To honor and protect -
Patriot Guard reaches two year mark
By Julie Anderson
Published: Monday, August 27, 2007 12:18 PM CDT
Two years ago today members
of the American Legion Riders, among other groups, climbed
on their motorcycles for what would be the first of many
rides.
This was the first ride of the yet un-named Patriot Guard.
"At the time what I did was get a hold of Cregg Hansen and
Steve McDonald, who are considered the founders of the
Patriot Guard too and told them that I was going to
discuss it with the American Legion," Terry "Darkhorse"
Houck, founder of the Patriot Guard, said.
The idea had actually arisen back in July
when Terry’s wife, Carol, read a newspaper article about a
group of protestors, the Phelps, protesting at a funeral
in Oklahoma.
When they found out the protestors would be at a
governors' meeting in Wichita, they went to stand between
the governors and the protestors at the Hilton.
The first funeral came in October of that year, when the
group traveled to Chelsea, Okla., for a funeral.
By that time, there were
more groups getting involved, so they came up with a name,
Patriot Guard.
"We had six to eight names," Terry said. "How I came up
with the name Patriot was the movie "The Patriot." I
thought this is kind of like the revolutionary days.
"Then I started thinking about how we’re guarding and I
started thinking about the Army National Guard, Air
National Guard, then Patriot Guard."
About 43 riders traveled
to Kansas to meet up with others in Oklahoma.
At first Terry received some resistance from the law
enforcement in Chelsea when he called to let them know
they were coming down.
"He (the chief of police) said, 'nope, I don’t want you
guys down here. We’ll take care of it’," Terry said.
Terry told him before the
night was over they would be invited guests, and they
were.
Seeing the protestors for the first time was a shock for
all of them.
"It just makes my whole body tense," Terry said. "You
couldn’t believe they would do that.
"That first mission, we
didn’t know what we were getting into."
Carol agreed.
"A lot of people who go for the first time come to me and
say it was overwhelming," she said. "I had no idea what I
would be doing."
Now two years later,
their reason for attending funerals has changed slightly.
While they are still there to honor the soldiers, they
don’t care if the Phelps are there or not.
They attend any funeral, if invited by the family, within
a 200-mile radius and will continue doing that until all
of the soldiers are home.
"I think to me
personally, it’s the families," Hansen said. "You want to
honor that soldier, but when they leave this world there’s
not much you can do, but the families, what they’re going
through we can help."
"That was the main thing," Doug "Grey Eagle" Lehman,
another original member, agreed, "just protect the
families. They had enough to deal with. They didn’t need
to listen to any people who didn’t know what they were
talking about. Our main goal was to shield them and do
whatever it took to get that done. It’s very eye-opening
that people have those beliefs."
The reactions they have gotten have shown them they are
doing the right thing.
"When the families took
time after the funeral and came and thanked us and the
city people at Chelsea came out to thank us, we just knew
then, we knew that it was going to be the right thing to
do," Hansen said.
Although they consider everyone who went on the first
funeral ride to Chelsea to be founding members, there are
a core group of them who have been in it from the
beginning. In addition to Hansen, Houck and Lehman, other
founding members were Steve McDonald, Greg Hansen, Chuck
and Monica Barshney and Dennis Scuffham.