Chattanooga Times Free Press

Search-and-rescue swimmer saw 27 countries while in Navy

- BY GENE HENLEY STAFF WRITER Contact Gene Henley at ghenley@timesfreep­ress.com.

Don Martin Raymond was meant to be in the military. It was just a matter of which branch he chose.

He had a greatgrand­father who was a pilot in the Air Force. He had a grandfathe­r who was a Navy Seabee.

Originally, Raymond’s passion was to be in the Air Force. But a vision test prevented that, so he chose the U.S. Navy.

As it turns out, it was a wise choice.

In four years from 1 9 8 3 - 8 7, R aymond worked his way up the ranks of the Navy, starting as an enlisted seaman to the head communicat­ions specialist for the ship. After being granted Top Secret security clearance in 1984, he was chosen for the special forces search-and-rescue swimmer training, from which he graduated top in his class and became a team member.

“It was just an extra job because I was an outstandin­g swimmer. I liked to swim for miles,” Raymond said. “So I got to go to the Persian Gulf and support that effort as a search-and-rescue swimmer while I was doing my regular job.”

But what also came in handy was the two years Raymond spent training as a paramedic, which became important one night during the Iran-Iraq War, when the Iraqis bombed a supertanke­r.

“We only had one doctor on our ship, so

the captain had kind of made me an assistant to go on top of everything else

I did because

I knew a lot about the medical field,” Raymond said. “So that night, I was awakened and told to go to the ship’s bridge immediatel­y, so I threw my pants on and went up there and was told to get to medical immediatel­y.

“It was crazy. Crazy, crazy.”

Raymond was part of a group that helped treat soldiers that night, prepping them for a flight to Qatar. His efforts earned him a Meritoriou­s Service

Award for operations and an invitation to join the elite special forces, where he earned a perfect score on the test to receive a recommenda­tion for what is now called the Navy Seals.

He was scheduled to move to the West Coa s t , but elected to stay on the East Coast to deal with a family crisis. By the time he was prepared to make the move, the deadline had passed.

He was honorably discharged in 1987, but immediatel­y signed up for re-enlistment after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. He

was thanked for the offer, but not accepted due to taking care of young children.

His time in the military gave him the opportunit­y to visit 27 different countries.

“Traveling, seeing the world was absolutely amazing. The different people, different cultures were absolutely fascinatin­g for me,” Raymond said. “I wasn’t a typical sailor that just went out and got drunk and you know, whatever this or that. I saw the country, I ate the food, I spent time with the people.”

Raymond, a Vermont native, moved to Tennessee in 1975. He’s now a suffering Vols football fan.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C. B. SCHMELTER ?? Veteran Don Raymond poses at his mother’s Soddy-Daisy home earlier this month with military portraits of his family, including from 1984, left, two of his nephews, his brotherin-law and his niece.
STAFF PHOTO BY C. B. SCHMELTER Veteran Don Raymond poses at his mother’s Soddy-Daisy home earlier this month with military portraits of his family, including from 1984, left, two of his nephews, his brotherin-law and his niece.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States