RICHMOND, Va. - The Virginia National Guard’s Fort Pickett will officially be redesignated Fort Barfoot in honor of Col. Van T. Barfoot, a World War II Medal of Honor recipient with extensive Virginia ties. The ceremony is scheduled March 24 in the Fort Pickett area near Blackstone.
The post is one of nine U.S. Army installations — and the only Army National Guard installation — being redesignated based on the Naming Commission’s recommendations to remove the names, symbols, displays, monuments and paraphernalia that honor or commemorate the Confederate States of America.
“It is such a tremendous honor to name an installation where military forces train to defend our freedoms in honor of Col. Van T. Barfoot,” said Maj. Gen. Timothy P. Williams, the adjutant general of Virginia. “His magnificent military career was marked by heroism and decades of selfless service to our nation, and his legacy will serve as an inspiration for current and future generations of service members.”
The ceremony will be open to invited guests and the news media. It is not open to the general public because of space constraints, though a video livestream is planned on VNG social media. The 29th Infantry Division Band will provide ceremonial music during the event.
Barfoot enlisted in the Army in 1940 and received the Medal of Honor for his actions as a technical sergeant in the 45th Infantry Division in May 1944 in Italy while fighting German soldiers and tanks. After World War II, he remained in the military for 34 years, including tours in Korea and Vietnam.
During his postwar career, Barfoot was an accomplished aviator. He is part of the Fort Rucker (soon to be Fort Novosel), Alabama, Aviation Hall of Fame. Retired Col. James Holden, a former VNG state aviation officer and Virginia Army National Guard chief of staff, flew with Barfoot a few times.
“Anyone who has a Medal of Honor, I only have good things to say about them. I don’t know a lot about his experiences in that, but he was quite a person. He was a gentleman,” said Holden.
After retirement, Barfoot settled in Amelia County, eventually moving to Henrico County, where he again rose to national prominence when the homeowner’s association challenged his desire to fly the American flag in front of his home. Barfoot received support from many national leaders and organizations, eventually prevailing in his efforts.
Barfoot also has a significant Native American heritage, as his maternal grandmother was a member of the Choctaw Nation. To commemorate this heritage, representatives from Choctaw Nation and Virginia-based Native American tribes will attend the ceremony.
Barfoot died in 2012 at the age of 92. In addition to being the new namesake of the VNG installation, there is also a Sitter & Barfoot Veterans Care Center in Richmond operated by the Virginia Department of Veterans Services. A portion of a highway near his place of birth in Mississippi is also dedicated in his honor.
Barfoot served two times as an adviser to Virginia National Guard units. In the 1950s, he served as an adviser to the 116th Infantry Regiment and later was the senior Army adviser to the Virginia National Guard until his retirement in 1974. Those jobs brought him to Fort Pickett for training with VNG units on multiple occasions.
“I served as senior adviser for the state of Virginia National Guard for four years. I love them. They’re dedicated people,” Barfoot said during an interview, part of the Library of Congress Veterans History Project. “I’ll tell you, the greatest asset we have now is our National Guard. They’re just complete Soldiers.”
According to the interview, Barfoot briefly trained at what was then Camp Pickett with the 157th Infantry Regiment, 45th Infantry Division, the unit he fought with in Italy, before shipping out for Europe during World War II. On his retirement as a colonel, the Virginia National Guard awarded him the Virginia Distinguished Service Medal. He also received the Silver Star, Bronze Star and three Purple Hearts for his combat service across World War II, Korea and Vietnam.
Fort Pickett sits on about 41,000 acres and is operated by the Virginia National Guard, which took control of the post in 1997. Built during World War II and originally named Camp Pickett, It features a combination of open-terrain and wooded maneuver areas, more than 20 ranges capable of training on nearly every Army weapons system, a rail spur and a C-17-capable airfield. It also boasts a forward operating base, multiple training villages and a Combined Arms Collective Training Facility, Fort Pickett’s urban operations training facility.
The installation’s primary customer is the Virginia National Guard, but also regularly hosts units from other states and services.
In addition to the installation name change, four buildings, 19 roads and five bridges will also be redesignated. The roads will follow a planned naming convention of A Avenue, B Avenue, etc., which is how the roads were named when the post was established in 1942.
Social Sharing