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Merideth L. Howard - May 2007
Shipment Honoree
She
was 52 when Afghan bomb struck
Merideth Howard, the oldest known woman to die in combat,
was behind the gun of a Humvee
Source: By Kim Barker and James
Janega, Chicago Tribune, September 24, 2006
 MEHTARLAM,
Afghanistan -- The older soldiers called themselves the Gray
Brigade, but Sgt. 1st Class Merideth Howard never talked
about her age. Soon, no one asked. In training, the
Waukesha, Wis., resident ran as hard as men much younger.
She became a gunner on a Humvee at this small military base,
building a wooden box to stand on so she could see over the
turret.
Her last
night here, Howard and Staff Sgt. Robert Paul sat on the
back stoop of their barracks with the base cook, as usual.
"We started talking about the time she got shot at," said
Air Force Tech. Sgt. Marlin McDaniel, 42, the cook. "I said
I'd probably duck. I wouldn't know what to do. But they both
basically said at the same time, `When it's your time to go,
it's your time to go.'"
The next
day, Howard and Paul made a supply run to a U.S.
military base near the Afghan capital. They never made it
back, dying in a fiery suicide bombing in Kabul on Sept. 8,
2006.
At 52,
Howard, who had gray hair and an infectious smile, became
the oldest known American woman to die in combat….She was
the new face of the military's civil affairs units, which do
reconstruction and relief work.
Howard
never had been deployed before, not since joining the
Reserves on a whim in 1988. After her medical unit was
disbanded in 1996, she was assigned to the Individual Ready
Reserves, for soldiers without a unit. She still went to
monthly drills but mainly handled paperwork, biding her
time, putting in her 20 years before earning retirement
benefits.
But as a
stopgap—and in a first for the U.S. military—provincial
reconstruction teams in Afghanistan were being filled by a
mix of Navy, Air Force, Army, National Guard and Reserve
soldiers. And many in the Reserves were like Howard, in the
Individual Ready Reserves, home also to retired soldiers who
had recently left the Army. "We were a little surprised,"
said Master Sgt. Robyn Fees, 50, who became a close friend
of Howard's after the two were called up. "We didn't even
know what `civil affairs' was, to be honest with you."
She was
used to challenges. Born and raised in Corpus
Christi, Texas, Howard wanted to be a firefighter, but her
hometown did not hire women. So in 1978 she joined the
department in Bryan, Texas, as its first female firefighter.
She later became a fire risk-management specialist with
insurance companies, eventually helping set up a consulting
company in California.
In late
April, the nine members of Howard's civil affairs team
arrived at the Mehtarlam base in eastern Laghman province.
They formed the core of the provincial reconstruction team.
Civil affairs is not a new concept for the U.S.
military, but provincial reconstruction teams are. The first
team began its work in Afghanistan in 2003, a calculated
attempt to try to fight the Taliban by helping Afghans
rebuild….There are now 24 provincial reconstruction teams
here, and a 25th is being set up in eastern Nuristan
province.
It is
not easy work. Almost 30 years of war have destroyed any
professional class in
Afghanistan. There are few engineers, architects, doctors or
teachers. Achieving anything here takes many attempts.
Hospital Road in Mehtarlam, for example, will soon have to
be redone for the third time.
In May,
Howard was filmed for a U.S.
military video highlighting reconstruction work. She is
serious, with no evidence of her normal laugh. She stands in
a village near the Mehtarlam base, the wind blowing through
her hair, her face pink from the hot sun, just after handing
out backpacks to kids. "We have a good relationship with the
people here in the village," she says. "And of course, as
[with] everybody in Afghanistan, they are in need."
At
first, Howard handled paperwork at the base, tracking
projects and applying for money. She was good but longed to
be off the base, to go on missions, to be out with the
Afghan people. She wanted to be a gunner.
"She
wanted to do everything," said Air Force Tech. Sgt. Felicia
Mason, 37, who later became Howard's roommate. "She wanted
to be able to excel in everything. Because she didn't want
anyone to say she couldn't do it because she was a woman."
Howard got her chance. The civil affairs team of nine
shrank. One soldier went home after a non-combat injury,
another was sent to Nuristan,
and the gunner to Jalalabad.
Howard
told a cousin back home she was surprised at what she was
doing. She told her husband that one day she realized she
enjoyed it. In August, she told Christian she was thinking
of extending her tour. "Merideth liked to live life as an
adventure," her husband said.
According to Pentagon policy, women are excluded from
serving in combat units, though in the chaotic realities of
Iraq and Afghanistan, their support roles have grown ever
closer to the front lines. Howard's death makes her the
oldest U.S. servicewoman known to have died in combat, said
Judy Bellafaire, chief historian at the Women in Military
Service for America Memorial Foundation near Arlington
National Cemetery. A 52-year-old nurse died in Vietnam, but
from a stroke, she said. Even so, there still was some
uncertainty. Records for World War II and earlier conflicts
often omit ages.
On
missions in
Afghanistan, Paul was the driver and Howard was the gunner,
standing on the box to make up for her height, about
5-foot-4. For Afghans in this conservative tribal area,
where most women wear burqas that cover everything, it must
have been a bizarre sight: a gray-haired woman in a helmet
on top of a Humvee.
"That's
why Sgt. Howard loved the turret," said Air Force Senior
Airman Brenda Patterson, 26. "She wanted to give little
girls dreams of their own."
The
supply run to Bagram Air Base, north of Kabul,
happened every month or two. On this trip, the soldiers
picked up mail, ammunition, supplies and three new Humvees,
with adjustable platforms for the gunner. For the first
time, Howard would not need her wooden box.
On that
Friday morning, Sept. 8, the convoy of five Humvees left
base. Paul and Howard were alone because they planned to
pick up two other people at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul.
At Camp Phoenix, just outside Kabul, the soldiers dropped
off one Humvee with transmission problems and a second
Humvee pulling a trailer of ammunition. The other three
vehicles made their way down Jalalabad Road, Kabul's suicide
bomb alley. The convoy headed for the embassy.
A Lexus
SUV pulled up behind the third Humvee. A blue Toyota Corolla
followed the Lexus. Witnesses said the Corolla tried to pass
the Lexus on the left. But the Lexus blocked the Corolla and
started trying to pass the convoy on the left.
The
gunner on the third Humvee told soldiers after the attack
that he was focused on the Lexus, warning it to stop. But at
the same time, the blue Corolla moved up on the right. One
soldier in the third Humvee saw the back of the driver's
head, his blue shirt. Another soldier noticed the brake
lights.
And they
all watched as the car swerved into the second Humvee,
bounced off, and then swerved in again. And then a loud
explosion, and a flash, and everything was on fire. The
blast left a 6-foot-wide crater in the road, killing at
least eight Afghans.
The
soldiers hoped for survivors in the second Humvee, that
somehow no one had died. But the medic never even got to
open his bag. Howard and Paul, who did most things together
on the base, who always referred to each other politely by
rank and last name, were killed in the same instant
In
Memoriam: Meridith L. Howard
Source:
The Association of Former Students, Texas
A&M
University
U.S.
Army Sgt 1st Class Merideth L. Howard was killed
September 8, 2006
in Kabul,
Afghanistan when a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device
detonated near her Humvee. Howard was assigned to the 364th
Civil Affairs Brigade in support of the 10th Mountain
Division at the time of her death.
Howard
graduated from Corpus
Christi’s
King High School in 1973 and earned both a bachelor’s and
master’s degrees in biology from Texas A&M University.
Family
members, including her cousin Lorraine Stevenson of Corpus
Christi, remember Howard‘s infectious laugh and her love of
the outdoors. “She was one of the sweetest people I’ve ever
known, Stevenson said, “I never heard her speak ill of
anyone.”
After
graduating from Texas A&M, Howard worked as a firefighter in
Bryan before beginning a career in fire safety and
investigation. Her work moved her to California, where she
met her husband, Hugh Hvolboll in 1991.
A member
of Army reserves since 1988, Howard was called to active
duty in December 2005. She is survived by her husband, Hugh
Hvolboll, of Waukesha, Wisconsin.
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