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Feb 15 10 tweets 3 min read
#BlackHistoryMonth Rear Admiral Anthony John "Tony" Watson (born May 18, 1949 in Chicago) is a retired 31-year Navy veteran and a graduate of the Naval Academy (1970).
He is one of the "Centennial Seven" African-American sailors who served as commanding officers of United States submarines in the 20th century. He was the first black submariner to be promoted to rear admiral.
He served on five different submarines and became the second African-American naval officer to command a nuclear submarine in December 1987.
He was raised in the public housing community of Cabrini-Green on the near north side of Chicago, where he graduated from Lane Technical High School in 1966.
At the U. S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, he was twice elected class president and was the first African American to achieve the rank of Brigade Commander as a third year midshipman.
He was Commanding Officer, USS Jacksonville, a Los Angeles Class fast-attack nuclear submarine, where he conducted the first live-fire, at-sea depth charge test of a submarine since USS Thresher in 1963.
From 1989 to 1992, he was Deputy Commandant of Midshipmen at the Naval Academy. In 1992, he was commander of Submarine Squadron Seven in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, with 13 fast attack nuclear submarines under his command.
As rear admiral he was assigned to the Pentagon where he worked under General Colin Powell who was then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Following that tour of duty, he was also Commander of the Navy Recruiting Command, an operation with a recruiting team of 6000 people nationwide.
His military awards include the Defense Superior Service Medal, the Legion of Merit, four Meritorious Service medals, three Navy Commendation Medals, the Navy Achievement Medal.

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More from @Submarine_Guy

Feb 16
#BlackHistoryMonth Wesley Anthony Brown (April 3, 1927 – May 22, 2012) was the first African American graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy (USNA), in Annapolis, Maryland. Image
He served in the Korean War and the Vietnam War and served in the U.S. Navy from May 2, 1944, until June 30, 1969.
Born in Baltimore, MD, Wesley Anthony Brown grew up in Washington DC, where his father delivered groceries and his mother worked in a dry cleaning shop.  Brown’s great-grandparents were slaves.
Read 19 tweets
Feb 13
#BlackHistoryMonth Dr. William Bundy born 12 August,1946 -15 December, 2019. The first African-American to rise from the enlisted ranks to become a submarine commander, U.S. Naval War College (NWC) Associate Provost. Image
Dr. Bundy was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of William and Paulyne Bundy.
After graduation, he enlisted in the Navy, serving as a sonar tech on USS Bowditch and then on USS Sturgeon, Richard B. Russell, and Memphis, during the Cold War. Image
Read 13 tweets
Feb 5, 2019
Master Chief William Goines (SEAL)Ret.
Segregation may have kept retired Master Chief William Goines from using Lockland's only public pool, but it didn't stop him from learning to swim and eventually joining the first teams of Navy SEALs.
Goines was a junior at Lockland Wayne High School when he saw a film that depicted Navy frogmen, who performed underwater demolition operations during World War II.”My fate was sealed right there.
That's exactly what I wanted to do," Goines said. Soon after, he headed to a Navy recruiter, who said he should graduate before he enlisted. Goines said this was fine because he knew his mother would never let him drop out of school.
Read 34 tweets
Jan 22, 2018
In 1942, Pittsburgh artist J. Howard Miller was hired by the Westinghouse Company's War Production Coordinating Committee to create a series of posters for the war effort. One of these posters became the famous "We Can Do It!"
image—an image that in later years would also be called "Rosie the Riveter", though it was never given this title during the war. Miller is thought to have based his "We Can Do It!" poster on a United Press International wire service photograph taken of a young female war worker,
widely but erroneously reported as being a photo of Michigan war worker Geraldine Hoff (later Doyle)More recent evidence indicates that the formerly mis-identified photo is actually of war worker Naomi Parker (later Fraley) taken at Alameda Naval Air Station in California.
Read 6 tweets

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