Army's first fourth-generation paratrooper follows in families' footsteps

By Megan Garcia, Maneuver Center of Excellence Public AffairsSeptember 18, 2017

Army's first fourth-generation paraptrooper follows in families' footsteps
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Cadet Meghan Copenhaver, an Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment trainee, comes in from her first jump Aug. 14 at Fryar Drop Zone on Fort Benning, Georgia. Copenhaver, whose mother, maternal grandfather and maternal great-g... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Army's first fourth-generation paraptrooper follows in families' footsteps
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Cadet Meghan Copenhaver, an Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment trainee, stops for a photo following her first jump Aug. 14 at Fryar Drop Zone on Fort Benning, Georgia. Copenhaver is the Army's first fourth-generation para... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

FORT BENNING, Ga. -- Service members wearing olive-green helmets marked with black numbers and letters line up on several steps as they wait their turn to practice landing techniques after jumping out of an airplane.

In the crowd, one Army Reserve Officer Training Corps cadet wears a helmet with the letter and numbers C30 printed on it.

Of the 30 females who started this journey in Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 507th Parachute Infantry Regiment at Fort Benning, Georgia, she's one of 12 left. Nonetheless, it's not the number 30 or the number 12 that sets this particular female apart from her peers; it's the number four. Cadet Meghan Copenhaver is the Army's first fourth-generation paratrooper.

Copenhaver's mother, maternal grandfather and maternal great-grandfather also graduated from the U.S. Army Airborne School. Additionally her great-grandfather, retired Army Col. John Anderson Hughes, jumped into Sainte-Mère-Église, France, just east of Normandy Beach on D-Day. He was a master parachutist who served in World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam.

"It's kind of scary, but it's also amazing," said Copenhaver, who's approaching her junior year as an ROTC cadet at Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Virginia. "I came to Airborne School because I wanted to get my wings, distinguish myself as a cadet, and prepare myself for a good career. Now, I'm able to follow in their footsteps in my own way and make my own path, and do what my family did before me."

Although she comes from a long line of Army paratroopers, Copenhaver said it took her a while before she decided to join the Army and attend Airborne School.

"Sophmore year of high school is when I threw around the idea, because that's when you start really thinking about what you want to do in life, and where you want to go to school," said Copenhaver, who is 19 years old.

She enrolled in college in 2015 as an ROTC cadet and immediately set her sights on achieving challenging goals.

"When I got my ROTC scholarship, I knew I wanted to do everything to distinguish myself as a cadet, so when the opportunity arose freshman year, I put my name in for Airborne and another ROTC program called CULP (Cultural Understanding and Language Proficiency) where you can travel. I got CULP instead, so I went to Africa instead of Airborne last summer," Copenhaver said.

She was persistent and determined to go to Airborne School.

"The opportunity arose this year, and I asked my cadre if I would be eligible, and they said yes based on my high physical fitness scores, GPA and persistence in the program of being a good cadet, so I got the slot, which was very exciting for me," she added.

Copenhaver said prior to arriving she began an intense workout regimen, taking advice from her friends who had attended Airborne School, as well as her father.

"My dad shared a workout program with me that I followed, which was a lot of cardio-based and upper body," she said. "I went to the gym every day and ran four times a week up to 6 miles a day."

Copehaver's mother, Carolyn Hughes, helped her daughter prepare as well.

"First and foremost, anybody that she would talk to would tell her to keep her feet and knees together, so that came up in about every conversation that we had to kind of engrain it in her brain," Hughes said.

She relayed to her daughter her own experiences in Airborne School in order to help her get prepared.

"We focused a lot on the physiological aspects of the course, and the things she might be exposed to, and how she could mitigate some of that away," Hughes said. "As a women, biologically and physiologically we're built a little differently than men, and it's not normal or natural for women to carry that amount of weight, so her being of sound mind and body was going to be critical and essential for her to be able to get through the course."

Copenhaver reported to Fort Benning July 26 for school, four days before her start date in order to acclimate herself to the new environment. She said her experiences were challenging but fun.

"There are some days where we're running -- like we've had a couple of 5-milers, and I'm fit to run the 5 miles -- but we run it at a pretty fast pace, so I have to focus on breathing and push through," she said.

During the swing landing training, where trainees practice their landing techniques, Copenhaver hit her head a couple of times after jumping from the platform, but she didn't let that discourage her.

"I was like, 'You know what? Get yourself together. You need to qualify, so you can jump,''' she said, describing the pep talk she had with herself that day.

Outside of making her family proud, Copenhaver said she doesn't believe in quitting or giving up no matter how hard something may seem.

"I don't let myself get to the mentality of, 'I can't do it. There's never I can't,'" she said. "It's whether or not I'm going to have to push really hard. On certain days when we're running everywhere in boots and full uniform with our kits and everything, it sucks, and sometimes I don't know how far we're going to run, but I just tell myself to get my breathing under control, and just push because no one else is going to fall out. There's never been a time in my life where I have let myself quit."

She also continued to receive motivation from her mother.

"Every day single day that we would talk in the morning or in the evening when she was done with training, first and foremost I would tell her that I was proud of her," said Hughes.

Copenhaver's grandfather and uncle also showed their support.

"My grandfather has been the happiest man ever since he heard I was going to Airborne School," said Copenhaver, whose grandfather will also be the speaker at the graduation. "My uncle texted me, and he was so excited. He said, 'This is for the family. You got this.'''

Outside of the constant motivation and support from her family, Copenhaver said the training she received from her instructors helped her to prepare for her first jump. Specifically, she felt ready after completing mass exit training, which teaches the trainees how to properly exit an aircraft.

"I felt very confident after that, and I called my dad that night and said, 'I'm so ready to jump out of an airplane now,'" she said.

On Aug. 14, she got her chance and completed her first jump. The view she said on the way down was beautiful if only for a second.

"You really don't have much time to take it in," she said. "You have to focus on pulling your slips and get ready to go. It was amazing. It was something I wasn't expecting."

Copenhaver's mother was elated to hear about her daughter's first jump.

"She was really, really excited, and she said she felt exhilarated," said Hughes, recalling the conversation she had with her daughter. "She had a phenomenal experience."

Although Copenhaver graduating from Airborne School means a lot to her family, Hughes said it more than just her adding to the family lineage.

"There's not a day that goes by that I don't thank the Lord that I have such a phenomenal child who is willing and capable to carry not only the family torch and legacy for family service, but is just a dynamic and very strong, young woman," Hughes said.

Copenhaver is scheduled to graduate at 9 a.m. Aug. 18 at the Airborne Walk located on Eubanks Field on base.

Fourth generation paratrooper to graduate Airborne School

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