Hunter Anderson has a long family history of military
service dating back to WWII, most of that Navy service. After two weeks at Fort
Devens in Devens, Massachusetts, as a sea cadet he has decided to enlist in the
Navy upon graduation from Windham High School this year.
“I started my enlistment paperwork last week,” Anderson
said. He attended the New Recruit Training program in July at “Recruit Training
Command – New England” as part of his commitment to the US Naval Sea Cadet
Corps, Coast Guard Group Portland Division.
Along with 200 other recruits and 100 staff, the two week
session kept him busy with PT, classes in everything from wilderness survival
and first aid to firefighting class and military customs and courtesy.
While at Devens, Anderson was told that the program he
was doing was tougher than Navy bootcamp and that “if you can make it through
this. Regular Navy bootcamp is 1,000 times easier.”
“I thought it was fun,” he said of the program, whose
main goals were teamwork, accountability, self-discipline, self-confidence,
physical fitness and basic military knowledge.
He learned to mop and clean, often the recruits had to
mop the floors three or four times a day, he said.
“They were big on personal hygiene,” he said, which meant
no facial hair at all. Anderson said he had to find time to shave a second time
each day because his hair grew so fast.
His favorite part of the training was “meeting all the
new people and doing all the new adventures,” he said. He spoke highly of the
staff training his division. Many were the same age as Anderson, but had been
through the program in previous years. “There were there to help you,” he
added.
One of Anderson’s goals is to see “far off distant lands”
on Naval ships. “I can’t wait,” he said. “I’d like to be on a ship so I can
travel. If I had my choice, I’d choose a ship every day.” He grew up on the
water often boating with his grandfather. Anderson also works on a lobster boat
in the summer.
Anderson is a student at Windham High School and also
attends PATHS vocational school for plumbing and heating, another family
tradition. He played soccer until last year, but found the cadet training
program at Windham High School and decided to join that. Although he missed the
training week with them at WHS, he likes being part of the group. When not in
school he enjoys fishing, hunting, boating and lobstering in Casco Bay.
He sees himself going career Navy, but possibly becoming
a game warden when his tour of duty is over. He is interested in two different
jobs in the Navy and although they might change, he is set on being in a job
that will keep him above deck for long stretches of time. The first job is
gunner’s mate where he would operate every weapon on the ship. The second is a Seabees, the construction division of the Navy.
“I’ve always been on the water. I can go places where you
can’t go in a car,” he said.
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