Many dedicated educators served in the US military prior to their service in the classroom. One of these was Karl Kimmons, a high school social studies teacher who had already retired from the United States Navy.
Karl was born in Hamilton, Ohio, on April 10, 1920, the great-grandson of a Mississippi slave and a slave owner. Karl was raised in a poor family in an integrated neighborhood just a short distance from segregated Kentucky.
In 1940, Karl enlisted in the US Navy, where he served during World War II, the Korean Conflict, and the Viet Nam War. When he entered the service, the military was segregated. He was the first person who enlisted as a mess attendant, and then served in every enlisted pay grade and ended his career as a commissioned officer. When he retired from the Navy in 1970, he had attained the rank of full lieutenant and had earned numerous awards and medals. In all, his career in the military spanned 30 years.
Once he retired from the Navy, Karl attended Connecticut College where he earned a Bachelor’s degree, magnum cum laude. He was 53 years old at the time! Then he earned his Master’s degree from the University of Connecticut, and his teaching credential from Southern Connecticut State University.
Once he completed his education, Karl accepted a position as a social studies teacher in Waterford Public Schools, where he taught at Waterford Junior High snd Waterford High School for 22 years. “I was a tough teacher too, I guess because of my military back- ground,” Karl once remarked. “In study halls I told them ‘Either study or fake it!’ But many of my old students thank me now and say I really taught them how to study,” he remembered.
This Chalkboard Hero passed away on August 4, 2016, at the age of 96. He was interred at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia.