Chattanooga Times Free Press

Coast Guard honors Black veteran, NFL Hall of Famer Emlen Tunnell

- BY PAT EATON-ROBB

Before he became the first Black player inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Emlen Tunnell served in the Coast Guard during and after World War II, where he was credited with saving the lives of two shipmates in separate incidents.

Now, a Coast Guard cutter and an athletic building on the Coast Guard Academy campus are being named in honor of the former NFL defensive back, who died in 1975, as the service aims to highlight his little-known story and its own efforts to do better when it comes to race and celebratin­g diversity.

“I think it’s important, because you have a teachable moment with young people when you talk about a guy like Emlen Tunnell,” Coast Guard Academy football coach C.C. Grant said. “They need to understand what he did, what he went through and what kind of a person he was.”

Tunnell was the first Black player signed by the New York Giants and later played for the Green Bay Packers. But not much was known about his Coast Guard service until 2008, when Cmdr. Bill McKinstry recognized Tunnell’s name on the back of photograph showing a Coast Guard basketball team from the late 1940s.

His research uncovered a remarkable service career that Tunnell, who had been a steward’s mate, had downplayed.

In April 1944, Tunnell was unloading fuel and explosives from a cargo ship in Papua New Guinea when it was hit by a Japanese torpedo. Tunnell used his bare hands to beat out flames that had engulfed a shipmate, suffering burns in the process. Two years later, while stationed in Newfoundla­nd, Tunnell jumped into 32-degree Fahrenheit water to save another man who had fallen from the USS Tampa.

Given the context of what a Black steward’s mate was expected or even allowed to do during that time in American history — largely restricted to duties like keeping the dishes on the ship clean — his accomplish­ments are all the more remarkable, McKinstry said.

“If you look at the pictures of him in uniform, he is the one African American in a sea of other people,” McKinstry said. “It is so important that we take a look at these trailblaze­rs, just like Mr. Tunnell and we honor them, because of all things they faced in laying the groundwork for where we are today in making a better future.”

In 2011, the Coast Guard posthumous­ly awarded Tunnell the Silver Lifesaving Medal. The cutter, currently under constructi­on in Louisiana, is tentativel­y scheduled to be commission­ed in October. The Coast Guard Academy plans to open the $3.5 million Emlen Tunnell Strength and Conditioni­ng Center in September.

Tunnell played college football at Toledo before the war and after the war — he enlisted from 1943 to 1946 — continued his collegiate career at the University of Iowa, suffering a serious neck injury. But after leaving college in 1948, he hitchhiked from his home on Pennsylvan­ia to New York for a tryout with the Giants.

He ended up playing 14 seasons in the NFL and when he retired as a player, he held league records with 79 intercepti­ons, 1,282 intercepti­on return yards, 258 punt returns and 2,209 punt return yards. He then became a scout and one of the league’s first Black assistant coaches, helping fully integrate both the Giants and the Packers, said David Lyons, an author who is writing a biography of Tunnell.

He died of a heart attack at the age of somewhere between 50 and 53 — his birth records were not clear.

He was the first Black man and the first defensive specialist to be enshrined in Canton. But he never gained the fame of contempora­ries in other sports, such as Jackie Robinson, because he played at a time before football was widely televised or popular — and because of his humility, Lyons said.

 ?? UNITED STATES COAST GUARD VIA AP ?? Emlen Tunnell was the first Black player inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
UNITED STATES COAST GUARD VIA AP Emlen Tunnell was the first Black player inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

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