Runners take to APG-South Streets for ECBC Gas Mask Dash

Event pays tribute to legacy of warfighter protection.

DEVCOM Chemical Biological Center Public Affairs
April 27th, 2017

Over 250 runners from the APG community start off ECBC's Gas Mask 5K Run/Walk in CAPA Field. See more photos from this event on the ECBC Flickr Page

More than 250 runners and walkers turned out for ECBC Gas Mask Dash five-kilometer race and two-mile walk on Thursday, April 27.

The event was part of ECBC’s year-long 100th anniversary celebration. Wearing gas mask T-shirts, participants started at CAPA Field and ran or walked a course that meandered through the Edgewood Area of Aberdeen Proving Ground.

Instead of firing a starting gun, ECBC Research and Technology Director Eric L. Moore, Ph.D., started the race by sounding a vintage 1942 M-1 gas attack alarm. The gas mask theme was a tribute to Edgewood Arsenal’s legacy of gas mask design and production starting in World War I. These masks have protected American Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines on the battlefield for a century, and today, ECBC is busy designing a new generation of masks using advanced technology.

The event was open to the public. The top overall finishers plus the top runners in the various age groups received commemorative medallions. The overall winner, who came in at a blistering time of 17 minutes and 59 seconds and a pace of 5:51 per mile, was Zach Zander, an ECBC research chemist. The fastest woman, at 20:15, was Madison Haas, an analytical chemist at the U.S. Army Public Health Command. An 8-year-old, Abigail Horsmon, daughter of two ECBC research biologists, won the 19 and under category with a time of 25:54, beating many older runners.

The winners in each age category of the Gas Mask 5K are flanked by ECBC directors Eric Moore, Ph.D. and Paul Tannenbaum, Ph.D.. See more photos from this event on the ECBC Flickr Page
The winners in each age category of the Gas Mask 5K are flanked by ECBC directors Eric Moore, Ph.D. and Paul Tannenbaum, Ph.D.. See more photos from this event on the ECBC Flickr Page.

“I’ve been running competitively since my junior year of high school and ran my first marathon when I was a senior,” said Zander. “Now I run at lunchtime with a group of runners from ECBC and several other Edgewood Area Army commands. Half of us were in the race, so it was fun to run with them in a race setting, and to run with a great community of people in remembrance of our heritage.”

ECBC will continue to hold a 100th anniversary celebration event each month for the remainder of 2017. On May 24, U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command Historian Jeff Smart will give a lecture at Berger Auditorium. On June 15, ECBC will hold a centennial celebration in front of Building E-3400. It will include the presentation of items to place in an ECBC time capsule and the unveiling of the design of a statue to be placed there in early 2018. Click here more information on ECBC’s 100th anniversary events.

See more photos from today’s event on our Flickr page.


The U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command, known as DEVCOM, is Army Futures Command’s leader and integrator within a global ecosystem of scientific exploration and technological innovation. DEVCOM expertise spans eight major competency areas to provide integrated research, development, analysis and engineering support to the Army and DOD. From rockets to robots, drones to dozers, and aviation to artillery, DEVCOM innovation is at the core of the combat capabilities American Warfighters need to win on the battlefield of the future. For more information, visit devcom.army.mil.

The DEVCOM Chemical Biological Center is the primary DOD technical organization for non-medical chemical and biological defense. The DEVCOM Chemical Biological Center fosters research, development, testing and application of technologies for protecting our military from chemical and biological warfare agents. The Center possesses an unrivaled chemical biological defense research and development infrastructure staffed by a highly-trained, multidisciplinary team of scientists, engineers, technicians and specialists located at four different sites in the United States: Edgewood Area of Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland; Pine Bluff Arsenal, Arkansas; Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois; and Dugway Proving Ground, Utah.

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