Danczyk to graduate from West Point
Cadet Anne Danczyk, Whitefish High
School class of 2007, will join the “Long Grey Line” on May 21,
when she graduates from the United States Military Academy at West
Point in New York.
West Point is the longest continuously
occupied military post in the nation. Danczyk will be commissioned
as a 2nd Lieutenant in artillery and assigned to Ft. Lewis, Wash.
following basic artillery officer training. Her unit, the 17th
Fires Brigade, is currently scheduled to deploy to Afghanistan in
the spring of 2012.
Danczyk’s family moved to the Flathead
in the summer of 2003 when her father, also a West Point graduate
in 1979, retired from active duty. They settled in Whitefish where
all four children attended school. Many of Danczyk’s skills and
passions at West Point were cultivated during her years in the
Flathead. She ran cross country under Bill and Sara Brist and track
under Derek Schulz where they passed on the love of endorphins.
She co-captained the 2006 team that was
third at state and still blogs with many of Bill’s “running
army.”
While her mom, Annell, provided the
foundation for her love of music, she truly blossomed under Bob and
Ruth Clawson and Whitefish High School’s wonderful choir and
equally enjoyed time spent acting with Betsi Morrison and the
Alpine Theater Project.
Similarly, while she learned to ski in
Germany, she learned to race on the Big Mountain Alpine Race Team
under Jeff Pickering, Pete Collins, Alrick Hale and others who
passed on the skills and love of both the “Big” and skiing.
She also loved the four seasons of the
Flathead. Family trips to hike Glacier, kayaking the lakes and
rivers, hunting, fishing, camping, skiing all joys that also served
her very well, especially in the field aspects of her becoming a
soldier. Her recognition as the outstanding female cadet during her
“yearling summer” field training summer had something to do with
those bivouacs paling in comparison to long, wet family weekends
spent bush whacking in the Whitefish range and in front of
campfires on mountainsides from Alaska to Italy.
Reflective of the ever evolving role of
the U.S. military, Danczyk has had a wide variety of experiences
and travels since her arrival at USMA. She attended Chile’s winter
warfare school, and Ecuador’s jungle warfare center. She was part
of Spanish language and culture immersion teams to Costa Rica,
Panama, Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands, and also served with a
helicopter unit in Japan.
She earned a varsity A with the USMA
cross-country team, sang with the glee club and skied with the
alpine race team. She captained the ski team this past year and was
able to compete at the USCSA regionals in 2010 and 2011 and
Nationals in 2010.
This past year she has been a Cadet
Captain as the Corps of Cadets Brigade Assistant Adjutant. This
high visibility assignment required her coordination of many of the
visiting dignitaries that routinely tour the Academy. After an
exhaustive academic schedule, she will earn a bachelor of science
degree in international studies concentrating on Latin and South
America.
Danczyk joins a long line of classmates
and friends from the Flathead who are serving the nation in one of
the military or other governmental services literally around the
globe. She looks forward to a moment in the nomadic life of a
soldier when she crosses paths with a classmate, and relives that
epic powder day on the Big or cross country run in the snow in
Helena.
Her brothers, Jake, an honors program
Physics and Mechanical Engineering major at MSU, and Matt, a
Mechanical Engineering student also in the MSU honors program, and
sister, Megan, a sophomore at Whitefish High School, are proud and
just a bit in denial that their silly sister could be leading
soldiers in combat shortly.
Whatever title she might have gained
means very little when she is home on leave and it comes time to
divide up the after-dinner chores. She can barely believe it
herself.
None the less, America continues to
lead, and our citizens, communities, and nation continue to prepare
new generations of warriors and leaders to rise up and meet the
demands and sacrifices of this complex new world. Certainly,
Danczyk, and many thousands like her, are providing the energy and
skills to ensure we will remain a world leader for many generations
to come.