Paralympics Archives - 91Ƶ News /now/news/tag/paralympics/ News from the 91Ƶ community. Fri, 06 Mar 2026 18:32:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 DSS Special Agent Hannah Patterson ’14 protects America’s athletes at 2026 Olympics and Paralympics /now/news/2026/dss-special-agent-hannah-patterson-14-protects-americas-athletes-at-2026-olympics-and-paralympics/ /now/news/2026/dss-special-agent-hannah-patterson-14-protects-americas-athletes-at-2026-olympics-and-paralympics/#comments Thu, 05 Mar 2026 23:50:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=60705 When Team USA’s athletes took to the ice at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in Italy last month, alumna Hannah Patterson ’14 was there to keep them safe.

Patterson is a special agent with the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service (DSS). She was one of more than 50 special agents assigned to protect America’s athletes and teams as they trained, competed, and traveled to media appearances.

The writing studies grad, who excelled as a cross-country and track athlete at 91Ƶ, worked as a field liaison officer at the ice rinks in Milan, where she safeguarded USA’s figure skaters, hockey teams, and speed skaters, including gold medalists Ilia Malinin, Alysa Liu, and Jordan Stolz.

“Part of being there is taking time to observe the crowd and ensure everything’s secure and all set-up,” said Patterson. “But it’s also a lot of sport-watching and cheering on Team USA and hoping the athletes you’ve been with do well.”

“Figure skating was phenomenal. I was in awe of what they’re able to do. But the crowd with the biggest atmosphere, I think, was probably men’s and women’s hockey. It was a very exhilarating environment. It was hard not to get caught up and feel the roar of the crowd cheering on the teams.” 


Hannah Patterson ’14, a special agent with the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service, worked a “pretty intense schedule” at the 2026 Winter Olympics, often starting her workday at 7 a.m. to protect athletes while they trained and working well past midnight for competitions that ended late.


‘It’s just one big adventure’

Born in Singapore to parents involved in community development work, Patterson moved with her family to Indonesia when she was 12. She attended Mountainview International Christian School. It was there she learned one of her classmates, nursing grad David Jantzi ’13, whose parents were alumni, had his sights set on attending 91Ƶ.

“I ended up applying on a whim,” said Patterson, “and I’m so grateful I did.”

She said one of the major draws to 91Ƶ was that its financial aid office was “so proactive” in telling her which grants and awards were available. “91Ƶ was such an obviously tight-knit community that cared, even before I showed up, and that just followed through over the next four years,” she said. “Looking back now, I wouldn’t have done as well at a big state school where I would’ve felt like just a number. My professors were always there for me, and I loved that about 91Ƶ.”

Another draw was its intercultural programs. Patterson immersed herself in the cultures of South Africa and Lesotho for a semester and said she treasures 91Ƶ’s global focus.

“I love the sense of adventure that 91Ƶ carries with it,” she said. “That’s something I feel almost every day on the job. It’s just one big adventure, and every day is a cross-cultural experience.”


Hannah Patterson ’14 (pictured third from left), a cross-country and track athlete at 91Ƶ, said her coaches ensured she was growing and finding her place in the world. “I loved being on a team that was incredibly supportive, and I think my teammates, coaches, and track and cross-country teams really shaped me as a person, pushed me, and helped me grow. In a school that is so community-focused, it was nice to have an even tighter group to grow and dream with.”

Patterson graduated with a writing studies degree in 2014 (right photo). She said her intercultural experiences in South Africa (left photo) and Lesotho, along with the mentorship she received from professors, helped shape her love of adventure. “It’s a huge thing to be able to travel as much as I do and I am very grateful for it,” she said.


Landing the job

After graduating in 2014, Patterson was working at Black Sheep Coffee in Harrisonburg when she mentioned to a coworker she was seeking a career change. Unbeknownst to her, that coworker’s husband was a DSS agent working at a training center in West Virginia, and she suggested that Patterson would be a good fit for the job, based on her experience growing up overseas and her love of adventure.

“I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I knew I wanted it to be relational,” Patterson said. “Along with the daily problem-solving and micro-challenges I enjoy, I’m very grateful this job exists, that I’m able to do it, and that I had a lot of good mentors at 91Ƶ along the way to encourage me.”

Patterson worked at the training center (now known as the ) for a half-decade, before applying and landing a job as a . She began training in July 2021 and, after a rigorous training process, officially became an agent in April 2022.

Since then, she’s built up an impressive foreign service career. She worked in Kyiv, Ukraine, for three months during the war. She also served at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad for one year.

Last year, Patterson interviewed for her current role as an agent at the Major Events Coordination Office, which secures international events such as the G7 and G20 summits, Pan American Games, and FIFA World Cup, in addition to the Olympics and Paralympics. When she learned she had been selected to join the office, she said she was “out-of-this-world thrilled.”

“It can be quite competitive, and I was very excited that I get to do this for the next two years (DSS agents typically switch offices every one to three years),” said Patterson. “Next year, we’ll have the Pan American Games and the Women’s World Cup, which will be in Brazil.”


This month, Hannah Patterson ’14 will help protect Team USA’s athletes as they train and compete at the 2026 Winter Paralympics, held in Milan and Cortina, Italy, from March 6-15.


Patterson, who has been in Italy since Jan. 27, will also keep watch over America’s athletes during the 2026 Winter Paralympics, held in Milan and Cortina from March 6-15. She’ll serve as one of the special agents staffing a DSS Joint Operations Center at the U.S. Consulate in Milan.

She took advantage of the four-day break in between training for the Olympics and Paralympics to explore the mountains of northern Italy. Inspired by the athletes she watched during the Olympics, she learned to ski for the first time.

“I never thought of this as a career option when I was going to school,” said Patterson. “I remember telling my poetry professor, Michael Ann Courtney, ‘I’m going to be a starving artist for the rest of my life,’ and she told me, ‘No, Hannah, don’t worry. The world is so much bigger than that.’ And it turns out she was right.”

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91Ƶ grad guides Paralympians in Paris /now/news/2024/emu-grad-guides-paralympians-in-paris/ Mon, 21 Oct 2024 13:55:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=57873 Philip Watson Jr. ’16 says his experiences at 91Ƶ sparked a passion for service—a passion that continues to this day. The Philadelphia native recently returned from the 2024 Summer Paralympics held in Paris, where he helped athletes on the Liberian team perform at their best. 

A former track sprinter at 91Ƶ, Watson serves as a guide runner for a visually impaired sprinter from Liberia (who couldn’t make the trip to Paris) and helped train an amputee javelin thrower and amputee shot put thrower on the team. 

And although neither of the two Liberians competing at this year’s Paralympics, Angie Myers and Jutomu Kollie, medaled in their events, Myers qualified for the shot put finals, which is an impressive achievement for the developing team. 

“They did as well as they could with the limited resources and training they had,” said Watson, who advocates for more support of the Paralympic athletes. “Getting to know them and see their hard work pay off was incredibly fulfilling.”

Path to the Paralympics

When he’s not training Paralympians, Watson works as a residential area director at Millersville University in Pennsylvania. 

Philip Watson Jr. ’16, 200m/400m specialist, competes at an indoor track meet. (91Ƶ file photo)

Before graduating from 91Ƶ with a psychology degree and Cords of Distinction honors in 2016, he interned at the Boys & Girls Clubs of Harrisonburg and Rockingham County to satisfy a requirement for his major. That internship led to a staff position at the organization. After graduating, Watson was promoted to unit director and led the club for two years.

“If it hadn’t been for that class requiring community service hours, I probably wouldn’t have gotten the opportunity to step outside my comfort zone and get into the mindset of doing what I can do to help others,” he said. 

Watson, a U.S. citizen whose parents emigrated from Liberia in the 1980s, initially sought to join the Liberian national track and field team ahead of the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. When that dream failed to materialize, he found another. He learned that former 91Ƶ track teammate had been chosen as a guide runner for the U.S. Paralympic team and sprang into action, researching as much as he could about Liberia’s Paralympic team and contacting its organizer. He began working with the team in 2019 to prepare for the Tokyo Paralympics (held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic).


Learn more about Watson’s beginnings with the Liberian Paralympic team in this August 2021 article from 91Ƶ News.


Watson hopes to continue guiding and training the athletes for the 2028 Summer Paralympics in Los Angeles. “If they make it to LA, I’ll be there to support them every step of the way,” he said.

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