Editor’s note: The below Fort Knox News story appeared in the June 21 Exchange Post. On July 26, Spectrum News Louisville reported on the plant, interviewing manager Teresa Green as well as Veteran and military-spouse associates working at the plant.
You can watch the video here.
Millions of service members from every military branch of service can trace their names back to one location.
Their names are not traced in the ancestral sense, however, but rather physically by a small team of workers at the Army & Air Force Exchange Service Name Tape Plant, in an unassuming nondescript facility at Fort Knox.
Plant manager Teresa Green receives hundreds of orders a day from all over the world in her email inbox. As the only Exchange facility of its kind, Green said, the operation is responsible for filling requests from 197 Military Clothing stores throughout the United States as well as an additional 20 overseas.

โWe [make] all the uniform tagsโthe branch and the namesโfor the Army, Air Force, Navy, Marines, Coast Guard and Space Force,โ said Green. โWe do all the embroidery and the name tags for dress uniforms, too.โ
The facility is composed of numerous automated machines designed to embroider and engrave, as well as stations where employees perform tasks such as applying Velcro, hand-painting metal tags and preparing items for shipment.
โRight now, we do about 200 to 220 orders every day and thereโs up to 20 names per order,โ said Green. โWeโre producing about 3,000 pieces a day, and a lot of it is hands-on manual work.โ
Although production levels vary, with busier times near the beginning and end of the month coinciding with military pay dates, Green said the facility averages about 50,000 units each month. However, one situation arises every so often that creates a significant surge in orders.
โWhen we have a uniform change like a few years ago, weโre really working,โ said Green. โI had to have two shifts then. Weโd work six, even seven days a weekโjust whatever we had to do to support our troops.โ
Green explained that a lot goes into preparing for a uniform change. She said as a certified facility, the plant is required to submit a drawing of the new tag layout before they can begin production.
โWe have to get approved to make these. Itโs not just something you can do in a day,โ said Green. โWe have to receive approval from the Institute of Heraldry out of Fort Belvoir in Virginia.โ

Once approved, Green said, they can move forward with creating products that service members will be able to know are verifiably accurate. That isnโt always the case if they purchase them from anywhere aside from a designated Military Clothing store.
โIf you go outside the gate and get something made there,โ said Green, โitโs not guaranteed itโs going to be certified.โ
Green, who will celebrate her 26th year at the plant this August, said the facility has been producing certified embroidered and printed tags at Fort Knox for nearly four decades.
โOur plant first opened at Fort Knox in 1985,โ said Green. โOur previous manager was here over 30 years and I worked under her from 1997 until 2018. Iโm only the second manager of this facility ever.โ
The products coming out of the plant may travel all over the world and be worn by countless service members, but the number of people behind the operation couldnโt fill one full name tape order sheet.
โI only have 18 people here and most of them have been here for years,โ said Green. โWeโre kind of like a small family.โ
The plant team members have a combined 240 years of experience.
Lynn Markham, another longtime plant associate who is in charge of quality control and shipping orders, is often referred to as โHawkeyeโ by her teammates. She and another associate approve every single piece before it gets packaged and shipped.
Markham said any time she sees someone in uniform, she zeroes right in on the lettering across the front: โI can take one look at a name tape and know if itโs ours.โ
Green agreed with Markham, saying her crew truly has production down to a science. However, she attributed their dedication to something more than just expertise.
โEverybody loves their country here,โ said Green. โEverybody has great respect for the military. Theyโre all affiliated in some way. Most are either retired or the spouse of a retiree. They stay here because they love it.โ
For the thousands of U.S. service members who put on a uniform every day, Green said, they can be assured that if their name was embroidered at the facility, they can count on it being done with honor.
โYou want it to look perfect and you try your best,โ said Green. โYou want to be proud that you made that because they sacrifice their lives for us.
โThatโs how we feel.โ
This story originally appeared in the Fort Knox News.


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