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Michael Berdinka, a Navy veteran, grew up in Westhampton and graduated from Westhampton Beach High School in 1968. Upon graduation, he attended SUNY Cobleskill, where he received an associate’s degree in accounting. However, he soon realized that accounting wasn’t for him.

Navy veteran Michael Berdinka was honored as a Hometown Hero by the Westhampton Free Library at a ceremony on March 16. He is pictured with his wife, Susan (center) and Westhampton Free Library Director Danielle Waskiewicz (right).
Navy veteran Michael Berdinka was honored as a Hometown Hero by the Westhampton Free Library at a ceremony on March 16. He is pictured with his wife, Susan (center) and Westhampton Free Library Director Danielle Waskiewicz (right).

As a child, Mr. Berdinka became interested in submarines, and after graduating college in 1970, he decided to enlist in the Navy. He followed in the footsteps of his family, who had served in World War II. His father, a Mattituck Junior/Senior High School graduate, joined the U.S. Army in 1941 and served as a radioman in Europe. His mother served in the British Army in London, and her brother was an electrician on a British submarine during the war. Michael’s brother, Peter, would follow suit as well by serving in the Marines in the late 1970s.

“I knew I would receive good training and I could see some of the world,” Mr. Berdinka said of his decision to enlist.

He immediately volunteered for a detail on nuclear submarines and was admitted into the Navy’s nuclear program. He trained first in electrical at the USO of Illinois Great Lakes training center, and then was stationed aboard the USS Howard W. Gilmore from 1971-72. The ship, a submarine tender, was home ported in Key West, Florida.

His training continued at Nuclear Power School in Bainbridge, Maryland, and ended in West Milton, New York, where he received extensive training as a nuclear reactor operator.

Following nuclear training, Mr. Berdinka served three and a half years in Hawaii aboard the USS Sargo (SSN-583), a nuclear fast attack submarine operating out of Pearl Harbor. During that time, he participated in weekly operations around Pearl Harbor and underwent training in individual submarine escape, controllers and circuit breakers, and submarine damage control, where he was trained to stop flooding inside a sub.

A few months after his arrival, the USS Sargo required a major overhaul, with all equipment replaced and the sub sent to the yard for work. The ship was reinstated in fall 1975 and Mr. Berdinka was then deployed for six months to the Western Pacific, where he toured Guam, the Philippines, Korea and Hong Kong. Like many fast attack nuclear submarines at the time, the crew of the USS Sargo participated in a number of secret missions while deployed.

Mr. Berdinka’s time of service had quieter moments, too. Some of his fondest memories during his time on the subs include surfacing and watching the sun set over the ocean, as well as swim calls – where anyone could jump off the ship for a few laps in the ocean.

He was honorably discharged on November 17, 1976. At that time, he was an electrician’s mate first class.

Mr. Berdinka used the skills he acquired in the Navy to obtain employment. He worked at two nuclear power plants, the first being the LaSalle County Nuclear Generating Station in Illinois, from 1977-78. The second was the Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant, where he held a management position until its closing. He went on to work as a field supervisor for overhead electric lines for the Long Island Lighting Company which became KeySpan Energy until his retirement in 2004.

Mr. Berdinka has always been dedicated to the community in which he grew up. He has been a member of the Knights of Columbus since 2008 and currently serves as treasurer of the American Legion Post 834. He is also involved with the Immaculate Conception Church and John’s Place, a homeless ministry. He is blessed with his wife, Susan, to whom he will have been married for 15 years on August 1. He has three children and four stepchildren, and between him and Susan, five grandchildren.

In gratitude of his service and sacrifice, the Westhampton Free Library paid tribute to Berdinka at a ceremony on March 16 as part of its new Hometown Heroes initiative.

The Library’s latest yearlong installment of its Hometown Heroes initiative aims to honor local veterans from the Arthur Ellis Hamm American Legion Post 834 on a monthly basis, with a culminating ceremony scheduled for January 2020.

“It is so important to honor our local veterans,” said Westhampton Free Library Director Danielle Waskiewicz. “They made many sacrifices and deserve to be thanked.”

During the ceremony, held at the Westhampton Beach Fire Department and attended by fellow Legionnaires, library representatives, family members and public officials, Berdinka was presented with proclamations and an American flag.

Photos courtesy Michael Azzato

Westhampton Free Library