Voices of Veterans: Maj. Sharon Frederick shares her story of service with the US Air Force

AUSTIN Friday, Texas Land Commissioner and Veterans Land Board (VLB) Chairwoman Dawn Buckingham, M.D., introduced the next installment of the series highlighting the VLB’s Voices of Veterans oral history program. This week, they highlight the service of Maj. Sharon Frederick, who served in the U.S. Air Force in Dubai during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm.

Born in Abilene, Frederick attended Abilene Christian College in West Texas before joining the Air Force Reserve in 1987. She credits joining the military because of the strong sense of community it offered, something she learned when she was married to her husband who also served in the Air Force.

“After traveling around with my husband, I learned to love the connectedness with the military,” Frederick said. “From the family members to the military members, and it was truly a community within a community.”

Frederick thought many times about going to active duty with the Air Force, but her parents talked her out of it because of they stay wanted her to be home for, both, her parents, and her daughter.

“So, I thought OK, well the best of both worlds, I’ll join the Reserves and I really won’t have to travel too much, and also be able to go back to school because I dropped out when I got married,” Frederick recalled. “It just offered the best opportunity to be a part-time weekend warrior and go to school and work on my educational goals.”

A few short years after she joined the Reserves, things started to get serious, Frederick said, when everyone started getting their marching orders for deployment

“It was kind of surreal because everyone else were getting orders and I was hearing from my friends then, ‘oh, you’re gonna be next’ and I was like ‘Nah, I’m not going anywhere, we’re not going anywhere’,” Frederick said of that time. “Then I received a phone call, and after hearing all about the horror stories, about what I’m going to do, people telling me I was going to die within two minutes, it was a lot. Of course, my family was devastated and being a single parent, I had to send my daughter to live with my parents in West Texas.”

Over the course of her 24 years spent in the military, Frederick was deployed on multiple missions. She recalled the surreal experiences during Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, when your next breath was not guaranteed.

“You just lived under a threat every day not knowing what was going to happen,” Frederick explained. “It was almost like an accepted fact, if anything happened, we knew we weren’t going to make it, and that’s how we operated.”

Click here to listen to U.S Air Force Veteran Sharon Frederick tell her story.