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Grant Earns Military Excellence Award at Recruit Training Command

13 July 2018
Seaman Recruit Roxane Grant, of Division 279, graduated as the top Sailor from Recruit Training Command, earning the Military Excellence Award July 13.
Seaman Recruit Roxane Grant, of Division 279, graduated as the top Sailor from Recruit Training Command, earning the Military Excellence Award July 13.

Grant, from Clemmons, North Carolina, said she joined the Navy to help save lives.

"In the movie 'Hacksaw Ridge,' the main character says, 'With the world so set on tearing itself apart, it doesn't seem like such a bad thing to me to want to put a little bit of it back together,'" Grant said. "From then on, my dream was to be a combat medic in the Navy."

Grant, 20, is a 2016 graduate of West Forsyth High School in Clemmons, North Carolina, where she played lacrosse. She intends to continue pursuing a college degree in biology.

Grant is assigned the rating of hospital corpsman.

The Navy Club of the United States Military Excellence Award is the top award presented to the No. 1 recruit of his or her graduating training group. The MEA is awarded to the recruit who best exemplifies the qualities of enthusiasm, devotion to duty, military bearing and teamwork. The award placed her at the pinnacle of today's newest Sailors. Grant also received a flag letter of commendation.

Grant said winning the MEA has made her more self-assured and assertive.

"I now have the confidence to be more outspoken," Grant said. "I was shocked when I was told I won the MEA, and it has inspired me to never doubt myself again."

Grant credited her recruit division commanders, Chief Builder Michael Bettencourt, Gas Turbine System Technician (Mechanical) 1st Class Ben McCarty and Electrician's Mate 1st Class Marialeona Guerrero for their leadership and guidance.

"My RDCs played a huge role in motivating me," Grant said. "Chief Bettencourt always had a speech on how we can better ourselves, Petty Officer McCarty pushed me to go past my potential, and Petty Officer Guerrero, my role model, showed me that there are amazing women in the military."

Grant said the toughest part of her boot camp experience was the transition from a civilian to a military mindset.

"There were new ways to walk, talk, and how you carry yourself," she said. "I accomplished that by listening to my RDCs and trusting the process."

After graduation, Grant will attend hospital corpsman "A" school in Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, where she will learn basic principles and techniques of patient care and first-aid procedures.

Boot camp is approximately eight weeks and all enlistees into the U.S. Navy begin their careers at the command. Training includes physical fitness, seamanship, firearms, firefighting and shipboard damage control, along with lessons in Navy heritage and core values, teamwork and discipline. About 38,000-40,000 recruits graduate annually from RTC and begin their Navy careers.

For more information, visit www.navy.mil, www.facebook.com/usnavy, or www.twitter.com/usnavy.

For more news from Recruit Training Command, visit www.navy.mil/.
 

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