| Lt. Adam Patterson’s Navy career hasn’t followed what most people 
			might call the “usual” path. Having experienced his own evolution of 
			sorts, he emerged from the sea and eventually took to the air by 
			first starting as a submariner and later transitioning to an 
			aviator.
 Back in 1996, as he was completing high school and 
			considering his next step, Patterson sat for the Armed Services 
			Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASVAB) test and scored in the 99th 
			percentile. Needless to say, the military recruiters came knocking.
 
			 
		
			| 
			 April 14, 2017 - Lt. Adam Patterson stands in front of one of 
			the MH-60S Helicopters he flies as a pilot with NAS Patuxent River's 
			Search and Rescue team, the NAS Patuxent River "SAR Dogs." 
			Patterson's Navy career has taken him above and below the sea, 
			starting with him as an enlisted submariner and taking him to the 
			heights of naval aviation. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Patrick Gordon)
 |  “The military wasn’t something I really wanted to do, but 
					I’d always wanted to fly,” said Patterson, currently serving 
					shore duty at NAS Patuxent River as a helicopter pilot with 
					the installation’s Search and Rescue (SAR) team. “I had 
					started flying at 13 and wanted to pursue it, but it was 
					expensive and time consuming.”
 Patterson initially 
					considered becoming an Airman, but Navy recruiters pointed 
					out that the Navy has more aircraft than the Air Force, so 
					he signed up as a Sailor.
 
 Nuking It
 
 “The next thing I knew, they said 
					the only thing I qualified for was the nuke program and told 
					me I was going to be a nuke engineer,” he said. “I went to 
					boot camp two months after graduating and then I was off to 
					nuke school in Orlando.”
 
 While his friends were 
					having a good time in college, Patterson was hitting the 
					books long and hard, studying 45 additional hours per week 
					beyond his normal classroom hours.
 
 “We’d start at 
					0630 and wouldn’t get home until 2300 at night,” he added. 
					“There were 33 in my starting class but only three of us 
					graduated because the program was so difficult.”
 
 Patterson was picked up, went to a naval nuclear power plant 
					in New York, did well in the program, and requested an 
					aircraft carrier out of San Diego.
 
 “I was going to be 
					a nuke engineer on an aircraft carrier and I thought it’d be 
					great because I’d finally be near my aviation; but the 
					orders showed up and, unfortunately, they were to a sub out 
					of Norfolk,” he said, chuckling.
 
 Not having 
					volunteered for a submarine, Patterson reported that this 
					wasn’t what he was supposed to be doing, but the Navy 
					countered by suggesting he try it for a year and if he 
					didn’t like it, they’d assign him to a carrier.
 
 “Within six weeks of being there, I wanted to talk with the 
					XO; I wanted to be a submariner and I wanted it in my record 
					that I was a submarine volunteer,” Patterson recalled. “I 
					knew it was what I wanted to be. I started losing interest 
					in aviation and focused on being a submariner.”
 
 As a 
					Nuclear Trained Machinist’s Mate (MMN), Patterson worked on 
					secondary propulsion systems and auxiliary equipment to make 
					the reactor work and provide the sub’s fresh drinking water, 
					high pressure compressed air and all the electrical power. A 
					skilled welder, he could also take a block of metal and 
					create any repair part the sub needed.
 
 “Everything 
					that made the sub work, I owned two-thirds of it,” he noted. 
					“When I quickly got qualified up to the highest I could 
					possibly qualify in the nuke program as an enlisted man, I 
					got bored.”
 
 Never glamorous, submarine life changed 
					further after the 2000 bombing of USS Cole (DDG-67), when 
					subs took on larger roles in mission sets and would spend 90 
					days or more at sea before pulling in to port.
 
 Boredom Spawns Learning
 
 “At the time, there was no Internet, no email, we didn’t 
					have phones; so I read books because there was nothing else 
					to do,” Patterson said. “I had all the quals in the 
					engineering spaces, so I started reading about submarining 
					and submarine warfare tactics, weapons employments, 
					torpedoes, cruise missiles. I learned everything until my 
					head hurt.”
 
 Patterson learned so much he was able to 
					help further improve the capabilities and employment methods 
					of our modern submarines.
 
 His efforts did not go 
					unnoticed. In 2004, Patterson went to Submarine Squadrons 6 
					and 8 in Norfolk and was responsible for 12 subs. That was 
					also the year he made Chief Petty Officer, after only six 
					years in the Navy.
 
 “People would tell me I’d be MCPON 
					someday, so that was the plan,” he added. “But my captain 
					had a different plan and put me in for the Seaman to Admiral 
					Program so I could get my commission.”
 
 Graduating 
					from the University of Arizona in 2008, Patterson planned to 
					remain a nuke submariner and take command of his own 
					submarine one day, but the aviation department reminded him 
					of his early desire to fly, so he took the test and scored a 
					near-perfect mark.
 
 “I called my former captain and 
					told him I could probably get selected for aviation and he 
					told me if I wanted to do it, I had earned it and should go 
					for it,” he said.
 
 Up, Up 
					and Away
 
 So it was off to Pensacola for flight 
					school where Patterson did well and ultimately ended up in 
					helicopter training where he requested to fly CH-53s out of 
					Norfolk but, instead, got MH-60 Romeos out of San Diego.
 
 “It’s amazing that 
					whatever you think, for whatever reason, someone else thinks 
					otherwise,” Patterson noted. “Somebody felt I needed to be a 
					submariner and I don’t know who that was, but I thank them 
					every day because they made my career what it is today. Same 
					thing with the Romeo — the 53s would’ve been neat to fly, 
					but the avionics package on the Romeo makes it the most 
					capable aircraft in the fleet, in my opinion, and it was a 
					great opportunity to be able to fly that asset.”
 
 Patterson has seen his share of action. As a submariner, 
					from 1999 to 2005 he served on the fast attack sub USS 
					Albany (SSN 753) and spent nearly the entire time underway. 
					In 2004 alone, he spent 242 days under the sea. As an 
					aviator, with Helicopter Maritime Strike Squadron (HSM) 73 
					he did a 10-month deployment, spending most of his time in 
					5th Fleet. Aboard the destroyer USS Gridley (DDG 101), he 
					made six port calls in 10 months. He even made it to an 
					aircraft carrier, spending three months with a strike group 
					aboard USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70).
 
 “I’ve been on every 
					continent except Antarctica and I’ve sailed every sea, and 
					that’s all because of the Navy,” Patterson said. “I can’t 
					even tell you how many countries I’ve been to, all because 
					the Navy took me there.”
 
 Shore Duty With Pax River’s SAR
 
 Patterson 
					arrived at Pax River in October 2016 and flies the station’s 
					SAR MH-60 helicopter.
 
 “It’s a stripped down version 
					made for troop transport for SAR so we can put as many 
					injured personnel in the aircraft as possible,” he added. 
					“The group of pilots and aircrewmen here are topnotch, 
					dedicated professionals. I see it every day. Every day we’re 
					focused on saving lives.”
 
 Patterson urges young 
					Sailors not to be complacent, and always strive for more.
 
 “It’s good to be good at your 
					job, but that should just happen,” he said. “It’s everything 
					else you seek out in professional development that makes you 
					the best Sailor. If you’re not trying to better yourself and 
					the people around you, then what are you doing?”
 
 Eligible for retirement in two and a half years, Patterson 
					says if the Navy wants to keep him around longer, he’s 
					willing to stay.
 
 “The Navy has a lot invested in me 
					and I’m still waiting for a niche to be carved out in the 
					aviation community,” he said. “I’m just now understanding 
					aviation the way I understood submarines. I’ve gotten to the 
					point where I can see places or processes that need 
					improvement or a change here or there. We’ll see if I get 
					the additional time to do that but, if not, I think I’ll be 
					okay finding a job.”
 By U.S. Navy Donna Cipolloni, NASPRProvided 
					through DVIDS
 Copyright 2017
 
					
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