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September 1, 2004
[Have an opinion about the issues discussed in this article?
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By Marni McEntee,
Stars and Stripes European edition
PANZER KASERNE, Germany — In 1977, Rebecca Halstead became one
of the first women admitted to the U.S. Military Academy at West
Point.
On Tuesday, Halstead made another indelible mark on history, becoming
the first female West Point graduate to achieve the rank of general
officer.
Halstead, deputy commanding general of the 21st Theater Support
Command in Kaiserslautern, was promoted to the rank of brigadier
general. On Thursday, she moves to her new post as commanding general
of the 3rd Corps Support Command in Wiesbaden.
“Somebody had to be first and who better? No one could have been
better in my mind,” said retired Maj. Gen. Dewitt Irby during Halstead’s
frocking ceremony at Panzer Kaserne’s parade ground.
“In every instance, she has made an example for all to emulate.
She has truly been a trendsetter in the Army,”
Irby said.
Irby, whom Halstead called her mentor and occasional “tormenter,”
and Halstead’s father, Richard, pinned a single star on each of
her lapels. Her nephew, Joseph Barron, placed her Kevlar helmet
with the new brigadier general’s rank insignia on her head. And
her mother, Betty Jeanne Halstead, helped her snap on a ceremonial
gunbelt.
Halstead graduated from West Point in 1981, the second graduating
class that included women. Women were first admitted to the academy
in 1976, and today they make up 15 percent of the school’s 4,000
students, according to the academy Web site.
Halstead, 45, of Willseyville, N.Y., credited her mother for pointing
her in the direction of the academy, after seeing a newspaper story
that the school had opened its doors to women.
Since then, she has risen swiftly through the ranks, having been
promoted four times “below the zone,” or earlier than average.
Col. Susan Sowers, commander of the Kaisersalutern-based 37th Transportation
Command, who graduated from West Point the year after Halstead,
said Halstead has always been dedicated to the Army and her soldiers.
The two served as company commanders together at Fort Lewis, Wash.,
18 years ago.
“She is, without a doubt, one of the best leaders I have ever met,”
said Sowers, 44, of Tacoma, Wash.
Sowers noted that women have indeed come a long way in the military.
During the U.S. invasion of Grenada, for example, women platoon
leaders were yanked back behind the lines after they jumped into
the conflict zone, Sowers said.
“There are no front lines or rear lines anymore,” Sowers said.
“The reality of warfare has helped diminish the gender gap. Women
are proving themselves one way or the other, whether the American
public is ready or not.” First Lt. Marisa Pace, a 2001 academy graduate,
said she related to Halstead’s speech because the two came from
similar backgrounds.
“It motivates me to go back to my job and do the best I can,” said
Pace, executive officer of 37th Transportation Command’s Headquarters
and Headquarters Company. “Maybe one day, I can make it to one-star,”
said Pace, 26, of Queens, N.Y.
Halstead said she only had a couple of pieces of advice for women
coming up in the ranks: “Number one, don’t quit. Number two, refer
back to number one,” she said.
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