[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 101 (Wednesday, July 8, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1683]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FIGHTING AGGIES OF TEXAS A&M
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HON. TED POE
of texas
in the house of representatives
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Mr. POE of Texas. Madam Speaker, Texas A&M University was founded in
1876 as a land grant college under the Morrill Act. The university
began as an all male military school until after World War II. Aggies
have been serving with honor in the armed forces since the Spanish
American War of 1898. In fact, Texas A&M is the largest provider of
military officers outside of the Nations service academies. General
George S. Patton said, Give me an army of West Point graduates, and
I'll win a battle Give me a handful of Texas Aggies, and I'll win a
war.
During the Spanish American War, eighty-nine Aggies served in the
Army, and sixty-three Aggies served as officers. When the United States
became involved in World War I, 702 A&M graduates served in the
military, and 668 graduates were officers. Texas A&M trained over 4000
troops during World War I.
It was World War II, however, when Texas A&M exhibited its expertise
in training soldiers as well as scholars. Twenty thousand Aggies served
in World War II; fourteen thousand of these men were officers, and
twenty-nine were generals. In order to speed up the process of sending
more Aggies to the front lines of the war, Texas A&M instituted a
twelve-month, three semester training program to prepare its soldiers.
The entire graduating classes of 1941 and 1942 enlisted in the armed
services immediately following graduation. Seven Congressional Medal of
Honor winners during the second world war were graduates from Texas
A&M. They included MAJ Horace S. Carswell, Jr., class of 1938; LT
Thomas W. Fowler, class of 1943; LT Eli Whitely, class of 1941; SGT
William Harrell, class of 1942; 2LT Lloyd D. Hughes, class of 1943; LT
Turney W. Leonard, class of 1942; and SGT George D. Keathley, class of
1937.
Six Aggies were survivors of the 131st Texas National Guard Field
Artillery, best known as the Lost Battalion because it was three years
before the fate of the men was known. They were captured on Java in
1942, and then transported to Burma, where they were forced to build
the infamous Railway of Death depicted in the movie Bridge Over River
Kwai.
Membership in the Corp of Cadets is now voluntary at Texas A&M;
however, the university continues its tradition of training men and
women to serve their country through military service.
And that's just the way it is.
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