http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A26325-2004Jun8.html
Military Ritual
Old Guard Solemnly Ready for Role in History
By Susan Kinzie
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, June 9, 2004;
At 4 in the morning, in the darkness, Army Spec. Stephen Cava and other members
of the Old Guard's elite Caisson Platoon begin their work in the nearly
century-old stable at Fort Myer in Arlington. They wash the horses, rub oil into
the black leather saddles, muck out the stalls, rinse the worn brick floors,
clean the gutters.
All those chores translate into the details that make a military tradition
evocative and powerful: six horses, all alike, drawing a caisson laden with the
body of a soldier in a coffin -- a ritual repeated hundreds of times a year. And
once in a great while, the ritual is lifted into something extraordinary, and
the members of the Old Guard become a part of history. When Cava saw on
television Saturday that former president Ronald Reagan had died, his wife
immediately asked him, "Are you going to ride in that?" Cava wasn't sure, but he
hoped he would be picked. He called his squad leader that night and came in on
Sunday to make sure everything was ready at the barn. On Monday it was official:
He will be one of the five riders to lead the caisson today, from 16th Street
and Constitution Avenue NW to the Capitol, where Reagan's body will lie in
state. "I'm very honored," Cava said. According to tradition, three soldiers
from the 3rd Infantry Regiment, the Army's oldest active unit, ride in blue wool
dress uniforms. Three horses walk riderless next to them, all six pulling the
caisson. Caissons are rich in American history as well. Originally designed to
carry artillery, they began being used in the 1800s to bring dead soldiers off
the battlefield. Another soldier rides on a horse alongside them, leading the
way. For Reagan's funeral procession, a single horse without a rider, known as a
caparisoned horse, will march to the same cadence. A pair of boots, set backward
in the stirrups, represents the warrior who will not return. "This is something
that's very symbolic," said Stephen J. Wayne, a professor of government at
Georgetown University. "It's a part of the nation's history that is dying with
Reagan's body. It puts an era to closure." It's important to have the full
ritual of military ceremony, he said, because the tradition provides a structure
that pulls people together. "It's a tribute to him and a moment in the history
of our nation," Wayne said. That moment is particularly meaningful now because
of the ongoing conflict over U.S. military involvement in Iraq, said Claire
Potter, associate professor of history at Wesleyan University. "A state funeral
gives us a view of the military that we want to see," Potter said, with tall,
young soldiers in crisp uniforms. "One thing any good funeral does is give order
to a community temporarily thrown into disarray by a death. For such a funeral
to be structured by a military procession and guards of honor, that sort of
reincorporates the military into our sense of honor. . . . I think it's a
soothing thing." She remembered, as a small girl, watching president John F.
Kennedy's funeral on TV, hearing the steady beat of the drums, seeing the
caisson roll through the streets of Washington. Yesterday, some Caisson Platoon
members practiced on the Capitol grounds, and others took care of chores back at
the Fort Myer barn. A farrier had been working until 11 p.m. Monday, tapping
special shoes onto the horses' hooves to protect them from the rough asphalt of
city streets and to keep their steps steady. He was back in at 4 a.m. yesterday,
Cava said. Horses chewed hay in their stalls yesterday morning or nosed plastic
apples tied in the corners. A pug, looking tiny next to the big animals, trotted
out to the sunlight, past a wool uniform hanging along one wall. The barn cat,
Samson, was hiding somewhere. Army Spec. Corey Newton blew dust off a black
saddle. Cava, from Medford, N.J., said he always loved horses but hadn't ridden
much prior to joining the Army. "Large animals, riding fast, open fields -- I
love that stuff," he said. In 10 weeks of Old Guard Caisson Platoon training, he
learned to ride bareback, to jump, to control the animals with all the rigor and
discipline needed for such precise military ceremonies. "They beat the heck out
of you," he said. The horses are big; some have thick shoulders six feet off the
ground, rippling with muscles. One horse weighed 2,000 pounds until it was put
on a diet; now it's a slimmed-down 1,800. "We check the horses' weight every
day," Cava said. "We can tell if they're getting too scrawny or chubby." He
walked over to Peter, a white Percheron-quarter horse mix from Oklahoma who was
lying in the stall with legs folded underneath, nosing through the woodchips for
grain. "Hey, Peter, what's up?" Cava asked, leaning against the shiny varnished
wood. The horse looked over at him, snorted, rolled over. Then he pushed up off
the floor, sending a spray of chips flying with a shake of his tail. Peter is
Cava's favorite. "He's just a big, gentle oaf." Cava loves the job; he likes the
day-to-day routine, and the theme to the work: "Paying tribute to soldiers who
have fallen for the country." Sometimes a family will thank them at Arlington
National Cemetery, he said. Sometimes someone will send homemade cookies for the
men and women or apples for the horses. Today, as heads of state, family and
strangers alike converge on Washington to mourn, Cava and the other members of
the Caisson Platoon will get up early, as always, to take care of all the
details. "We have so much going on, we can't be nervous," Cava said yesterday,
hurrying off to the next chore to finish before riding into history today. "We
haven't got the time."
© 2004 The Washington Post Company
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(Ret)