The Long Blue Line: Juan del Castillo – Coast Guard officer and humanitarian

By Written by William H. Thiesen, Coast Guard Atlantic Area Historian

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Lt. j.g. Juan del Castillo sitting for formal service photograph. Photo courtesy of the del Castillo family.
Lt. j.g. Juan del Castillo sitting for formal service photograph. Photo courtesy of the del Castillo family.

The Coast Guard is a sea service with a variety of missions that attract personnel with unique interests and experiences. A few examples include Alex Haley, a journalist who later became a famous writer after leaving the service; and Dr. Olivia Hooker, the first African American woman to wear a Coast Guard uniform as a World War II SPAR, who went on to have a distinguished career as a psychology professor at Fordham University.

Juan del Castillo was also a member of the Coast Guard who distinguished himself in the service and in civilian life.

Born in New York in 1921, he attended La Salle Military Academy in Oakdale, New York, and graduated from Manhattan College in the spring of 1942. In June, he began what became a 40-year career with the Coast Guard Reserve. After first enlisting in the service, he received an appointment to Reserve Officer Training, later known as Officer Candidate School, at the Coast Guard Academy. He completed the course in December 1942, becoming the first Coast Guardsmen of Hispanic heritage to complete the training.

It was in the Coast Guard that del Castillo honed his leadership skills. During World War II, he served aboard the 1912 cutter Unalga and the heavily armed patrol craft PC-469, which both served as escorts for convoys in the Caribbean at a time when u-boat attacks there were a common occurrence.

The Coast Guard-manned USS Albuquerque (PF-7), patrol frigate responsible for patrolling Alaskan waters in World War II. U.S. Navy photo.
The Coast Guard-manned USS Albuquerque (PF-7), patrol frigate responsible for patrolling Alaskan waters in World War II. U.S. Navy photo.

He was next selected for Naval Communications School at Harvard University and became an expert in shipboard communications. He served the latter part of World War II in the Aleutian Islands aboard the Coast Guard-manned patrol frigate, USS Albuquerque.

After the war, del Castillo left active duty, but continued to serve as a Reservist and took a job with his family’s import business, Rafael del Castillo & Company. During this period in his career, he became interested in famine relief in the developing world. Armed with his bachelor’s degree in political science and his Coast Guard training, del Castillo became a self-taught authority on food science, famine relief and large-scale food aid distribution.

In later years, while continuing to serve in the Coast Guard Reserve, del Castillo worked in executive positions with the Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). During this time, he invented the formula for Corn Soy Milk, considered one of the most important high protein foods ever developed. Next, he invented a rice substitute out of sorghum for international food programs. Unlike large commercial food producers, del Castillo developed these highly nutritional food substitutes with no staff or laboratory. Over 4 million men, women and children worldwide consume these food products daily to avoid malnutrition and starvation.

Officers of the USS Albuquerque. Lt. Juan del Castillo stands second from the left Photo courtesy of David Hendrickson.
Officers of the USS Albuquerque. Lt. Juan del Castillo stands second from the left Photo courtesy of David Hendrickson.

As if his important advances in food science were not enough, del Castillo also held leadership positions at the USDA. These included directing distribution of foods for the nation’s school lunch program and elderly and family feeding programs and providing food for American Indian reservations.

He also served as the first director of the nation’s food stamp and Women, Infants, and Children program. In 1981, after he retiredt from the Coast Guard Reserves as a commander, del Castillo continued his work on nutritious food for feeding the needy and starving and he took an additional leadership role in the cause of improved survivor annuities for military widows.

Lt. Juan del Castillo stands watch on USS Albuquerque. Photo courtesy of Coast Guard Combat Veterans Association.
Lt. Juan del Castillo stands watch on USS Albuquerque. Photo courtesy of Coast Guard Combat Veterans Association.

Juan del Castillo, the Coast Guard Officer, war veteran, self-taught scientist and humanitarian passed away in 2009. Before he died, del Castillo was recognized for his important contributions to humanitarian food aid programs with the USAID Lifetime Achievement Award. del Castillo left behind a wife of 57 years, six children and 19 grandchildren.

Carrying on the family tradition, one of his grandchildren began training as a cadet at the Coast Guard Academy in August 2010 – nearly 70 years after del Castillo attended as a Reserve Officer trainee. del Castillo was a member of the long blue line and another example of the talented individuals who join the Coast Guard to serve others.


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Copy photo found in the CG Historian's Office Special Collections Archive in the "Uniforms" folder....

U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office
2703 Martin Luther King, Jr., Ave, SE
Washington, DC 20593-7031


U.S. Coast Guard Museum
Coast Guard Academy - Waesche Hall
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New London, CT 06320-8100

Contacting us:  U.S.C.G. Historian's Office