The Benjamin Guard was built by people who spent careers in environments where standards aren't aspirational — they're operational. Air Force Special Warfare. Global Response Staff. State Department Anti-Terrorism. The people who built this facility learned their standards in places where the wrong answer gets people killed.
That experience doesn't retire. It gets passed on. And that's what The Benjamin Guard is — a transfer of doctrine from people who've used it to people who want to learn it.
We didn't build a range. We built a standard.
The Work Is Real
Every drill has a purpose. Every debrief has a lesson. We don't run entertainment — we run training. If you show up and go through the motions, you're wasting your time and ours.
The Doctrine Is Verified
Nothing gets taught here that hasn't been validated in the field. Our instructors don't teach theory. They teach what they've used, what they've seen, and what they know works when the situation is real.
The Standard Doesn't Move
We don't adjust the standard to match the student. The student adjusts to match the standard. That's not harsh — it's honest. And it's the only way the training actually means something.
Every Environment. Every Discipline.
Vehicle. Shoot house. Long range. Medical. Fitness under load. The Benjamin Guard trains the whole operator — not just the part that's easy to train.
The Name Means Something
Benjamin Milam stormed San Antonio with 300 volunteers against a fortified position. He didn't wait for permission. He didn't wait for perfect conditions. He asked who would come with him — and he went. That question still applies. Who will come with old Ben Milam?
Anyone willing to be held to it.
Law enforcement. Military. Armed civilians. Corporate teams. First responders. Anyone who takes their own preparation seriously enough to show up and do the work.
We don't ask for your resume. We ask for your commitment to the standard while you're here.