
The burgess family's legacy of military service
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The Burgess Family (Air Force, Army, Navy) These six women are descendants of the late Leon Burgess, a World War II veteran who spent 30 years in the military, mostly in the Air Force, and
his wife, Helen Sue. They had four daughters (three of whom served) and two sons (one served). Laura B. Stevens Callahan, 67, of Hernando, Mississippi, spent seven years as an attorney in
the Air Force and 23 years in the reserve and Air National Guard. Her sister Lucinda “Cindy” Carlson, 66, of Midway, Kentucky, served for seven years on active duty as a nurse in the Army
and 21 years as a nurse practitioner in the reserve. Their sister Melody Bock, 59, of Newark, Delaware, spent seven years on active duty, mostly as a public affairs officer in the Navy, and
13 years in the reserve. Laura’s daughter Sara Johnson, 31, currently of Clovis, New Mexico, is a captain in the Air Force, serving as an intelligence officer. Cindy’s daughters are Susan
Harrington, 32, of Pensacola, Florida, who served in public affairs in the Air Force for eight years and is now in the reserve, and Bethany Gillin, 29, of Nashville, Tennessee, who spent
seven years as a nuclear surface warfare officer in the Navy, finishing last August. The interview took place in Breckenridge, Colorado. WHY THEY SERVED LAURA: Our dad never said to
us, “Why don’t you go into the military?” He didn’t discourage us, but he was probably as surprised as anybody that three of his four daughters went in, and all in different branches. Leon
Burgess, with, from left, daughters Cindy, Laura and Melody in 1996. Burgess served in the Air Force; his daughters served in the Army, Air Force and Navy, respectively. Photo courtesy Laura
B. Stevens Callahan CINDY: Being raised military, you don’t have a ton of money. All of us went to college, but I was first, and accepted an Army scholarship — a wonderful way to get
college paid for. MELODY: I was in high school during the last years of the Vietnam War. And it irritated me that my little brothers could have been drafted if the war continued but that I
was excluded, just because I was a woman. I thought, That just isn’t right. I have a choice. And I’m going in. LAURA: The day I put that Air Force uniform on, I was, like, this is where I
belong. When I finished my law degree and joined the office of the Judge Advocate General in 1981, there were about 1,500 lawyers, and only about 130 were women. Today there are a lot more
women in the JAG Corps. CINDY: Our generation joined the military in peacetime. Our daughters have had it harder. They’ve had pretty difficult and painful experiences and a lot more
deployments. Things that we really didn’t have to deal with.