in the
Academic University Interscholastic League (UIL).
Test officers and NCOs of the U.S. Army Operational Test
Command (USAOTC), partnered with the Horse Platoon to
teach the kids something about the Army's past under
Fort Hood's Adopt-A-School program.
"Their participation in UIL definitely sets them apart
from their peers," said Sgt. 1st Class Robert D.
Grawburg, NCOIC of USAOTC's Maneuver Test Directorate
(MTD).
"The Horse Platoon visit was for a job-well-done for the
kids who competed."
One USAOTC Test and Evaluation Officer, Maj. Mindy A.
Brown, has gone to Florence Elementary before to help
with long division and multi-step multiplication
problems.
"Interacting with the children at the Cavalry Horse
Detachment, it was really awesome to see their faces,"
she said.
"I have three young kids myself," Brown added. "So I see
the impact when other people give back to the school,
and I wish I was one of those Moms who could be at the
school with my kids and to have that kind of impact.
"Being a working Mom and being in the military, I don't
always get that opportunity. So getting that opportunity
with Florence, kind of fills a little bit of that void
and makes my heart feel a little bigger."
Florence Elementary Counselor Julie Parker, said she is
grateful to the Soldiers for taking the time to show the
stables to the 2nd- through 5th-grade students.
"The Troopers are extremely knowledgeable about the
stables and everything that goes into taking care of the
horses," Parker said.
"The horses were a huge hit," she added. "The kids had a
lot of good questions, and they look up to the Soldiers
and they all want to work with them."
Grawburg recalled a time when a San Antonio, Texas
police officer gave his daughter a sticker.
"Just a simple little police badge sticker," he said.
"Ever since then, she's actually talked about wanting to
be a police officer.
"It's the little interaction that you never think about
that can mean the world to some of these kids," he
added. "It can have a profound impact on their lives.
You just never know."
At the tour's end, the Cavalry Troopers gave each child
a keepsake "HOT TO TROT" poster to remember their day
and the kids asked the Soldiers for their autographs.
"When it was time to go home, the kids were all like,
'Already?!'" said Parker. "They didn't want to leave."
Horse Cavalry Detachment Troopers used their American
Quarter Horses to demonstrate mounted battle drills of
the 1880s, showing off their period weapons which
included the 1873 Springfield Carbine rifle; the 1873
Colt Single Action pistol; the 1860 Light Cavalry saber;
and the 1842 Light Mountain Howitzer (cannon) drawn by a
covered wagon, according to Spc. Jake Schultz, a Horse
Platoon Trooper.
The 1st Cavalry Division Horse Cavalry Detachment
Troopers conduct demonstrations that are open to the
public every Thursday at 10 a.m., depending on weather
and mission requirements.
Call ahead at (254) 287-2229 to check the Horse Cavalry
Detachment's schedule.