One of my earliest memories of Dad is from the first of two periods living in Middletown, Rhode Island, across the inlet from Newport. I would have been about five or so, and had just gone to bed. Dad came in to kiss me goodnight, and I remember how rough his chin felt against my cheek as he did this, and how soft that feeling was. A tender man, and a stern one. From that same period: I was outside in the yard playing with my cap pistol, and I must have pointed it at someone, perhaps my brother Blackie, perhaps at Dad himself, who very sternly told me that it didn’t matter that it was a toy gun, if I ever pointed it at anyone again, he would take it from me.
Three or four years later, for my eighth birthday, he bought me a single-shot .22 caliber rifle, sawed an inch or two off the butt so it would fit my young arms, and began to teach me to shoot. He was a strict, demanding, and unrelenting teacher, and a good one. We moved that year to Ankara Turkey where he was stationed as an attache to the Turkish navy–“spying on the Russians,” he used to say–at a desk job (mostly desk; there were mysterious journeys away from his desk to unidentified places), which gave us time on weekends for rifle shooting. We would go outside the city to an area where a dirt bank provided a safe backstop. Dad would dig small holes in the dirt to hold my elbows in place, and grind my hand and arm into the sling-supported prone position. I remember that it was painful. Dad’s instruction was precise and exacting, and by the time we were back in the states, at the target range on the island, I slung naturally into prone, and the other positions, with confidence and without any pain. By the time I finished high school I had gone through the entire marksmanship course offered by the NRA, and earned my Distinguished Rifleman badge. I was shooting in state-wide competitions, and one year came in second place in the Maine State Smallbore Championship, behind our friend and neighbor, Irving Merry. I would never have progressed this far without Dad, who was, to my young eyes, nothing less than a champion teacher. He was supremely confident in his knowledge and expertise (he was an expert shot himself), and in teaching mode he inspired another kind of confidence, confidence in his love and concern for me as his son.
I wish I knew more about Dad’s background. Growing up, I knew he had been born and raised in Des Moines, that his father had died when he was, I heard, thirteen. It was said that my grandfather had been a cabinet-maker, and Dad’s skill at wood-working certainly bore this out. Growing up during the Great Depression was hard, I remember hearing, with little money. His widowed mother earned a living, in part at least, by giving music lessons (she was an accomplished pianist and composer). I heard he sang treble in an Episcopal choir in Des Moines. He told us about the packets of yellow die that used to come with margarine, to be used to make it look like butter. He told us about the poor boys’ entertainments of those days, such as rolling down hill inside large tires. But I wish I knew more, and there is probably some, if not much, that I heard growing up which I’ve now forgotten.
I did know my grandmother, Grandma Jeanne, later, when she came to live with us in Maine after we moved to The Island in 1959. She was an eccentric woman with, as we would say today, “issues,” a hard woman, a female Captain Ahab of the household, with no white whale other than her own demands, and, in my limited teenage judgment, no eyes for the feelings or concerns of others. When Mom would say that Dad “was the way he was” because his mother had shown him little regard as a child, I understood what she meant. “The way he was” referred to Dad’s growing disinclination to compromise in family struggles, his increasing self-isolation, especially after he retired from the Navy at the young age of forty-three.
But I am seventy as I write this, and have little stomach for describing the hard edges of my father’s character, or of his mother’s. I come to understand the meaning of that fifth commandment, honor thy father and thy mother. It comes with a promise, that honoring, the promise “that your days may be long in the land that the Lord is giving you.” In recalling the best that Dad was, and that he gave, I feel at home and alive in the life the Lord gives me now.
Dad joined the Navy when he was very young, at least by today’s standards. In the fabled Royal Navy of the days of sail, young men went to sea as midshipmen when they were scarcely out of short pants. In Dad’s day they were more likely to be out of high school. There was a rumor that Dad had lied about his age and joined up at seventeen, but I never knew whether that was true. (Mom was, like the girl in Saki’s story “The Open Window,” adept at “romance at short notice,” and she had a tendency to believe her romances were factual. This may have been one of those romances, or perhaps that notion is something my own imagination is creating.) His first ship was the battleship Texas, but he sailed before the mast for only a few years, because by the time he was twenty-three, some five years later, he had graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy with the class of ’39, with a commission in the Naval Reserve. He had earned a “fleet appointment” to the Academy by passing a battery of tests. (His older brother John had won the political appointment; this made Dad ineligible for the same.)
I don’t know much about his time at Annapolis. The one story I remember is that he was chosen for the color guard at graduation because he had never fainted on the parade ground during drill, and there are pictures of him, in his yearbook, parading the colors during that ceremony. His time in the reserves was short. I don’t know when he went active, but we were at war two years later, so it would not have been long after he was commissioned. He served in combat, and as far as I know, for the duration of the war, most notably as skipper of PC1263 during the Normandy invasion.
I have no memory of Dad until after the war, and still have virtually no memory of his naval career until he was stationed in U.S.S. Fargo as chief gunnery officer. That would have been some time in the late 1940’s, when I was five or so. After that the record is fairly clear. We moved to The Island when I was seven, and at that time he was still on sea duty, I believe with the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean. Then from fall 1951 until spring 1954 he was on shore duty in Ankara, taking us with him. We returned to the States when he was posted to U.S.S. Preston, DD795, as commanding officer, living for a month in Key West while he attended destroyer school, then moving to Middletown for the second time, because Preston was sailing out of Newport.
Dad took ill with a bronchial condition some time the following year. I know little about the details, only that he required surgery and that this put him on sick leave long enough that he was relieved of his command. When he went back to sea, some time in 1955, he was in U.S.S. Coral Sea, CVA 43, flagship of Carrier Division Six, I think it was, as navigation officer on the admiral’s staff. As he was sailing out of Norfolk, we all moved to Virginia Beach in the fall of 1955 (we were spending summers on The Island and then moving in the fall, in time to start school wherever Dad was stationed). I attended seventh grade in Virginia Beach, having completed sixth grade in Middletown. (I had begun elementary school in Middletown in 1949. From there, I went to second grade in Newcastle Maine, in–this is not a cliche–a one-room school with eight grades, one teacher, and an outhouse in the back. I completed grades three through five in the American school in Ankara, the only time I was more than one year in a given school until beginning high school in 1957.)
In 1956 Dad was ordered to the United States Merchant Marine Academy at Kings Point on Long Island as Professor of Naval Science and, to the best of my knowledge, commanding officer of the NROTC unit there. We moved to Plainview in central Long Island and Dad commuted to Kings Point. Two and a half years later he retired from the Navy, and at the end of the school year in the spring of 1959, we moved to The Island as our year-round residence.
Dad was promoted to captain on his retirement, such promotion, with all benefits, being an honor then accorded to officers decorated in combat. But he and I never talked about his retirement. What I heard from Mom was only two things, that he had been passed over for captain, and had decided to retire rather than become junior to officers who had been his peers. I did hear rumors of his being offered a job at the Bath Iron Works, and this would certainly have been possible, as naval officers did sometimes become consultants in the defense industry. BIW was building–still builds–destroyers and Dad was a destroyer man, so it would have been a good fit. But I consider the rumor as belonging only to the realm of possibility. Dad was still a young man in terms of time in career, but I suspect that he was too much a sailor to think he’d ever be happy driving ships in dry dock.
So he retired to a remote farm house in Maine and began a second career, restoring antique sports cars. But that’s another blog. Here’s a poem Dad wrote on one of the more famous days in modern history.
6th June, 1944
My God, as on this day I sail into
The crucible of battle, take my hand,
And lead me on with courage to subdue
The mortal fear that I may not withstand
Death’s choiceless search. Grant me a steadfast will,
To prove the trust of men whom I command,
So that, if I return, I may fulfil,
With them, the end whose means are close at hand.
And give me strength to see my weaknesses.
In knowing them I may evaluate
The bigotries that cunningly suppress
The dignity of Man, and tolerate
Man’s individuality. If, here,
I die, then grant that I may live somewhere
Within the hearts of those whose love I share.
And say I was in death, as life, sincere.