RECOGNIZING THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF DIVERSE U.S. COAST GUARD SERVICE MEMBERS ON THE U.S. COAST GUARD'S 229TH BIRTHDAY; Congressional Record Vol. 165, No. 127
(Extensions of Remarks - July 26, 2019)
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[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1003]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF DIVERSE U.S. COAST GUARD SERVICE
MEMBERS ON THE U.S. COAST GUARD'S 229TH BIRTHDAY
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HON. J. LUIS CORREA
of california
in the house of representatives
Friday, July 26, 2019
Mr. CORREA. Madam Speaker, I rise today to ask the House of
Representatives to join me in recognizing the U.S. Coast Guard on its
upcoming 229th birthday on August 4, 2019. In honor of this significant
occasion, I would like to particularly recognize the contributions of
Coast Guard men and women from diverse and underrepresented
communities. They have fought for our country in times of war and
rescued thousands in time of peace. ``Semper Paratus'' is the U.S.
Coast Guard motto, and regardless of the day, time, or crisis, they
have always been ready.
Such U.S. Coast Guard members include James Leftwich, a member of the
Chickasaw nation. In 1943, Mr. Leftwich enlisted in the U.S. Coast
Guard. He was 14 years of age and the youngest enlistee. Two years
later, he was wounded at the Battle of Eniwetok. Mr. Letwich recovered
and continued to serve in the U.S. Coast Guard until 1964.
Master Chief Melvin Kealoha Bell, a native Hawaiian, joined the Coast
Guard in 1938. Stationed at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, Mr. Bell
transmitted the first radio message warning vessels and military
institutions of the attack on Pearl Harbor. He then served as a member
of the Navy's Fleet Radio Unit Pacific and helped break the secret
Japanese Imperial Navy code that led to U.S. Navy victories in the
Pacific.
Myrtle Rae Holthaus Hazard Gambrill was the first woman to serve on
active duty in the U.S. Coast Guard. She joined on January 7, 1918,
before women could vote. Ms. Gambrill served as an electrician at Coast
Guard headquarters and was honorably discharged in November 1919.
Olivia Hooker, Dorothy Winifred Byrd, Julia Watson Mosley Shields,
Aileen Anita Cooke Moore, and Yvonne Cumberbatch were the first five
African-American women to serve as Coast Guard service members during
World War II, as part of the ``Semper Paratus, Always Ready'' (SPARs)
program. Dr. Hooker was the first one in this group to enlist in the
U.S. Guard in February 1945, and she was one of the last known
survivors of the Tulsa race riots of 1921 .
Their sister SPARs included other trailblazers: Cuban-American Mary
Rivero and Filipina-American Florence Finch Smith. Ms. Smith joined the
SPARs after surviving torture and incarceration at the hands of the
Japanese during the occupation of the Philippines.
Admiral Vivian Crea, former Vice Commandant, is the highest-ranking
woman in Coast Guard history. Admiral Crea joined the service in 1973,
and in 2000, she became the first female Admiral in the U.S. Coast
Guard. Admiral Crea was selected as Vice Commandant in 2006.
Master Chief Vince Patton became the highest ranking African-American
Coast Guard enlisted member when he was selected in 1998 to be the
Eighth Master Chief Petty Officer of the U.S. Coast Guard. He was the
senior enlisted advisor on workforce and personnel issues.
Henry Garcia, born in Puerto Rico, became the first underrepresented
minority to receive an officer's commission in 1928. Ten years later in
1938, he took command of the Coast Guard Cutter Morris and became the
first Hispanic-American to command a Coast Guard cutter.
In 1991, Katherine Faverey took command of Coast Guard Cutter
Bainbridge Island, becoming the first Hispanic-American woman to
command a cutter.
Happy birthday, U.S. Coast Guard. You consist of a diverse group of
men and women, and your diversity has been essential to your success.
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