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Carl Brashear dies
Fordboy
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Auckland, New Zealand
Joined: July 13, 2004
KitMaker: 2,169 posts
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Posted: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 - 07:59 PM UTC
Hi

Carl Brashear the retired master chief was 75 years old and became famous after actor Cuba Gooding jr portrayed him in the movie "Men of Honor".

Here is the Chief of Naval Operations Statement on BMCM Carl Brashear's passing:

"Every Sailor in our Navy joins me today in mourning the death of Master Chief Boatswain’s Mate (Master Diver) Carl M. Brashear, as true an American hero as ever lived. We extend to his family our thoughts, prayers and deepest sympathies.
It would be easy in remembering his incredible life to focus on one aspect or another - his humble, yet proud, beginnings in rural Kentucky; the discrimination he suffered at the hands of racist superiors and colleagues; the list of all the “firsts” he accomplished in the dangerous world of Navy diving; the raw, physical courage he exhibited in overcoming what would be for many a debilitating injury.
But focusing only on such things would be shortsighted. For in doing so we obscure from history and from our heritage the real greatness of the man. We must - as he always did - look at the whole, not at the parts.
Carl Brashear wasn’t just a trailblazing African-American. He wasn’t just a superb and skilled diver. He was a good husband and father...a patriot...a leader. He was a friend who friends cherished, and a Sailor who Sailors admired. He represented in his poise and in his character something larger and more dignified than the trappings of military rank and position, no matter how hard-earned they proved to be.
Put simply, Carl Brashear was the very best of men. He was living proof that, in a world which can at times be unfair and uncompromising, persistence and sheer determination trumps all. He once recalled wryly during an interview that, as a chief petty officer dive instructor, his young students bemoaned the fact that Brashear simply “had no quitting sense.” He was as tough on them as he was on himself.
And that, I believe, is his greatest legacy - the one thing we ought never to forget about this remarkable naval hero. He leaves behind many terrific and improbable accomplishments, but the greatest is his example of toughness and leadership. It says all we really need to know about him.

Carl Brashear made us all better, and we - as a Navy and as a nation - are going to miss him sorely.
"

Rest in Peace Master Chief

Regards


Sean
BM2
#151
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Virginia, United States
Joined: November 19, 2005
KitMaker: 1,361 posts
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Posted: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 - 08:09 PM UTC
Fair winds following Seas Master Chief-
http://www.nps.gov/fols/bugle/taps.wav
http://www.npc.navy.mil/NR/rdonlyres/83B29C89-3827-439A-9FFC-8149519D6320/0/BMCSecureGeneralQuarters.mp3


thathaway3
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Michigan, United States
Joined: September 10, 2004
KitMaker: 1,610 posts
Model Shipwrights: 566 posts
Posted: Monday, July 31, 2006 - 05:05 AM UTC
Indeed a sad day. He was quite an inspiration and a man who wouldn't let either prejudice or a significant physical challenge stop him from acheiving his goals. The world has lost a fine man.

Tom
skipper
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Lisboa, Portugal
Joined: February 28, 2002
KitMaker: 5,182 posts
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Posted: Monday, July 31, 2006 - 03:50 PM UTC
Fair winds and God speed!

It's the least I can say
Skipper
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