[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 152 (2006), Part 18] [Senate] [Page 23000] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]RECOGNIZING CAPTAIN JOHN C. CARMICHAEL Mr. CHAMBLISS. Mr. President, I rise today to recognize a special anniversary year for a true patriot, a great American and fellow Georgian, Captain John C. Carmichael, U.S. Navy, Retired. Friends and family back home on St. Simon's Island know him as Jack. As a teenager, Jack Carmichael had aspirations of attending West Point, his desire being to follow in the great GEN Robert E. Lee's footsteps. However, his father died in 1928 when he was only 14 years old, leaving his two younger brothers and his mother Kate with heavy hearts and tough decisions. At the time, they were living in Jacksonville, FL. Kate did not think that schools in Jacksonville or Waycross, GA, where they had lived and from where Jack's father hailed, were adequate to prepare him for the academic rigors of the service academies; therefore, she made the decision to move the family to Washington, DC, to live with two aunts in order for Jack to acquire the requisite education. He attended Western High School and several military academy preparatory schools. During that time he became reacquainted with his cousin, John Harllee, who convinced him that the Naval Academy was the better path, so Jack reset his goal for Annapolis. Unfortunately, his Georgia Congressman did not have any available Naval Academy slots, so he was referred to a Pennsylvania congressman. However, that Congressman only had a West Point slot, so the gentlemen referred him to a Congressman in Oklahoma who was able to sponsor Jack to attend the Naval Academy. Jack's 4 years at the Naval Academy were fast and rewarding, helped along by his dear friend and roommate, John Court. Jack graduated on June 4, 1936, one of 242 graduates, the smallest graduating class since 1900. During his career as a naval officer, Jack held various assignments both at sea and ashore. He served in World War II with the 5th Fleet and married his wife, Elizabeth Gordon Ellyson, on October 25, 1944, in San Francisco. ``Gordie,'' the name his wife goes by, was the daughter of the reputed naval aviator, Theodore Gordon ``Spuds'' Ellyson. Jack retired from the Navy in July of 1966 after 30 years of distinguished service. He moved Gordie and his family from Key West, FL, to St. Simon's Island, back to the nostalgic cottage of his youth within close proximity to the wonderful lighthouse. Jack and Gordie have enjoyed a full life and traveled much since then, but their center is St. Simon's Island and the quaint cottage they affectionately call ``Homeport.'' Mr. President, it is indeed an honor and a pleasure to recognize this accomplished fellow Georgian from the ``greatest generation,'' some 70 years after his graduation from the U.S. Naval Academy. He is the consummate patriot and citizen, and his distinguished and noteworthy service to our Nation is laudable. ____________________