MEDCoE conducts Centennial book launch

By Tish Williamson, MEDCoE Director of CommunicationsDecember 1, 2021

Five trainees assigned to the 264th Medical Battalion, 32d Medical Brigade, provided a living display of historical uniforms.  Privates Salvador Mendez, Christopher Arana, Bhumika Kharkiv, Isaiah Green and Kaitlyn Thompson donned period costumes,...
1 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Five trainees assigned to the 264th Medical Battalion, 32d Medical Brigade, provided a living display of historical uniforms. Privates Salvador Mendez, Christopher Arana, Bhumika Kharkiv, Isaiah Green and Kaitlyn Thompson donned period costumes, provided by Robert Ampula, AMEDD Center of History and Heritage, that spanned the last 100 years.

MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum)
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Nolan Andy Watson, Director, Army Medical Department Center for History Heritage and co-author of the MEDCoE Centennial Book.
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2 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Nolan Andy Watson, Director, Army Medical Department Center for History Heritage and co-author of the MEDCoE Centennial Book.

MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum)
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During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training; James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service; and Joseph Bray, the...
3 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training; James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service; and Joseph Bray, the Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army, Texas (South), pictured with Maj. Gen. Dennis P. LeMaster.

MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum)
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During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training (pictured with Maj. Gen. Dennis P. LeMaster); James Murray, the Civilian employee with the...
4 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training (pictured with Maj. Gen. Dennis P. LeMaster); James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service; and Joseph Bray, the Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army, Texas (South).

MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum)
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During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training; James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service (pictured on right with...
5 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training; James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service (pictured on right with Mr. J.M. Harmon, SES); and Joseph Bray, the Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army, Texas (South).

MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta)
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MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by...
6 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum) VIEW ORIGINAL
MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by...
7 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – MEDCoE Centennial Book Launch. Hosted by MG Dennis P. LeMaster, U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, Commanding General. AMEDD Museum-Vehicle Pergola, 3988 Stanley Road, Bldg. 1046, JBSA-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, 30NOV2021. (U.S. Army photo by Francis S. Trachta/Released) (Photo Credit: Francis Trachta, AMEDD Museum) VIEW ORIGINAL

JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO-FORT SAM HOUSTON, Texas –The U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence conducted a ceremony to unveil a book dedicated to their Centennial Anniversary on November 30, 2021. The event was hosted by Maj. Gen. Dennis P. LeMaster outdoors at the Army Medical Department Museum vehicle pergola and was attended by over 100 military and community guests.

Maj. Michael Forslund, the narrator for the ceremony, told attendees, “Though COVID-19, another historic event, put a pause on much of the formal Centennial events we had planned last year, we are happy to gather here today to celebrate the launch of the MEDCoE Centennial Book.”

LeMaster agreed, noting how the challenges associated with the pandemic significantly delayed the book production and the feasibility of holding a large ceremony with community participation before COVID-19 conditions began to improve locally.

“I want to thank everyone involved with crafting, codifying and remembering our 100-year story,” he said, “which we should have discussed last year, but we had something that got in the way of that.”

The book, titled “Army Medicine Starts Here: the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence and Its Origins,” is a pictorial history of the first 100 years of the medical education and training institution, from 1920 through 2020.

The Medical Field Service School, where the MEDCoE traces its origin, received official approval for establishment by the Department of the Army on May 15, 1920 after a formal request was made by the Surgeon General of the Army at the time, Major General Merritte Ireland. The school began its first class in July 1921 at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania. When the facilities at Carlisle proved to be too small for the breadth and depth of the mission, in February 1946, the school moved to Fort Sam Houston, Texas.

Nolan Andy Watson, Director, Army Medical Department Center for History Heritage and co-author of the MEDCoE Centennial Book, was the special guest speaker for the event. The part of the book covering the first 90 years of the training institution was written by former MEDCoE historian Adrian Askins Neidinger under the direction of Maj. Gen. Retired David Rubenstein, the MEDCoE Commanding General at the time.

“I am a co-author,” Watson explained. “Historian Adrian Neidinger set the foundation for this book, and I followed on with an equally impressive team. He encouraged everyone to read the lengthy acknowledgements section in the 287-page book. He also pointed out that he feels true authors of the MEDCoE story are the hundreds of thousands of former and current MEDCoE Soldiers, Civilians and Leaders. “As a historian, I will always be a co-author, as it is the Soldiers of the Army who create the story,” he concluded.

The MEDCoE has over 1,500 faculty and staff who train and educate nearly 34,000 students annually in 257 courses or programs. The average daily student load of 4,600 Soldiers includes over 3,300 on Joint Base San Antonio, and another 1300 students at 246 clinical sites across the Department of Defense. The MEDCoE currently offers four Masters and nine Doctoral Degree Programs.

“As we celebrate the past today with our centennial book, I think we will all agree that these are historic times,” said LeMaster who took command of the MEDCoE in February 2020. “Even without the pandemic, our history is now. No one truly fathoms that they are a part of history while they are making it.”

LeMaster made closing remarks during the 30-minute event. “Over the last year and a half, while dealing with the added pressure of the largest pandemic the world has seen in over 100 years,” LeMaster said, “we boldly and safely kept the Army’s pipeline of trained and ready medical professionals securely open.”

Through all of the mitigation measures carried out by engaged leaders, LeMaster recalled how MEDCoE ensured all Soldiers sent from Advanced Individual Training at the MEDCoE to their first unit of assignment were free of COVID-19.

“What the Medical Center of Excellence has accomplished will resonate now, and well into the future, to ensure we have a trained, educated and resourced medical force,” LeMaster explained. “That is our legacy; this is the history which we are making. Our mission and future history begin and end with Soldiers. Everything else is secondary.”

All in-person ceremony attendees received a free copy of the MEDCoE Centennial Book courtesy of MEDCoE’s Borden Institute. During the ceremony, personalized copies of the book were presented to the youngest Soldier, Pvt. Bright Odura, a 17-year-old 68W Combat Medic in training; James Murray, the Civilian employee with the most years in service; and Joseph Bray, the Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army, Texas (South).

Five trainees assigned to the 264th Medical Battalion, 32d Medical Brigade, provided a living display of historical uniforms. Privates Salvador Mendez, Christopher Arana, Bhumika Kharkiv, Isaiah Green and Kaitlyn Thompson donned period costumes, provided by Robert Ampula, AMEDD Center of History and Heritage, that spanned the last 100 years. The ceremony concluded with a traditional cake cutting and the Army song played by the “After Five” Jazz Combo from “Fort Sam’s Own” 323d Army Band. Attendees were invited to stay for a reception and get their books signed by key leaders after the ceremony.

“For those of you who are new to the Medical Center of Excellence,” LeMaster concluded, “though your book has yet to be written, be proud of the knowledge that ‘we,’ which includes all of you, are setting Army Medicine on an upward trajectory that is sure to last well into the next 100 years.”

To learn more about the U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence, visit https://medcoe.army.mil. To receive a digital copy of the MEDCoE Centennial Book, visit the “ordering information” section on the Borden Institute webpage: https://medcoe.army.mil/borden.