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Daniel L Arnes, CMDCM
to remember
Whalen, Rodney N., LCDR.
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Contact Info
Home Town Negritos, Peru, SA
Last Address Tyler, TX
Date of Passing Feb 23, 2016
Location of Interment Barrancas National Cemetery (VA) - Pensacola, Florida
Rodney Whalen (1934 - 2016)
LCDR Rodney N. "Rod" Whalen USN (Ret.), of Tyler went to be with the Lord he loved on February 23, 2016. He was 81.
He was born on July 11, 1934 near the jungles of EI Centro, Columbia, SA and grew up in the northwest coastal desert of Negritos, Peru, SA. He was preceded in death by his parents, Tony and Ruth Mayfield Whalen of Magnolia, AR and by his late wife and mother of their children, Mary Jo Connor Whalen of Southington, CT.
He is survived by his wife Evelyn Baillio Lucero Whalen of Tyler: a son Stephen, his wife Carla, and their children Connor, Gregory, and Jane of Baton Rouge, LA; a daughter Mary Beth Petrakian and her children Anthony and Brett of Tyler; a daughter Jenny Merrill, her husband Chad, and their children Whalen and Drew of Birmingham, AL; Evelyn's children Joe and Patti Grace and daughter Samantha; Tab and Angela Werner and son Adam; Tony and Karen Lucero and their daughters Megan and Madelyn; sisters Nelda Fuller of Bald Knob, AR and Virginia Fager of Ben Wheeler; and several nieces and nephews.
He was a graduate of Magnolia (AR) High School where he was an honor graduate, a member of the National Honor Society, All-District and All-State football, and District and State tennis champion. He attended Southern State College (now Southern Arkansas University) where he was twice Arkansas Intercollegiate Conference singles and doubles tennis champion and represented the Southern District in the NAIA National Tennis Championships. In 2007, he was selected a Distinguished Alumni by Southern Arkansas University.
He graduated from LSU where he was a member of Sigma Chi Fraternity and was elected Outstanding Athlete; was a graduate of the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School; and received his Masters Degree from Empire State College, State University of New York, where he was named to Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges.
During, his Navy career, Mr. Whalen set the world altitude record in the H-25 type helicopter, was flag pilot aboard the cruiser USS Canberra and flew the line during the Cuban Quarantine; and was Helicopter pilot and Fire Team Leader flying Navy helicopter gunships in the Mekong Delta of South Vietnam and Cambodia. He earned the following military awards: Bronze Star with combat V, four Air Medals, two Navy Commendation Medals, Presidential Unit Citation, Meritorious Unit Citation, two National Defense Service Medals, Armed Forces Expedition Medal, Vietnam Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Medal, Vietnam Cross of Gallantry, Vietnam Presidential Unit Citation, and the Vietnam Community Service Medal. For rescues, he was awarded the Sikorsky Aircraft Winged "S": and the Kaman Aircraft Flying "K."
After his Navy career, he was manager and head tennis professional of the Saratoga (Springs, NY) Racquet Club; was certified tennis teaching professional by the U.S. Professional Tennis Association and the U.S. Professional Tennis Registry; was men's tennis coach at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY where he three times led his teams to the NAIA National Tennis Championship Tournament, and was three times named Coach of the Year by the Northeast District of NAIA and was so named once each by the Mayflower Conference and by the Eastern Division of USPT A.
Mr. Whalen earned a CSP (Certified Safety Professional), was an Industrial Hygienist, Director of Occupational Safety and Health for United University Professions, Albany, NY and was an adjunct instructor for Cornell University and a lecturer for the American Institute of Medical law.
After retiring, he volunteered his time to coach the boys and girls tennis teams three years each at Crestview (FL) High and Walton High School, DeFuniak Springs, FL.
A memorial service will be held at 10:30am, Saturday, February 27, 2016 at Lloyd James Funeral Home in Tyler. His ashes will be in repose at Barrancas National Cemetery, Naval Air Station, Pensacola, FL.
In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to Colonial Hills Baptist Church, 7330 South Broadway, Tyler, TX. 75703 or Watkins-Logan Veterans Home, 11466 Honor Ln., Tyler, TX. 75708.
Vietnam War/Consolidation I Campaign (71)
From Month/Year
July / 1971
To Month/Year
December / 1971
Description This Campaign period was from 1 July to 30 November 1971. Confident of the coastal patrol's effectiveness, Commander Coastal Surveillance Force began early the Vietnamization of the Market Time effort. The ACTOV program of the Navy and the SCATTOR (Small Craft Assets, Training, and Turnover of Resources) plan of the Coast Guard entailed the phased transition of the Vietnamese Navy into complete control of the inshore barrier, then the high seas surface patrol, and finally a coastal radar network intended to replace the American air surveillance effort. Throughout 1971, the American naval command transferred seagoing ships, harbor control and mine craft, and logistic support craft of many types, including Coast Guard cutters Yakutat (WHEC 380), Bering Strait (WHEC 382), Castle Rock (WHEC 383), and Cook Inlet (WHEC 384), each equipped with 5-inch guns; radar escort picket Camp (DER 251); Garrett County, reconfigured as a small craft tender; and refrigerated storage craft YFR 889.
Despite the natural complications of a turnover process, the combined coastal patrol continued to perform successfully in 1971. Of the 11 Communist ships detected attempting infiltration during the year, only one delivered its cargo to the Viet Cong in An Xuyen Province, the usual destination of the trawlers. Another nine ships fled after being sighted by the allied patrol. The remaining vessel was tracked and sunk in coastal waters on 8 April through the coordinated effort of Coast Guard cutters Morgenthau (WHEC 722) and Rush (WHEC 723), the U.S. Navy's gunboat Antelope (PG 86) and air patrol units, and the Vietnamese Navy's motor gunboat Kien Vang (PGM 603).
An efficient logistic establishment was as important as a ready combat force to the future performance of the Vietnamese Navy. Soon after the turnover of combatant craft got underway, the U.S. Navy prepared its support establishment for eventual transfer to the allied naval service. Under ACTOVLOG (Accelerated Turnover to the Vietnamese, Logistics), Admiral Zumwalt oversaw not only the turnover of U.S. installations, but also the expansion of the Vietnamese base, transportation, maintenance and repair, supply, and personnel housing infrastructures to accommodate the planned doubling in size of the navy. The Americans modernized existing facilities and constructed new bases, coastal radar sites, and housing for Vietnamese sailors and their families.