
By Curtis Millner, Sr.
A high school masonry teacher looked at the son of a house painter, saw potential, and planted the first stone. A few years later, the young man was asked to lead the worst platoon in the worst company at Fort Bragg. Most would have called it a career dead-end. But Dennis Via called it an opportunity. From that broken platoon, he built a foundation that would eventually make him the only Signal Corps officer in U.S. Army history to ever wear four stars.
Dennis L. Via—the boy from the textile mills of Martinsville, Virginia, who one day would become one of the highest-ranking African American officers in American military history.
The Boy Who Almost Didn’t Go to College
Dennis L. Via was born in 1958 in the small industrial town of Martinsville, Virginia. His father, Henry, was a house painter with a fifth grade education. His mother, Margaret, was a homemaker. Dennis grew up watching his father work with his hands, and he planned to follow in his footsteps—maybe own a construction company someday. College was not part of the plan.
Then a high school masonry teacher named Edward Fontaine stepped in. “Mr. Fontaine told me, ‘I think you should go to college. You are a leader,’” Via later recalled. “It was the first time I was ever called a leader”. Fontaine helped fill out the paperwork for Virginia State University, a historically Black school in Petersburg.
Via entered on probation. He was the first person in his family to go to college.
During his freshman year, tragedy struck. His father died suddenly. “That was the first time adversity had hit me,” Via said. He and his brother finished every painting job his father had promised to do. “My father always taught us that your word is your bond”.
Back at Virginia State for his sophomore year, Via wandered into the student union and started talking to two Army officers. They told him about ROTC camp in Kentucky—a plane ticket, $500, and a chance to go to camp. “A plane ticket, $500, and I get to go to camp—I thought where do I sign up?” In May 1980, he graduated as a Distinguished Military Graduate and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Signal Corps.
The “Worst Platoon in the Worst Company”
Via’s first assignment was to lead the 3rd Platoon, A Company, 25th Signal Battalion at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. It was widely known as the worst platoon in the worst company. “The majority of my platoon had been given the choice of join the Army or go to jail,” Via recalled.
He was 22 years old. He didn’t ask for a transfer. He went to work.
“It was probably the best leadership devolving assignment that I’ve had,” he said. He turned the platoon around. He earned his jump wings—even negotiating to take leave so he could attend airborne school. Over the years, he held a string of demanding command positions: 82nd Signal Battalion (82nd Airborne Division), 3rd Signal Brigade (III Armored Corps), 5th Signal Command in Europe, and ultimately the U.S. Army Communications Electronics Command (CECOM).
The First and Only Signal Corps Four Star
By August 2012, Via was a lieutenant general serving as Deputy Commanding General of Army Materiel Command (AMC)—a $50 billion global logistics organization with more than 140,000 soldiers and civilians in 144 countries. That month, President Barack Obama nominated him for promotion to general, the Army’s highest rank.
At the promotion ceremony at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, Via’s predecessor, General Ann E. Dunwoody, made a historic announcement: “Lt. Gen. Via is the first ever signal officer in the history of the Army to ever be promoted to 4 star”. For 36 years, no Signal Corps officer had risen above three stars. Via broke that ceiling—and remains the only Signal Corps officer to ever wear four stars.
From August 2012 to September 2016, Via served as the 18th Commanding General of the U.S. Army Materiel Command. He oversaw a workforce of more than 120,000 people with an annual budget of $50 billion.
His most difficult operational challenge came in 2011, when he deployed to Southwest Asia as commander of the AMC Responsible Reset Task Force, leading the strategic retrograde of all military equipment out of Iraq at the conclusion of Operation New Dawn. Among his lasting contributions was founding the U.S. Strategic Command’s Joint Task Force Global, a pioneering cybersecurity defense organization.
Family: “My Greatest Accomplishment”
General Via consistently said that his greatest achievement wasn’t a star—it was his family. He met his wife, Linda A. Brown, at Virginia State University. She pinned on his second lieutenant bars in 1980 and was there to pin on his fourth star 32 years later. They have two sons, Brian and Bradley.
“We committed early on to maintain balance between professional and family life, and I think that’s our greatest achievement,” Via said in a 2016 interview. “I would not be here today without the love and support she has provided me throughout my career”.
Recognition and Retirement
Via retired from the Army on September 30, 2016, after more than 36 years of service. He is one of only twelve African American four star generals in the Army’s 248 year history.
His awards include the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, the Army Distinguished Service Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Defense Superior Service Medal, and the Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster. He also wears the Master Parachutist Badge, the Joint Staff Identification Badge, and the Army Staff Identification Badge.
After retirement, Via became an executive vice president at Booz Allen Hamilton, where he leads firmwide corporate engagement. He also serves on the Virginia State University Board of Visitors, giving back to the institution that gave him his start.
What Dennis Via Knew
General Via often credited Edward Fontaine, the high school masonry teacher who saw a leader in a young man who couldn’t see it himself. “Mr. Fontaine epitomizes that one person can make a difference in your life,” Via said at his promotion ceremony. “It’s not about me today, it is about the impact all of us can make on someone in our lives”.
From a probationary college student to a four star general, from a broken platoon to commanding the largest logistics enterprise in the Department of Defense, Dennis Via never stopped believing that “your word is your bond” and that education, family, and perseverance can carry you farther than any title.
He didn’t just make history. He proved that a foundation built by a teacher’s faith and a father’s example can withstand any storm.




