[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 141 (Tuesday, November 18, 2014)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1613]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN TRIBUTE TO MCPO. EDWIN F. (BUD) ATKINS (RET.) ON HIS INDUCTION INTO
THE CONNECTICUT VETERANS HALL OF FAME
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HON. JOE COURTNEY
of connecticut
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Mr. COURTNEY. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor a constituent whose
lifelong service in our nation's military is truly breathtaking. Our
men and women in uniform are regularly called upon to sacrifice large
spans of time away from family, usually with limited contact and in
dangerous conditions. In few jobs within the military is that truer
than for our submariners, who can spend months at a time without even
seeing the light of day, yet Master Chief Petty Officer Edwin F. (Bud)
Atkins of Oakdale, Connecticut has partaken in a total of twenty
patrols, spending time attached to nine different submarines.
Bud first enlisted, not as a sailor, but as a soldier in his native
Wisconsin National Guard in 1949. He then joined the Navy in February,
1954 and attended Basic Submarine School before reporting to the USS
Wahoo (SS 565). After this first assignment, he briefly left the active
service and joined the Naval Reserve, before returning to active duty.
He then reported to the USS Congor (SS 477) followed by the USS Corsair
(SS 435) to take part in the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in
1959.
Upon completion of that tour, he took part in thirteen strategic
patrols during which he became a ``plankholder,'' a member of the first
crew aboard a commissioned naval vessel, on the USS Sculpin (SSN590),
USS Daniel Webster (SSBN 626) and the USS Francis Scott Key (SSBN 657).
In 1969, he returned to staff duty at the submarine base in Groton,
Connecticut to become the leading instructor in Advanced Nuclear
Weapons, educating a new generation of submariners in the details of
their unique craft.
In June of 1973, Bud reported to the USS Kamehameha (SSBN 642) to
lead his first patrol as Chief of the Boat, the highest ranking
enlisted personnel on a submarine. He then led six more over ten years
assigned to the submarine's Gold crew. Upon completing his final patrol
with the Kamehameha, Bud returned to Groton as Staff Command Master
Chief for Submarine Group Two.
Already with more than twenty-five years in the Navy, Bud's desire to
serve never died. In continuing his naval career, Bud reported to
precommissioning units for both the USS Michigan and USS Alabama (SSBN
731), serving as Chief of the Boat for both. Following commissioning of
the Alabama, Bud served as the Group Command Master Chief for Submarine
Group Nine, one of the Navy's highest enlisted positions, before
retiring in March 1988 after forty years of service.
A life member of the U.S. Submarine Veterans, a Holland Club Member,
and former Base Vice Commander of the Groton Base U.S. Submarine
Veterans, Inc. Master Chief Atkins' service still hasn't fully ended.
Not only is he an active member of the Connecticut veterans community,
he also still serves as a Captain in the Second Company of the
Governor's Foot Guard, a unit that, while largely ceremonial, is still
officially part of the Connecticut military.
While Bud's service is incredible in both its length and its profound
impact on numerous ships of the U.S. submarine fleet, the sacrifice of
his family must be recognized as well. He is married to the former
Frances Somers of Amherst, Wisconsin, with whom he has two children. I
wish Bud the best in his induction into the Connecticut Veteran's Hall
of Fame this week.
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