Brashear, Carl Maxie, BMCM

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
86 kb
View Shadow Box View Printable Shadow Box View Time Line
Last Rank
Master Chief Petty Officer
Last Primary NEC
BM-0000-Boatswain's Mate
Last Rating/NEC Group
Boatswain's Mate
Primary Unit
2003-2003, BM-0000, Naval Air Station (NAS) Norfolk, VA
Service Years
1948 - 1979
BM-Boatswain's Mate
Seven Hash Marks

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

41 kb


Home State
Kentucky
Kentucky
Year of Birth
1931
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Jeffery Matheny, ITC to remember Brashear, Carl Maxie, BMCM.

If you knew or served with this Sailor and have additional information or photos to support this Page, please leave a message for the Page Administrator(s) HERE.
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Tonieville
Last Address
Virginia Beach, VA
Date of Passing
Jul 25, 2006
 
Location of Interment
Woodlawn Memorial Gardens - Norfolk, Virginia

 Official Badges 




 Unofficial Badges 




 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Carl M. Brashear; Diver Persevered After Amputation

Written by Adam Bernstein, Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 28, 2006

 

Carl M. Brashear, 75, the Navy's first black master deep-sea diver and who later successfully fought to continue his undersea career after he became an amputee, died July 25 at the Naval Medical Center in Portsmouth, Va. He had respiratory and heart ailments.

Mr. Brashear made several efforts to interest filmmakers in his life story before Cuba Gooding Jr. played him in the 2000 film "Men of Honor." The film was generally true to Mr. Brashear's determination at work even as it overlooked his troubled marriages and alcoholism.

"I put my naval career ahead of my family life," he later said. "That's just the way it was, for better or worse."

A sharecropper's son with minimal formal schooling, Mr. Brashear joined the Navy in 1948 and endured years of racial taunts, even death threats, as he pushed ahead for what he hoped would be a glamorous diving career.

In 1966, he lost half of his left leg in a shipboard accident. After a long struggle in physical therapy and using an artificial leg, he became the Navy's first amputee diver. He retired in 1979 at the top enlisted rank of master chief petty officer.

Carl Maxie Brashear was born Jan. 19, 1931, in Tonieville, Ky. One of eight children, he left school after the seventh grade to help in his family's tobacco, corn and wheat fields. He also worked in a gas station in Sonora, Ky.

Hoping for more adventure, he tried to enlist in the Army in 1948 but was turned away -- months before a presidential order desegregating the armed forces. The Navy took Mr. Brashear but relegated him to the officers' mess.

While on an aircraft carrier in 1950, he saw a mission to salvage a fighter plane that had fallen overboard.

"A Navy diver with helmet and diving suit was sent out to the ship and went down about 50 feet to attach lines to the plane," Mr. Brashear once told a Norfolk reporter. "Everyone on ship was looking at him. No one had ever paid much attention to me. I immediately thought that diving was something I wanted to do."

He began sending letters requesting admission to the Navy salvage diving school, but his notes usually went missing or unanswered.

Although admitted to salvage diving school in 1954, he was constantly harassed by classmates, sometimes with direct threats on his life. He graduated the next year and became a salvage diver, retrieving sunken planes, ships and World War II torpedoes that he would sometimes have to detonate.

In 1960, he completed his general equivalency diploma and entered the Navy's deep-sea diving school in Washington. Mr. Brashear said he failed the school's science tests many times before buckling down and graduating in 1964.

Two years later, he was on the salvage ship USS Hoist off the southeastern coast of Spain. He was helping direct the recovery of a hydrogen bomb resting on a ledge 2,000 feet below the surface of the Mediterranean Sea; the plane ferrying the bomb had crashed in the sea.

During the recovery, a cable on the ship suddenly faltered and caused a steel pipe to tumble to the deck. Mr. Brashear shoved another sailor out of danger, but he was hit in the leg and suffered massive bleeding.

His leg was amputated at the naval hospital in Portsmouth. With support from the hospital commandant, he began a stressful physical therapy course that would allow him not only to resume his career, but also help him reach his ultimate goal of becoming the Navy's first black master diver.

He made dives in a 290-pound suit to depths of 200 feet and tended to his wounds himself to hide the severity of the bleeding.

"Sometimes I would come back from a run and my artificial leg would have a puddle of blood from my stump," he told an interviewer from the U.S. Naval Institute in 1989. "I wouldn't go to sick bay. In that year, if I had gone to sick bay, they would have written me up. . . . I'd go somewhere and hide and soak my leg in a bucket of hot water with salt in it -- an old remedy. Then I'd get up the next morning and run."

In 1967, he persuaded skeptical officials at the Navy's Bureau of Medicine to clear him for diving duty. He qualified in 1970 as a master diver.

After retiring from active duty, he spent several years involved in classified work for the Navy Department. After the biographic film came out in 2000, he was deluged with letters from amputees, and he answered them all. He also began giving inspirational lectures.

His marriages to Junetta Wilcoxson Brashear, Hattie Elam Brashear and Jeanette Brundage Brashear ended in divorce. A son from his first marriage, Shazanta Brashear, died in 1996.

Survivors include three sons from his first marriage, Dawayne Brashear of Newark, Patrick Brashear of Portsmouth and Phillip Brashear of Sandston, Va., a member of the Virginia Army National Guard now stationed in Iraq; three sisters; two brothers; 12 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

Source: carlbrashear.org/carlbrashear.html

   
Other Comments:


   

  1966-1967, BM-0000, Naval Hospital Portsmouth, VA

BM-Boatswain's Mate

From Month/Year
- / 1966

To Month/Year
- / 1967

Unit
Naval Hospital Portsmouth, VA Unit Page

Rank
Senior Chief Petty Officer

NEC
BM-0000-Boatswain's Mate

Base, Station or City
Portsmouth

State/Country
Virginia
 
 
 Patch
 Naval Hospital Portsmouth, VA Details

Naval Hospital Portsmouth, VA
Redesignated NMC Portsmouth As the U. S. Navy's oldest, continuously-operating hospital since 1830, Naval Medical Center Portsmouth (NMCP) proudly serves past and present military members and their families. The nationally acclaimed, state-of-the-art medical center, including its nine branch clinics located throughout the Hampton Roads area, additionally offers premier research and teaching programs designed to prepare new doctors, nurses and hospital corpsmen for future roles in healing and wellness. NMCP is a patient-driven TRICARE facility entrusted with the health readiness of the United States armed forces. Geographically located in the southeastern corner of the Commonwealth of Virginia, on historic Hospital Point in Portsmouth, Virginia, the main campus of NMCP is home to more than 5,000 men and women who provide healthcare services to the brave men and women of all our armed forces, their family members, and military retirees which is a daunting task accomplished with great skill and competency by the "First and Finest." Hampton Roads generally includes the cities of Newport News, Hampton, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, and Suffolk, and is populated with more than 1.5 million people. The region is homeport to the majority of the ships, aircraft, and Department of the Navy Sailors and Marines assigned to the Atlantic Fleet. Naval Medical Center Portsmouth is one of many regional commands that constitute the largest military concentration in the world.

Type
Communications
 

Parent Unit
Naval Hospital (NAVHOSP)/Navy Regional Medical Center (NRMC)/Naval Medical Center (NAVMEDCEN)/Naval

Strength
Hospital

Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Apr 5, 2007
   
Memories For This Unit

Other Memories
May 1966-March 1967

Naval Regional Medical Center, Portsmouth, Virginia

Treatment following the amputation of left leg below the knee

   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
Receiving His Navy and Marine Corps Medal
Brashear running with an artificial leg
49 Members Also There at Same Time
Naval Hospital Portsmouth, VA

Petre, William Ridgeway, CDR, (1944-1967) OFF 410X Commander
Mancuso, Frank, LCDR, (1956-1968) OFF 210X Lieutenant Commander
Davidson, Robin, CAPT, (1965-2005) OFF 210X Lieutenant
Pfannenstiel, James Dixon, CAPT, (1962-1985) OFF 410X Lieutenant
Doll, Henry, SCPO, (1958-1987) HM HM-8442 Petty Officer First Class
Bell, Dennis, PO2, (1963-1967) HM HM-8432 Petty Officer Second Class
Broadhurst, Ron, CDR, (1963-1988) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Creasy, Michael, PO2, (1966-1970) HM HM-8541 Petty Officer Second Class
Parker, Dennis, PO2, (1965-1969) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Second Class
Wykoff, Walter, MCPO, (1959-1990) HM HM-8483 Petty Officer Second Class
Bridgers, Callis, MCPO, (1964-1990) YN YN-2516 Petty Officer Third Class
Buchholtz, Paul, CPO, (1966-1994) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Gurley, Michael, PO3, (1962-1966) HM HM-8483 Petty Officer Third Class
Koerber, Kenneth, PO3, (1963-1971) HM HM-8485 Petty Officer Third Class
Longmore, Terri, PO3, (1966-1968) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
McCormick, William Livingston, PO2, (1966-1969) HM HM-8404 Petty Officer Third Class
Meaux, John, PO2, (1964-1971) HM HM-8489 Petty Officer Third Class
Miller, Richard, PO2, (1966-1969) HM HM-8404 Petty Officer Third Class
Morr, Brian, PO2, (1966-1969) HM HM-8404 Petty Officer Third Class
Richardson, Lawrence, PO2, (1964-1968) HM HM-8482 Petty Officer Third Class
Shehane, Claude, LCDR, (1966-1987) HM HM-8482 Petty Officer Third Class
Smith, Herb, PO3, (1966-1970) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Twiss, Dennis, PO3, (1965-1968) 00 HM-8404 Petty Officer Third Class
Willard, James, PO3, (1963-1967) HM HM-0000 Petty Officer Third Class
Aldrich, Stanley, PO2, (1966-1970) HM HM-0000 Seaman
DENNIS-LEIGH, DAVID, PO2, (1966-1970) HM HM-8483 Seaman
Rodriquez, Samuel Henri, HN, (1966-1968) HN HN-8404 Seaman
Barham, Carroll, CPO, (1966-1995) HM HM-8404 Hospitalman
Boatman, William, PO2, (1966-1969) HM HM-8404 Hospitalman
Gaughan, Rick, PO1, (1967-1988) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman
Glenn, Donald Nelson, HN, (1966-1968) HN HN-0000 Hospitalman
Phelps, David Clayton, HN, (1966-1967) HN HN-0000 Hospitalman
Pizarro, James, PO2, (1964-1968) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman
Ruger, Paul, PO2, (1966-1970) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman
Vaughan, Susan, HN, (1966-1969) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman
Wean, Doug, PO2, (1966-1971) HM HM-8404 Hospitalman
Wheeler, Terry, PO3, (1966-1970) HM HM-8404 Hospitalman
Ancog, Andrew, PO3, (1965-1972) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman Apprentice
Cohen, Stan, HN, (1967-1971) HA HA-0000 Hospitalman Apprentice
Rigsby, Lenzie, HR, (1963-1967) HM HM-0000 Hospitalman Recruit
Hicks, David, PO3, (1963-1967) Petty Officer Third Class
Clarke, Sr, James, PO2, (1965-1968) Hospitalman
Eckert, Richard, PO2, (1965-1969) Hospitalman
Markovich, John, PO2, (1966-1970) Hospitalman
Jacobs, Larry, PO3, (1965-1969) Hospitalman Apprentice
Elwood, Barry K., MCPO, (1966-1993) Hospitalman
Martin, Robert, PO3, (1967-1970) Hospitalman Apprentice
Boone Clinic (NHC)

Roberts, Terry, HN, (1965-1971) HN HN-0000 Hospitalman
Fleet Hospital 5

Lowa, David, HN, (1965-1967) HN HN-0000 Hospitalman

Copyright Togetherweserved.com Inc 2003-2011