窪蹋勛圖厙

Setting Sail from South


Posted on May 20, 2021
Thomas Becnel


Navy Rear Admiral Gayle Shaffer, a 1987 biology graduate of the 窪蹋勛圖厙, is the first dentist to serve as deputy surgeon general. data-lightbox='featured'
Navy Rear Admiral Gayle Shaffer, a 1987 biology graduate of the University of South Alabama, is the first dentist to serve as deputy surgeon general.

When Gayle Shaffer left the Midwest for college on the Gulf Coast, it didnt take long for her to discover Southern hospitality at the 窪蹋勛圖厙.

I felt at home immediately, she said. You couldnt walk across campus without every single person you passed saying Hey. I loved it. I made some friends down there and they taught me how to talk Southern. I felt like I was part of a community. Thats what always resonated with me.

Shaffer now Rear Admiral Gayle Shaffer, deputy surgeon general of the Navy had a scholarship at South. She also worked part-time in the marine biology lab of Dr. John Freeman, who was studying the molting cycle of blue crabs.

My job it was really tough, let me tell you was to go down to Dauphin Island, go crabbing and bring blue crabs back to the lab, she said. Then I just had to make sure they got fed every day, and I cleaned their tank and did what I needed to do. Every once in a while, wed get an escapee running through the lab, and Id corral him and get him back in the tank, but it was a lot of fun.

Shaffer earned a biology degree from South in 1987, went on to dental school and then joined the Navy. What began as a job out of school turned into a career of more than 30 years.

When she joined the service, women werent allowed on combatant ships. Now they serve on everything from aircraft carriers to submarines.

Shaffer, 59, completed two Mediterranean deployments. She served in Okinawa and Japan. She led a medical facility in Djibouti, Africa, and commanded a joint medical unit in Kandahar, Afghanistan.

Since 2014, shes been stationed in Washington, D.C. Last year, she became the first dentist appointed deputy surgeon general of the Navy.

In a Zoom interview from her office, Shaffer wore a Navy uniform with twin stars on the shoulders. She recalled her days at South. She described learning how to seize opportunities and build a career.

You have to have good mentors who are going to push you outside your comfort zone, she said. You have to be comfortable being uncomfortable. And its important not to be your own barrier. I decided early on that if I was offered certain things, I wasnt going to say no. Its better to volunteer than be voluntold.

South Roommates, Sorority Sisters

At South, Paige Walsh was Shaffers roommate in the Delta residence hall. Then they rented a house in the Hillsdale neighborhood. Classmates remember her potato soup.

She was always the adult in the room always, Walsh said. She was very driven in school, but to accomplish whats shes accomplished, my goodness.

Walsh and Shaffer belonged to different sororities at South. They had fun. They got around town in a convertible.

She had the coolest little car, a Triumph Spitfire, Walsh said. We drove all the way to Chicago once to visit her family. I couldnt hear a thing when I got out of that car.

Kelley Rideout, another South classmate, met Shaffer in Alpha Omicron Pi. More than 30 years later, they stay in touch with Zoom calls.

Its not every day you have a sorority sister whos an admiral, right? Rideout said. She was always on top of everything, and so darn smart. I knew that whatever she was going to do, she was going to do it to the best of her ability.

Believing in Herself

Shaffer grew up in Bloomington, Illinois, but her family planned a move to L.A. Lower Alabama and she enrolled at South.

After graduation and dental school, she planned to see the world through the Navy. This plan got off to a slow start. She laughs when she says her first assignment was at the Great Lakes Navy Base back in the Midwest.

Her first ship was the USS Puget Sound, a destroyer tender.

They dont even have those anymore, she joked. That tells you how old I am.

In an interview with Navy Medicine Magazine for Womens History Month, Shaffer talked about the importance of believing in herself and not second-guessing her own decisions. She accepted difficult jobs and worked hard to succeed. She earned a reputation and carried it through her career.

Shaffer said shes still learning on the job. She hasnt seen it all. Theres always something new to master.

In the U.S., shes been stationed everywhere from Jacksonville, Florida, to Camp Pendleton, California, and Bethesda, Maryland. She earned a masters degree in health sciences from George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

She got married in 1998. Her husband, Shawn Shaffer, was also in the Navy.

We met after he retired, she said. Hes been able to have kind of a second career in the Navy, following me around.

Shaffer loves musical theater and traveling to New York City. She jokes with her Alabama friends about being able to visit them when she retires. She wouldnt recognize the University if she visited, they say.

The campus used to be really small, she said. Now theyve got the big clock tower and everything.

Over the years, Shaffer considered changing careers, but never left the Navy. She chokes up a little when talking about her shipmates, colleagues and time in the service.

When I weighed my options, the Navy was my best one, she said. I realized that what I was going to miss most was the camaraderie. Youre working with the best people you will ever meet in your lifetime.


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