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From Green Bay to the Persian Gulf Moving Out: To Bragg and Beyond |
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The feelings all came together during the last formation of the 432nd in Green Bay. The formation on January 5 had been beefed up with additional troops from the parent unit, the 308th Civil Affairs Group from Homewood, Illinois and the 415th CA Company from Kalamazoo, Michigan. Green Bay's mayor, Sam Halloin, made it clear that our home town was behind us. After the mayor's speech, the 432nd's commander, LTC James A. Christopherson, then addressed the troops. His own personal struggle with saying goodbye strongly reflected the depths of each member's own struggle, leaving behind loved ones and friends. The 432nd was dismissed, and it was left for Sunday to do the dispersing.
On Sunday, members of the unit left Green Bay in a great variety of ways and times. Some rode the bus to Milwaukee's Mitchell Airfield; others flew out from Green Bay's Austin Straubel Airport. Gradually however, the unit converged on Fayetteville, North Carolina for the ride to nearby Ft. Bragg. Once there, the difficulties of leaving home must have been partially relieved by the balmy weather which greeted the company. Sunday's temperature of 67 degrees was a welcome change from the near zero weather that was far less than pleasant for almost the entire period of the 432nd's stay at Ft. Bragg. Within a day after arriving, the temeperature dropped and the troops had to adapt to calithenics iand common task training in cold and lightly rainy weather. Being used to Wisconsin winters helped only slightly when it came to assuming the leaning prone position on the cold, wet Carolina ground, or pushing through the soaked underbrush following a compass course on a day which members were convinced was deliberately planned to be on the rainiest day of the entire stay at Ft. Bragg.
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