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    Solomon Atkinson Wasn't Just a Decorated US Navy SEAL - He Trained NASA Astronauts and Was a Movie Stuntman

    By Clare Fitzgerald,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3Cq1SP_0uz2aNwo00

    Since the 1960s, countless US Navy SEALs have served with distinction, but only a few have achieved the legendary status of Solomon Atkinson. As an Alaska Native and one of the original members of SEAL Team 1, Atkinson earned numerous commendations for his brave combat service in Vietnam.

    In August 2023, it was revealed that a Navy vessel would be named in his honor, a tribute that will forever cement his legacy in both military and Alaskan history.

    Solomon Atkinson's early life

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    Solomon Atkinson. (Photo Credit: Maria Hayward / Courtesy Photo / Alaska National Guard Public Affairs / DVIDS / Public Domain)

    Solomon Atkinson was born in 1930 in Metlakatla, Alaska, and raised in a small Tsimshian village on Annette Island, along Port Chester Bay. Home to a population of under 500 people, the environment was the perfect place for the young man to hone and develop a variety of skills, including hunting, fishing and living off the land.

    Attending boarding school for the majority of the year, Atkinson returned home each summer to help his father, who was an accomplished commercial fisherman.

    Becoming one of the first US Navy SEALs

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1gCqFN_0uz2aNwo00
    SEAL Team 1 member in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam, 1968. (Photo Credit: Bettmann / Getty Images)

    Solomon Atkinson enlisted in the US Navy in 1952, at the age of 21. He'd previously joined the Army National Guard, but almost immediately requested a transfer. In 1953, he volunteered to become a frogman - a member of the Navy's Underwater Demolition Teams (UDTs), which served as the precursors for the SEALs . He became the first Alaska Native to join the UDTs.

    When the Navy SEALs were established in 1962, Atkinson, once again, volunteered, attending training at Naval Base Coronado , California. He subsequently became one of the founding members of SEAL Team 1, and served deployments in Korea and the Pacific. While in Korea, he did a rotation aboard the USS Washburn (AKA-108) as an engineman.

    Following his stint with SEAL Team 1, Atkinson went on to serve with SEAL Team 2, based out of Dam Neck, Virginia.

    Serving three combat tours in Vietnam

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1XYzjY_0uz2aNwo00
    SEAL Team 1 in Saigon, South Vietnam, 1967. (Photo Credit: JO1 J.D. Randall / US Navy / PhotoQuest / Getty Images)

    Over the course of his career with the US Navy, Solomon Atkinson served three combat tours in Vietnam , receiving the Bronze Star, the Navy Commendation Medal with Combat "V" and the Purple Heart . His first deployment was for beach reconnaissance, while the second was to train Vietnamese special operations forces.

    During his third in June 1968, Atkinson suffered an injury. His mission was to keep the shipping channel to Saigon open in the Rung Sat Special Zone , in the Sác Forest, and he'd been assigned as a platoon chief. While on a jungle ambush, he and his men accidentally placed a claymore mine on a rotting tree. When they detonated it near a group of Viet Cong guerrillas, shrapnel shot back at them.

    "We got right back up and started shooting, but Sol had a lot of blood on his face and lost some teeth, but he got right back on it," fellow Navy SEAL  Lowell "Bo" Burwell told Task & Purpose . "He was serious about everything, and we had some enemy out there. He was wanting to get back on to that for sure."

    Solomon Atkinson trained NASA astronauts

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4f9o3L_0uz2aNwo00
    NASA astronaut Neil Armstrong, commander of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission, 1969. (Photo Credit: Space Frontiers / Getty Images)

    When not on deployment, Solomon Atkinson took on the role of instructor for aspiring US Navy SEALs, earning the nickname "Mean Machine" from his trainees. According to his widow, JoAnn, he got this title "because he was in charge of [physical training] for new recruits" and "was your typical SEAL - work hard, play hard."

    In addition, Atkinson served as a dive instructor at the US Army Special Forces Underwater Operations School in Key West, Florida, where he had the unique opportunity to train 48 NASA astronauts in underwater weightlessness, including notable figures like Buzz Aldrin , Neil Armstrong and Jim Lovell .

    As if that weren't impressive enough, Atkinson also trained Green Light Teams —Special Atomic Demolition Munition Units—in deploying portable nuclear bombs, specifically B-54 Special Atomic Demolition Munitions, across Eastern Europe.

    He even ventured into acting, working as a stuntman in the 1958 film Underwater Warrior .

    Dedicating himself to his local community and veterans

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    Solomon Atkinson at the ceremony to receive the Alaska Governor's Veteran Advocacy Award, 2018. (Photo Credit: U.S. Navy / Courtesy Photo / Naval Special Warfare Group ONE / DVIDS / Public Domain)

    Solomon Atkinson retired from the US Navy in 1973, with the rank of chief warrant officer 4. Following his military service, he did all he could to advocate for veterans, founding Annette Island's first veterans organization in the 1990s. His advocacy saw him be awarded the Alaska Governor's Veteran's Advocacy Award in 2018.

    He also dedicated himself to his community, despite struggling for a time with alcoholism. He spoke at local schools, became a member of the school board and went on to sit on the Metlakatla Community Council. His heavy involvement in the community eventually saw him voted mayor.

    Atkinson passed away in July 2019.

    Naming a US Navy ship for Solomon Atkinson

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    Graphic representation of a Navajo -class towing, salvage and rescue ship. (Photo Credit: United States Navy / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

    In August 2023, the US Navy announced that a future Navajo -class towing, salvage and rescue (T-ATS) ship would be named in honor of the late veteran. The USNS Solomon Atkinson (T-ATS-12) will be the seventh vessel in her class, with the first, the USNS Navajo (T-ATS-6), yet to be commissioned.

    "The Navy couldn't have picked a better person to name a ship after. It brings tears to my eyes thinking that they are going to honor him in this way," Verdie Bowen, director of the Alaska Office of Veterans Affairs, said in a press release . "If you want a representation for Alaska on a ship, it's Sol.

    "For him to go from a local Alaskan hero to having his name on a ship is remarkable," she continued. "It just means that for the generations to come, not only will Alaskans know that the ship is named for him but every sailor that gets on the ship will know about his accomplishments."

    Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-AK) also commented on the news , saying:

    "You would never hear Sol brag about his accomplishments and illustrious career because Sol was - as most of the greats are - a truly humble man. Sol also personified the special patriotism manifest in our Alaska Native people, who serve at higher rates in our military than any other ethnic group. I can't think of an individual who is more deserving of this incredible honor."

    More from us: Errol Flynn's Son Disappeared While Serving As a Photojournalist In Vietnam

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    Upon her completion and launch in 2025, the USNS Solomon Atkinson will join the guided missile destroyer USS Ted Stevens (DDG-128), which is still under construction, as just one of two ships named for Alaskan servicemen.

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