A Thank You to One More Veteran
Before the day is over, I want to thank one more veteran for her sacrifice and military service. I’ve known her for a long time and know first hand how proud she was to serve her country.
She joined the U.S. Navy after high school over the objections of her father, who wanted her to finish college before considering military service, and spent five long years away from home as a cryptographer stationed in Adak, Alaska, Pearl Harbor and at sea. She held a Top Secret security clearance and handled Top Secret intelligence on a daily basis, the same kind of sensitive classified data that landed John Walker Jr. in federal prison for selling to the Soviets.
She spent months at sea, often shadowed for days by Russian ships. She became highly proficient with 9mm handguns, M-14s and M-16s, consistently taking top honors in shooting competitions. And for a time she worked in a military correctional institute in direct contact with prisoners.
Like all our deployed service men and women, she was sometimes homesick. But she was dedicated and did her job proudly and well.
Today she sometimes jokes about her Navy days - I think all vets do that from time to time - but what she was doing was serious and necessary. This Navy veteran, this woman I’m so very proud of, if you haven’t already guessed, is my daughter. Strong, determined and now with a family of her own, she continues to make me proud. Thank you, Shannon. Happy Veterans Day.
Reader Comments (8)
I was stationed at Pearl Harbor for a while. What years did your daughter serve there?
Thanks for your service, Shannon! Your dad is very proud of you.
I can tell you are very proud of your children and grandchildren. And I'm sure you were worried about your daughter when she was away. And at such a young age, too! God bless her and all our veterans who have served and are serving now. They are what keeps our country strong, and we owe them an immeasurable debt of gratitude.
Very nice tribute. You get a different kind of pride when your children follow in your footsteps, don't you?
Hi LittleJohn,
I was a Radioman stationed at Ford Island Pearl Harbor from...if I can remember correctly, late 86 to late 89. Funny too....my nickname there was Lilred! :)
I was at Hickam, left in 1985. Not bad duty. I knew some Navy on the island.
I would love to go back and visit as a civilian. Visited Maui and Kauai, probably go back to Maui one day.
I did some T.A.D. at Hickham. Worked at the military correctional facility there for a bit. I had to supervise inmates. That was interesting duty...quite a switch from what I usually did.
What a nice post, Doug, for your daughter. I don't care what everyone else says. You're OK!