BY
BILL JONES
STAFF WRITER
With light
snow on the ground and the temperature in the 30s, the citizen-soldiers of Greeneville-based Troop L
of the Tennessee National Guard's 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment (ACR) left here Sunday morning on
the first leg of a journey that will eventually take them to Iraq.
A
small "advance party" of Troop L soldiers had departed Greeneville in a convoy of military trucks on
Saturday morning, but the bulk of the unit's personnel departed the National Guard Armory on Hal
Henard Road shortly before 10 a.m. aboard three Greene Coach buses.
Troop
L was bound, on Sunday, for Camp Shelby, Miss., where they and the rest of the 3,000 soldiers who
make up the 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment are to undergo additional training before deploying to
Iraq early in February.
Dozens of family members, including a large
number of children, gathered at the National Guard Armory on Sunday morning to see the departing
soldiers off.
The soldiers had stood in formation at 8:30 a.m., and both
they and their families had been treated to breakfast by the unit's Family Readiness Group, a
support organization composed largely of soldiers' spouses.
Among the
family members who stood in freezing temperatures early Sunday morning outside the armory to spend
as much time as possible with the departing soldiers were Vickie Buckles, of Unicoi County, and her
children ,Trinity, McKenzie and Austin Buckles.
Vickie Buckles and the
children were there to say good-bye their husband and father, Spc. Jose
Buckles.
"It's going to be hard," Vickie Buckles said in a quavering
voice, referring to the coming months without her husband.
Spc. Buckles
also said departing on a journey that will take him to a war zone was going to be difficult because
he had never been away from his family for more than five months.
That
five-month separation, he said, was when he was attending basic training and advanced individual
training last year.
Buckles said he believes his family will be able to
manage his deployment to Iraq because "they know Daddy is going to be safe, Daddy is protecting
them, and Daddy will come home to be with them."
For most of the Troop L
soldiers, like Spc. Buckles, the coming deployment to Iraq will be their first because they have
joined the National Guard since the locally-based unit (formerly known as Troop G) last went to Iraq
in 2004-05.
A unit spokesman said last week that only about 20 veterans
of the local National Guard unit's last deployment to Iraq remain with what is now Troop
L.
But Capt. Gary Price, Troop L's commanding officer, said all the
unit's key non-commissioned officers are Iraq veterans.
In addition, even
some of the junior enlisted men, such as Spc. Ricky Lynn Dean, of Chuckey, have been to
Iraq.
Dean said he had been in basic training at the time the 278th ACR
deployed to Iraq in 2004 and was unable to deploy with the unit.
But
after he completed basic training, Dean said, he volunteered to deploy to Iraq with a unit of the
Georgia National Guard.
On Sunday Dean said he had become a new father
only days ago with the birth of his daughter, Riley Lynn Dean.
"I didn't
think I was going to be here when she was born because of the deployment," Dean said.
But Takoma Regional Hospital physicians who were attending his wife were
able to induce labor in time for his daughter to be born before his unit's deployment
began.
"She weighed seven pounds and 12 ounces," he said of his daughter.
"She's the greatest thing I've ever seen!"
Dean noted that his wife, Mary
Ann, and little Riley are doing well, as are his two stepdaughters, ages two and
three.
Deploying is now even harder, he said, because of the new addition
to the family. "My daughters and my wife have made my life complete," he
said.
Sgt. Jeremy Bonds, another veteran of the local National Guard
unit's first deployment to Iraq, also was among the Troop L soldiers who departed on Sunday,
according to his grandmother, Rebecca Lopez.
She noted that she, his
grandfather, B.C. Lopez, his wife, and his mother-in-law were all on hand for the unit's
departure.
Bonds had been among the younger members of what was then
Troop G when the unit deployed in 2004, but he is now a veteran in a unit largely composed of young
privates and specialists.
As the scheduled 9:50 a.m. bus departure time
neared on Sunday morning, soldiers were called into formation by First Sgt. Dwayne Huskey, who
thanked the soldiers' families, and motorcyclists from the Patriot Guard and the Iron Riders, for
coming out "on a cold day" to support the soldiers.
Huskey told the
assembled soldiers to pick up 10 copies of their deployment orders and have their identification
tags and identification cards visible for inspection before boarding the waiting
buses.
The soldiers earlier had loaded most of their baggage onto the
buses. They moved toward the waiting buses one-by-one as their names were
called.
As the soldiers boarded the buses, many received good-bye hugs
from family members as the motorcycles that were to escort them from the armory's parking lot moved
into position behind a Greeneville Police Department patrol car driven by Sgt. Steve
Spano.
When all the soldiers were aboard, the procession of motorcycles
and buses moved out of the parking lot and onto Hal Henard Road, where sheriff's deputies joined the
procession. Many supporters lined the road to wave good-bye.
After the
buses passed, units of the Greene County Chapter of the American Red Cross, the Greeneville
Emergency & Rescue Squad, and a fire engine from Unicoi County fell in behind the departing
buses.
As the departing buses reached the intersection of Hal Henard Road
and the West Andrew Johnson Highway (U.S. 11E), they passed beneath a large American Flag that was
suspended from the upraised aerial ladder of a Greeneville Fire Department fire
engine.
As the buses and their escorting vehicles turned left onto the
West Andrew Johnson Highway, they were greeted by the first of many citizens who lined the edge of
the highway to show support for the departing troops.
Greeneville Mayor
Laraine King and Greene County Mayor Alan Broyles, on Friday, had asked local residents to "line the
highway" to show support as the Troop L soldiers departed.
Many did so
despite Sunday morning's chill and the departure time's conflict with church
services.
Many of the supporters lining the highway waved U.S. flags.
Others held aloft signs wishing the departing soldiers well.
Most of the
escorting vehicles ended their participation when the buses reached Interstate 81's Exit 23 in
Mosheim.
But a spokesman for the motorcyclists said they planned to
continue escorting the buses until they reached Fish Hatchery Road in Hamblen
County.
The Troop L soldiers are scheduled to return home for a brief
Christmas leave about Dec. 20.
A "departure ceremony" for the 278th ACR
is scheduled to be held on Feb. 5 at Camp Shelby, Miss.