Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

First Navy SEAL, 93, to become admiral

- By Julie Watson

SAN DIEGO — Richard Lyon, the first Navy SEAL to rise to the rank of admiral, has died. He was 93.

Lyon died Friday surrounded by family and friends at his beachfront home in Oceanside, north of San Diego, said lifelong friend Kelly Sarber, who met Lyon as a child because her father was also a SEAL.

Sarber recalled photos of Lyon and the other SEALs during the elite military team’s beginnings, showing them swimming with knives.

“He reminded me of James Bond,” she said. “I never saw him lose his cool. I never saw him be nothing but kind and treat people with manners. He was a real class act.”

Lyon enlisted in the Navy in 1942 while studying at Yale University. He was among the first to endure the SEAL training known as “Hell Week” in which trainees spend seven days with almost no sleep, running, swimming and doing other drills.

He served four decades in the Navy, including World War II and the Korean War, and was among the first U.S. troops to enter Japan after the atomic bomb was dropped. He went on to work as a Scout intelligen­ce officer in northern China. He later served in Korea.

An award-winning swimmer, he continued to body surf in competitio­ns into his 70s, Sarber said. He stayed active in the SEAL community until his death and mentored young SEAL candidates until recently.

Retired Rear Adm. Garry Bonelli, who became a SEAL in 1968, said he never knew SEALs had such highrankin­g officers among them until being told as a young SEAL that he was going to be briefed by an admiral.

“I thought there are no Navy SEAL admirals, and then I saw him in his white uniform, big gold bars and thought ‘Wow, that’s a Navy SEAL admiral!’ ” Bonelli said. “Dick Lyon personifie­s what it is to be a Navy frogman and Navy SEAL.”

He is survived by his wife of 41 years, Cynthia Gisslin Lyon; nine children; 14 grandchild­ren; and two great grandchild­ren.

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