By Army Spc. Reginald M. Graham Jr.
16th Combat Aviation Brigade
KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan, June 23, 2014 – An allied
trade specialist with Task Force Bellator here uses his creativity not only to
enhance his unit’s mission effectiveness, but also to raise his morale.
Army Sgt. Marshall R. Meeks enlisted as a metal worker in
2006. As the Army transitioned, his military occupational specialty was
combined with the machinist specialty to produce more versatile soldiers.
Meeks, a San Antonio native, said he enlisted as a way to
expand on abilities he had developed in his civilian life. “I used to be a
mechanic, [used to] build houses, and was a freelance contractor,” he said. “I
joined the Army to be a welder.”
Now serving on his third deployment, Meeks transitioned from
supporting ground units most of his career to supporting aviation with the 16th
Combat Aviation Brigade. His ability to weld, mold and create products from
scratch makes him a highly sought commodity among the unit’s logisticians,
mechanics, crew chiefs, pilots and senior leaders.
“Being in a welding shop is a real spotlight,” he said. “A
lot of people get you to build a lot of different stuff. They will give me a
blueprint with tolerances. … As long as you make it to that print, then you are
good to go.”
Meeks assisted soldiers in his support battalion by building
a cart to carry Hellfire missiles and their cases, which weigh almost 250
pounds each. Moving each case used to require four soldiers carrying it, but
now the task requires just one soldier rolling a cart.
Meeks said that on a previous deployment, he was shown a
picture of a missile cart, but it carried only the missile and not the case. “I
made one so the whole [case] fit in there,” he said. “You can just take the top
off … and have the bottom half roll under the wing of the [helicopter].”
When Meeks is not making something for missions, he is
turning his military trade into a hobby. In the middle of a work area filled
with blowtorches, welding helmets and scrap metal stands an array of animal
figurines made from leftover metal that otherwise would be thrown away after a
job.
Meeks said he and other soldiers in his shop were off work
one day and decided the scraps could be made into things worth keeping. He now
uses the shop’s scraps and his imagination to make the figurines out of what
would be junk.
Meanwhile, Meeks continues to build his future.
“My next big goal is to finish my schooling,” he said,
noting that he has accumulated 28 semester hours in engineering and welding
science.
With 12-hour work days, constant requests for missions and a
continuation of bettering himself, Meeks said, he has found a way to create an
environment that enables individuality within the confines of the unit.
“You can make anything you want as long as you have
imagination and the will to do it,” he said.
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