With a love for the sea
Elia Powers
The image still makes his friends and family smile: a young Donald
Brown, standing on a surfboard in the Pacific Ocean, wearing a suit
-- think CEO, not surfer -- and carrying an empty briefcase.
Brown was filming a commercial for United California Bank. Back
then, he was a full-fledged member of the Screen Actors Guild and one
of the first Marlboro Man characters in the famed advertising
campaign.
“He was this cool, cool man,” said Steve Kaufmann, a friend of
Brown’s daughter, Wendy Brown-Barry. “You just wanted to be like him
when you grew up.”
A longtime Laguna Beach resident who spent much of his nonmilitary
career working in Newport Beach, Brown died March 20. He was 91.
Brown developed a love of swimming at an early age. He was a
Laguna Beach lifeguard and a surfing aficionado. One of his favorite
spots was the Wedge, friends say.
Brown-Barry said her father loved boats and built many in his
lifetime.
He enlisted in the United States Navy in 1934 and served for 20
years. Brown was awarded numerous medals of honor, including the
Silver Lifesaving Medal.
“He had a huge love of his country,” Brown-Barry said. “I didn’t
understand it at the time, but after Sept. 11, it came to light to me
what he did to protect our country.”
Brown married his childhood friend, Wilma, in 1939, and they
raised their children in Orange County. After retiring from the Navy,
Brown joined the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol to stay close
to the ocean.
“It was a natural thing for him to get into after retiring from
the Navy,” Brown-Barry said.
Using some of his earnings, he took his family to Hawaii every
Christmas.
On the job, Brown spent many hours patrolling Newport Harbor.
Brown was a compass adjuster and a gold-medal winner in the Police
Olympics Senior Division in swimming. He worked the graveyard shift
with his friends, and Brown-Barry said her father was proud of his
work saving lives.
One memorable evening, Brown encountered a despondent man standing
at the edge of a Newport Beach dock. Brown said the man was talking
about committing suicide, so Brown drove around with him all night
long and talked him out of making an irrational decision.
Brown’s family remembers him for his uplifting personality.
“He used to do a gesture with his hand, like when you are savoring
really good food,” Brown-Barry said. “He said, ‘The world is your
oyster.’ When things seemed dark, it would cheer me up.”
Friends say Brown was also generous.
Kaufmann was 18 when he met Brown. He said he and a friend would
visit Brown-Barry in Laguna Beach and sleep under a hotel by the
water at night. When Brown found out where they were sleeping,
Kaufmann said Brown offered his house.
In the early 1960s, Brown suffered a stroke and turned to
windsurfing as a pastime.
Upon retiring from the Harbor Patrol, he joined several tuna
fishing expeditions in Mexico and reconnected with old friends.
Wilma Brown died in June 2003 at the age of 86. The two were
married 65 years.
At Don Brown’s service, friends from the Harbor Patrol joined
family members for a service at sea.
“It was a fitting way to remember him,” Brown-Barry said.
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