[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 82 (Monday, June 4, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3680-S3681]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO LIEUTENANT COMMANDER WESLEY A. BROWN
Mr. CARDIN. Madam President, I wish to commemorate the life of
retired Navy LCDR Wesley Anthony Brown, who passed away on May 22,
2012, at the age of 85. Lieutenant Commander Brown was the sixth
African American to attend and first to graduate from the U.S. Naval
Academy in 1949, where he excelled as a notable student and athlete.
Lieutenant Commander Brown went on to have a distinguished career in
the Navy Civil Engineer Corps and retired in 1969 after serving 20
years. Lieutenant Commander Brown is survived by his wife, Crystal
Brown; two daughters, Wiletta Scott and Carol Jackson; two sons, Wesley
Jr., and Gary; and seven grandchildren. I would like to take a moment
to remember his life and what his accomplishments meant not just for
the African American midshipmen who followed him at the Naval Academy,
but also for our military and for our Nation.
Lieutenant Commander Brown was born on April 3, 1927 in Baltimore,
MD. He was the only child of William and Rosetta Brown. He grew up in
Washington, D.C., and graduated from Dunbar High School, where he
showed strong proficiency for math and a profound interest in the Navy.
In fact, he worked on afternoons and evenings as a junior clerk for the
Navy and during his senior year in high school he served as the Cadet
Corps Battalion Commander. He later wrote an article in the Saturday
Evening Post: ``I've been thinking about the Navy since I was about 8
or 10 since the time I pinned the photograph of the old USS Lexington
on my bedroom wall. I arranged my high school studies to get as much
math and science as possible.'' This dedication and love of the Navy
lasted throughout Lieutenant Commander Brown's life.
Lieutenant Commander Brown was the first in his family to attend
college. He first enrolled at Howard University before being nominated
by Harlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. to attend the U.S. Naval
Academy (USNA) in 1945. Five young African American men had entered
USNA before Lieutenant Commander Brown, but they all left within a year
because they could not endure the brutal hazing from hostile
classmates. Lieutenant Commander Brown recalled that his first year at
the Academy was ``tough,'' being subject to the constant torrent of
racial epithets, taunts, and excessive demerits from upperclassman who
wanted to see him fail the Naval Academy. Other midshipmen refused to
sit next to him, room with him, or even allow him to join the choir. He
once told an interviewer that he thought about quitting every day. Yet,
he endured.
Lieutenant Commander Brown did have a few supporters at the Naval
Academy. There were a handful of fellow midshipmen who were friendly to
him in spite of threats from other classmates. One of them who visited
his dorm room to chat and encourage him to ``hang in there'' was future
president Jimmy Carter, an upperclassman and teammate on the Academy's
cross-country team at the time. In a speech President Carter gave at
the Naval Academy last year, he mentioned Lieutenant Commander Brown.
President Carter remarked that Midshipman Brown had a significant
impact on his views on the issue of race in America. He called his
encounter with Wesley Brown at USNA ``my first personal experience with
total integration'' and said, ``A few members of my senior class
attempted to find ways to give him demerits so that he would be
discharged, but Brown's good performance prevailed.''
Although African Americans had served and fought in our wars since
the American Revolution, the Armed
[[Page S3681]]
Forces remained segregated by units until President Truman integrated
the military services by executive order in 1948. There was intense
resistance against any attempts to integrate the military academies and
only a half dozen or so African Americans had graduated from West Point
by the time Lieutenant Commander Brown was commissioned as the first
African American graduate of the Naval Academy.
After Lieutenant Commander Brown graduated from the Naval Academy in
1949, he was commissioned into the Navy Civil Engineer Corps. Prior to
that, he served honorably in World War II and after he graduated, he
served in Korea and Vietnam. As a Navy civil engineer, he also built
houses in Hawaii, roads in Liberia, waterfront facilities in the
Philippines, and a seawater conversion plan in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba
before retiring from the Navy in 1969. Lieutenant Commander Brown
continued his professional life working for the New York State
University Construction Fund, the Dormitory Authority of the State of
New York, and Howard University before retiring in 1998. He also served
as chairman of District of Columbia Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton's
Service Academy Selection Board.
In spite of the challenges Lieutenant Commander Brown faced at the
Naval Academy, he maintained a close connection to the school
throughout his life and served as a member of the Naval Academy Alumni
Association Board of Trustees. And in 2008, USNA honored Lieutenant
Commander Brown by dedicating a new athletic facility in his name, a
decision I supported while I served in the House of Representatives and
since I have become a United States Senator. The Wesley A. Brown Field
House was the first and only building dedicated to a living alumnus
and, in his honor, the building hosts an annual track and field
invitational. During the dedication of the building on the banks of the
Severn River, ADM Michael Mullen, then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, stated, ``He fought a war his whole life for all of us to
improve who we are as individuals, who we are both as a Navy and a
nation. It was his noble calling and it was his call to service and
citizenship that led to lasting change in our Navy and in our nation.''
In another tribute to this pioneer, a consortium of minority Naval
Academy alumni established the Lieutenant Commander Wesley A. Brown '49
Honor Scholar scholarship in 2007 which awards up to $5,000 annually to
four individuals who are accepted into any 4-year university in
Maryland.
Although we have come a long way since Lieutenant Commander Brown's
days as a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy, our Armed Forces and
Nation are still challenged with discrimination based on race, gender,
religion, and the other attributes of heterogeneity that make up this
great country. While minority and female students may walk freely
through our military academies without the audible taunts and slurs, we
know that some of them face hazing and harassment behind closed doors
because of who they are. While I know that Department of Defense
leaders have a zero-tolerance policy regarding discrimination and
harassment in their Service Academies, commands and units, that is not
enough. I call on them to go a step further and redouble their efforts
to communicate to those who currently serve and those who will serve
our Nation in the future what makes our military the greatest force in
history: the fact that our Armed Forces reflect the rich diversity of
America. We owe it to Lieutenant Commander Brown and others like him
who bravely endured racism and discrimination to pave the way so that
others could serve honorably, too, and accomplish exceptional
achievements on behalf of our country. Therefore, let Lieutenant
Commander Brown's life be a testament to how his strength, courage, and
humility through adversity not only transformed the people around him
but profoundly affected the Naval Academy and our Nation. Today,
minorities comprise more than 20 percent of the brigade of midshipmen
and many of these young men and women have stated that Lieutenant
Commander Brown was their inspiration. All Americans are fortunate to
have had Lieutenant Commander Wesley Anthony Brown's selfless service
and example.
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