Slideshow October 14, 2022 at 10:24 AM
We're pleased to present ThinkAdvisor's 11th annual Advisors Who Serve(d) compilation, in which we highlight stories of veterans in the advisory world, told in their own words.
Joe Bautista
Title/company: Grow With Joe LLC/Financial PlannerBranch: U.S. Marine Corps
Rank held at beginning of service and at end: Private E-1/Sergeant E-5
Service dates: 2004-2011
Work you did: Supply Administration
Brief story that stands out from your service time: When I was in the Marines, I got in trouble for underage drinking, and afterward, we had this educational brief about the anthrax vaccine. And the doc leading the brief asks all the Marines who invented the vaccine.
In high school, my biology teacher taught us about Louis Pasteur, so I was the only one that knew the answer. After I got the answer correct, the doc said to give me a beer, and my whole company laughed because they knew I couldn't drink and recently got in trouble for it.
I also had to pay a heavy price because I was selected for mess duty on a ship for three weeks, where I had to work 15-hour days on a ship and it was miserable, but I was able to show my higher-ups that I was a good worker and recovered my reputation.
Erik Goodge
Title/company: uVest Advisory Group LLC/PresidentBranch: U.S. Marine Corps
Rank held at beginning of service and at end: Private (E-1) and was medically retired as a Sergeant (E-5)
Service dates: 2007-2012
Work you did: My MOS was 0861, which is a forward observer. My job was to locate enemy targets and call in artillery or mortar strikes.
Brief story that stands out from your service time: I was wounded by an improvised explosive device while on patrol in Helmand province, Afghanistan. I lost my right eye and spent about a year in the hospital recovering. I was awarded the Purple Heart for wounds received in action. I was medically retired in March 2012. A funnier aspect of that story is that American cigarettes were a big commodity in Afghanistan; I had been hiding some American cigarettes among my gear at our patrol base. After I was wounded, my unit members promptly found and stole all of my cigarettes before sending all my gear back to the States. Even the corpsman who helped me on to the medevac helicopter as I was unconscious felt obliged to help himself to the Marlboros I had in my pocket! I don't blame him, I would have done the same thing!
Gail M. Harris
Title/company: Wealthspire Advisors Senior Vice PresidentBranch: U.S. Navy
Rank held at beginning of service and at end: Ensign/Lieutenant
Service dates: 1980-1984
Brief story that stands out from your service time: During my second assignment while stationed in Naples, Italy, I worked for COMFAIRMED (Commander Fleet Air Mediterranean) with responsibilities for providing air logistics support for the 6th Fleet. As part of my job I would attend logistics meetings, some of which would take place on aircraft carriers. At this point in time women were not allowed to serve as combatants. I would typically arrive via helicopter, so when I stepped off the helicopter onto the flight deck it would be obvious even from a distance that at 5 feet tall, a woman had arrived. I would be the solitary woman on a ship with approximately 6,000 men! Although I experienced this situation several times, I never quite became accustomed to my arrival causing legions of men to stop and stare at the rare sight of a woman. It certainly made for some memorable experiences!