Wolsey woman receives Distinctive Woman of Service Award

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SPEARFISH — Eryn Schlotte, a human services and sociology major at Black Hills State University, was recently presented the Distinctive Woman of Service Award from the Girl Scouts Dakota Horizons council.
Schlotte, who is from Wolsey, is a  2017 graduate of Huron High School and is a history maker, as she is the first female combat engineer in the state.
The Distinctive Woman of Service Award winner must currently be serving in the U.S. Armed Forces andbe a woman of courage, confidence and character who has made a contribution of time or support to the community.
Lieutenant Colonel Elvis Coronado, professor of military science at BHSU, says Schlotte is “one of the Mount Rushmore Battalion’s top Cadets” in physical and academic ability, as well as by displaying honorable and ethical decision-making.
Schlotte knew she wanted to join the U.S. Army after witnessing firsthand the National Guard’s response to the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013.
She was in eighth grade at the time, and was visiting Boston with the Capitol Children’s Choir of Pierre.
“I remember watching the National Guard do security checks on the buildings in Boston,” she said. “We were in the same area where they caught the shooter.”
Soon after returning to South Dakota, Schlotte’s cousin, who was in the National Guard, invited her to a training day to see the different roles of the Guard units.

“I remember watching the combat engineer do demolitions and I knew that’s how I wanted to serve our country,” she says.
As a combat engineer, Schlotte is trained to oversee demolitions, breach buildings, and clear rooms while looking for explosive devices. When Schlotte became a combat engineer, there were fewer than 15 females with the title in the U.S. Armed Forces.
The road to becoming South Dakota’s first female combat engineer was not easy. The role was just being opened up to females when Schlotte enlisted. Schlotte completed military basic training in 2016 between her junior and senior years of high school and returned a year later for more extensive training.
Schlotte chose to attend BHSU because the school offered the major she desired and, after growing up on a ranch in central South Dakota, she says she likes living in the Hills. Schlotte boards her horse in Spearfish.
As a member of the National Guard while also earning her degree, Schlotte works hard to manage her responsibilities – from coursework, to preparing for drills and missions. Schlotte says her commander is very supportive of education.
Schlotte also works in the Veterans’ Services Office at BHSU supporting other service members as they earn their degrees.
“I’ve had so many opportunities because of BHSU,” says Schlotte. “I can see many connections in my classes, like sociology for example, about how people in society respond to situations that my soldiers may respond to in the same way. I’ve also enjoyed my ROTC leadership classes at BHSU.”
After earning her degree from BHSU, Schlotte will continue serving in the National Guard while building her career in protection and justice. She hopes to become a local police officer and then go into the Department of Criminals Investigations or U.S. Marshalls.
“I want to help and protect people,” she says.
Schlotte’s superiors note her exceptional contribution to missions and leadership, noting that she is often the first to volunteer for missions.
Her service to her community is exemplified by an incident that happened in June when Schlotte witnessed a motorcycle run off the road and into a barb-wire fence. She immediately ran to give emergency aid and assistance to the individual. Her supervisor said Schlotte was able to calmly assess the situation to prioritize immediate medical needs while keeping aware of the multiple hazards of the accident.
Schlotte received The Army Achievement Medal for her representation of the National Guard during this emergency event.
Although she insists she’s just “doing her job” and would prefer to be known as another key part the team, as the first female in her role in the state, Schlotte knows she has the opportunity to inspire other females and will confront challenges and obstacles in her role.  
“If you put your mind to it and you’re motivated - you can do absolutely anything,” says Schlotte. “It’s going to take a lot of hard work, and you might have to work a little harder, but if you really want it, you can achieve whatever they want to achieve.”

This story originally was printed in the BHSU BUZZ.