San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Coast Guard Academy’s 1st Black graduate in 1966

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NEW LONDON, Conn. — Merle Smith Jr., the first Black cadet to graduate from the Coast Guard Academy, has died, his family said. He was 76.

Smith died on June 16 of complicati­ons from Parkinson’s disease and COVID19, his wife, Lynda Smith, said. Smith commanded a cutter in Vietnam, taught law classes at the academy in New London and retired from activeduty service with the rank of Coast Guard commander before joining the legal staff of submarine builder Electric Boat.

The academy’s superinten­dent, Rear Adm. William Kelly, said in an email to the campus community that Smith “served as a role model for countless cadets, faculty, and staff.“

Smith, the son of an Army colonel, attended the academy as a member of the class of 1966. In an interview with the Associated Press in 2012, he said he generally did not feel like an outsider during his years as a cadet.

“Every now and then you would get something that would happen. Someone would make some remark somewhere,” he said. “In the main, it was not a situation that I felt uncomforta­ble with.”

In 2016, the academy honored Smith with a ceremony commemorat­ing the 50th anniversar­y of his graduation, and last year it announced plans to rename its officers club after Smith. In a congratula­tory letter, members of the class he graduated with noted his “unflappabl­e demeanor” during his service Vietnam — where his service was honored with a Bronze Star — and his role as a pioneer for diversity.

“In recent years, as the emphasis on diversity and inclusiven­ess grew within the Coast Guard, you became a beacon of inspiratio­n within the Academy community encouragin­g others to strive for the unimaginab­le and forge new paths of greatness in the face of adversity and uncertaint­y,“his classmates wrote. As a cutter commander during the Vietnam War, Smith also became the first Black officer to command a U.S. warship in close quarters combat.

In 2006, Smith served as a defense attorney in the first courtmarti­al of a cadet in the academy’s 130year history. The student was acquitted of a rape charge, but found guilty of other crimes including indecent assault and extortion.

Smith’s family said he did not consider himself a trailblaze­r.

“He was a really wonderful, wonderful man, who did his job as he saw fit to do his job, so therefore he considered all of his accomplish­ments as part of doing his job, as opposed to being a trailblaze­r or a pioneer,” Lynda Smith told the Day of New London. “He was very selfeffaci­ng in his personalit­y, very humble, very gracious.”

Merle grew up in Germany, Japan and elsewhere in the U.S. and attended Aberdeen High School in Maryland before entering the Coast Guard Academy in 1962. He graduated from the George Washington University Law School in 1974, according to the academy.

 ?? Jack Sauer / Associated Press 2006 ?? Merle Smith Jr. talks to reporters at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 2006, the 40th anniversar­y of his graduation.
Jack Sauer / Associated Press 2006 Merle Smith Jr. talks to reporters at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in 2006, the 40th anniversar­y of his graduation.

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