[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 17 (Thursday, January 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S340-S341]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO GIL CARMICHAEL
Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, this weekend, Disney Pictures will
release ``The Finest Hours,'' a cinematic retelling of a 1952 Coast
Guard rescue mission off the New England coast. I am pleased to use its
release as an opportunity to commend Mr. Gil Carmichael of Meridian,
MS, an important participant in this mission, for his bravery during
that storm and for a lifetime of service to the State of Mississippi
and the Nation. Mr. Carmichael, an ensign in the U.S. Coast Guard at
the time, was awarded the Silver Life-Saving Medal for his heroic
actions during that rescue mission.
A 1952 Coast Guard news release described the rescue:
For Release at 10: 30 a.m., May 14, 1952
Twenty-one Coast Guardsmen were decorated today by Edward
H. Foley, Under Secretary of the Treasury, and Vice Admiral
Merlin O'Neill, Coast Guard Commandant, for the rescue of 70
men in a heavy storm at sea Feb. 18-19.
The rescued men were crew members of the tankers SS FORT
MERCER and SS PENDLETON which broke in two in 70-knot winds
and 60-foot seas off the coast of Cape Cod, Mass.
The group ceremony was held in the Treasury before members
of Congress and high ranking Coast Guard officers. Members of
Congress from the homes of each man decorated, and members of
committees which handle Coast Guard legislation, also were
invited.
Also present were William B. St. John of the National Bulk
Carriers, Inc., owner of the PENDELTON, and C.A. Thomas, W.G.
Johnson and P.J. Clausen of the Trinidad Corp., owner of the
FORT MERCER.
Admiral O'Neill described the Cape Cod rescue operations as
unique in Coast Guard history. With each tanker broken in two
forty miles apart, four hulks with survivors aboard were left
adrift in the mountainous seas.
He said all types of rescue equipment were used including
large Coast Guard cutters, an airplane, an ocean-going tug,
motor lifeboats, radar, rubber liferafts, scramble nets,
lifelines and exposure suits.
"But most of all,'' said Admiral O'Neill, ``the situation
called for raw courage and skill of the highest order--backed
by Coast Guard teamwork.''
Five of the men received the Treasury's Gold Life-saving
Medal for ``extreme and heroic daring.'' Four others received
the Treasury's Silver Life-saving Medal for ``heroic
action.'' Fifteen were cited for ``courage, initiative and
unswerving devotion to duty'' and authorized to wear the
Coast Guard Commendation ribbon. Those decorated were:
Gold Life-Saving Medal:
Andrew J. Fitzgerald, Engineman 2nd class; Ervin E. Maske,
Seaman; Bernard C. Webber, Boatswain's Mate 1st class;
Richard P. Livesey, Seaman; Ensign William R. Kiely, Jr.
Silver Life-Saving Medal:
Paul R. Black, Engineman 2nd class; Ensign Gilbert E.
Carmichael; Edward A. Mason, Jr., Apprentice Seaman; Webster
G. Terwilliger, Seaman
Coast Guard Commendation Ribbon:
Antonio F. Ballerini, Boatswain's Mate 3rd class
provisional; Donald H. Bangs, Boatswain's Mate Chief; Richard
J. Ciccone, Seaman; John J. Courtney, Boatswain's Mate 3rd
class; John F. Dunn, Engineman 1st class; Philip M. Griebel,
Radioman 1st class; Emory H. Haynes, Engineman 1st class;
Roland W. Hoffert, Gunner's Mate 3rd class; Eugene W.
Korpusik, Seaman Apprentice; Ralph L. Ormsby, Boatswain's
Mate Chief; Dennis J. Perry, Seaman; Donald E. Pitts, Seaman;
Alfred J. Roy, Boatswain's Mate 1st class; Herman M.
Rubinsky, Seaman Apprentice; LCDR John N. Joseph
A nor'easter is a remarkable event in any era. The 1952 winter storm
spawned hurricane-force winds and waves as tall as most of the office
buildings at the time. The brave members of our Coast Guard raced into
this dangerous situation to locate two large tankers that had broken in
two and to rescue 70 men facing nearly certain death.
When asked about the rescue, a selfless Mr. Carmichael, who was in
charge of a rescue boat that rescued two men from the bow of the SS
Fort Mercer that day, said, ``I learned early in life how I would
behave in crisis. I knew when we put the boat over we could be killed
but all of us were just thinking about trying to save lives rather than
of our own safety.''
Gil Carmichael took the remarkable experience he gained in the Coast
Guard and continued on the path of public service, later for statewide
office in Mississippi in the 1960s, as a candidate for the U.S. Senate
in 1972, twice for Governor in 1975 and 1979, and once for Lieutenant
Governor in 1983. He also served as a delegate from Mississippi to the
Republican National
[[Page S341]]
Convention. In 1973, he was appointed to the National Highway Safety
Advisory Committee and became chairman of the advisory committee until
1976. From 1976 to 1979, he was a Federal commissioner for the National
Transportation Policy Study Commission. He became Administrator of the
U.S. Department of Transportation's Federal Railroad Administration in
1989 and served until 1993. He later served as chairman of the Amtrak
Reform Council.
It is a pleasure to acknowledge Mr. Carmichael whose selfless
personal qualities reflect a great deal of credit on my State and this
Nation.
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