Richard Dixon (USCG): Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 06:00, 12 October 2024
Richard Dixon was the coxswain of a 44 foot motor lifeboat, on the July 4th weekend of 1980, when his skill and daring enabled him to rescue stricken pleasure boat crew off Tillamook Bay, Oregon.[1][2][3]
During the first incident a 58 foot yacht was in distress in the aftermath of hurricane Celia,[4]and needed to seek sheltered waters, but wave conditions seemed likely to batter it apart if it tried to use the narrow entrance between two stone jetties to enter Tillamook Bay's harbor. Dixon and the Coxswain of another motor life boat maneuvered beside the yacht, to absorb some of the wave energy as if entered harbor.
In the second incident two pleasure boat occupants had fallen overboard and were within fifty feet of being dashed upon the harbor's breakwater.[1] In spite of the danger of maneuvering so close to the crashing waves, in such high sea conditions, Dixon was able to rescue the pleasure boaters.
Dixon received Coast Guard Medals for both rescues.[1]
In 2010, the USCG named a new cutter after the coxwain.
Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Connie Braesch. Coast Guard Heroes: Richard Dixon, United States Coast Guard, 2010-11-11. “Richard Dixon, a Boatswain's Mate stationed at Tillamook Bay, was awarded two Coast Guard Medals for his heroic actions on July Fourth weekend, 1980.”
- ↑ Stephanie Young. Coast Guard Heroes, United States Coast Guard, 2010-10-27. Retrieved on 2012-04-20.
- ↑ Clive Lawford. US Coast Guard Medal Awards, 2011. Retrieved on 2013-01-10. “Petty Officer Dixon is cited for heroism on the afternoon of 3 July 1980 while serving as the coxswain of Coast Guard Motor Lifeboat (MLB) 44409.”
- ↑ Admiral J. B. Hayes (2 February 1981), Citation to accompany the award of the Coast Guard Medal to Richard D. Dixon