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United States Naval Academy

The United States Naval Academy (US Naval Academy, USNA, or Navy) is a federal service academy in Annapolis, Maryland. It was established on 10 October 1845 during the tenure of George Bancroft as Secretary of the Navy. The Naval Academy is the second oldest of the five U.S. service academies and it educates midshipmen for service in the officer corps of the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps. The 338-acre (137 ha) campus is located on the former grounds of Fort Severn at the confluence of the Severn River and Chesapeake Bay in Anne Arundel County, 33 miles (53 km) east of Washington, D.C., and 26 miles (42 km) southeast of Baltimore. The entire campus, known colloquially as the Yard, is a National Historic Landmark and home to many historic sites, buildings, and monuments. It replaced Philadelphia Naval Asylum in Philadelphia that had served as the first United States Naval Academy from 1838 to 1845 when the Naval Academy formed in Annapolis.[4]

United States Naval Academy
MottoEx Scientia Tridens (Latin)
Motto in English
From Knowledge, Seapower
TypeU.S. service academy
Established10 October 1845; 177 years ago (1845-10-10)
Academic affiliations
Space-grant
SuperintendentVice Admiral Sean S. Buck
ProvostAndrew T. Phillips
Commandant of MidshipmenColonel James "J.P." McDonough III
Academic staff
510
Students4,576
Location, ,
United States
CampusUrban – 338 acres (1,370,000 m2)
Colors  Navy Blue
  Gold
NicknameMidshipmen
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IPatriot League
AAC CSFL EARC EIGL EIWA
MascotBill the Goat
Websitewww.usna.edu
U.S. Naval Academy
LocationMaryland Ave. and Hanover St., Annapolis, Maryland
Built1845 (1845)
ArchitectErnest Flagg
EngineerSeverud Associates
Architectural styleBeaux Arts[2]
NRHP reference No.66000386[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHP15 October 1966
Designated NHLD4 July 1961[3]

Candidates for admission generally must apply directly to the academy and apply separately for a nomination, usually from a member of Congress. Students are officers-in-training with the rank of midshipman. Tuition for midshipmen is fully funded by the Navy in exchange for an active duty service obligation upon graduation. Approximately 1,200 "plebes" (an abbreviation of the Ancient Roman word plebeian) enter the academy each summer for the rigorous Plebe Summer. About 1,000 midshipmen graduate. Graduates are commissioned as either ensigns in the Navy or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps, but a small number can also be cross-commissioned as officers in other U.S. services, and the services of allied nations. The United States Naval Academy has some of the highest paid graduates in the country according to starting salary.[5] The academic program grants a Bachelor of Science degree with a curriculum that grades midshipmen's performance upon a broad academic program, military leadership performance, and mandatory participation in competitive athletics. Midshipmen are required to adhere to the academy's Honor Concept.

Rotunda steps leading to Memorial Hall

Other Navy schools

The Navy operates the Naval Postgraduate School and the Naval War College separately. The Naval Academy Preparatory School (NAPS) in Newport, Rhode Island, is the official preparatory school for the Naval Academy. The Naval Academy Foundation also provides post-graduate high school education for a year of preparatory school at various private High school campuses across the U.S. before entering the academy for a very limited number of applicants.[6][clarification needed]

History

 
U.S. Naval Academy in 1853
 
Stereoscopic views of midshipman quarters and mess hall c. 1905

The first nautical school for officers was conceived by Commodore Arthur Sinclair in 1819 while in command of the Norfolk Navy Yard. Due to his zeal and perseverance, the "Nautical School" was opened on board the frigate Guerriere on 3 Dec 1821 with between 40 and 50 midshipmen attached to the ship. The curriculum was diversified with Naval Tactics, Astronomy, Geography, French, History, English Grammar, and International Relations. The school operated until 1828, when Guerriere was ordered to duty in the Pacific.[7] It was from that small start that the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis grew.[8]

The history of the academy can be divided into four eras:[9] 1) use of original Fort Severn 1845–1861, 2) "Porter's Academy" 1865–1903, 3) "Flagg Academy" 1903–1941, 4) modern era 1941–present.

Identity

The academy's Latin motto is Ex Scientia Tridens, which means 'Through Knowledge, Sea Power'. It appears on a design devised by the lawyer, writer, editor, encyclopedist and naval academy graduate (1867), Park Benjamin, Jr. It was adopted by the Navy Department in 1898 due to the efforts of another graduate (also 1867) and collaborator, Jacob W. Miller. Benjamin states:[10]

The seal or coat-of-arms of the Naval Academy has for its crest a hand grasping a trident, below which is a shield bearing an ancient galley coming into action, bows on, and below that an open book, indicative of education, and finally bears the motto, Ex Scientia Tridens (From knowledge, sea power).

The trident, emblem of the Roman god Neptune, represents seapower.[citation needed]

Early years

The institution was founded as the Naval School on 10 October 1845 by Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft. The campus was established at Annapolis on the grounds of the former U.S. Army post Fort Severn. The school opened with 50 midshipman students and seven professors. The decision to establish an academy on land may have been in part a result of the Somers Affair, an alleged mutiny involving the Secretary of War's son that resulted in his execution at sea. Commodore Matthew Perry had a considerable interest in naval education, supporting an apprentice system to train new seamen, and helped establish the curriculum for the United States Naval Academy. He was also a vocal proponent of modernization of the navy.

Originally a course of study for five years was prescribed. Only the first and last were spent at the school with the other three being passed at sea. The present name was adopted when the school was reorganized in 1850 and placed under the supervision of the chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography. Under the immediate charge of the superintendent, the course of study was extended to seven years with the first two and the last two to be spent at the school and the intervening three years at sea. The four years of study were made consecutive in 1851 and practice cruises were substituted for the three consecutive years at sea. The first class of naval academy students graduated on 10 June 1854. They were considered as passed midshipmen until 1912, when graduates were first sworn in as officers.[11]

In 1850, Edward Seager joined the faculty as the first instructor of drawing, and he also served as the first fencing instructor. He held the position of teacher of the art of defence from 1851 to 1859.[12]

In 1860, the Tripoli Monument was moved to the academy grounds. Later that year in August, the model of the USS Somers experiment was resurrected when USS Constitution, then 60 years old, was recommissioned as a school ship for the fourth-class midshipmen after a conversion and refitting begun in 1857. She was anchored at the yard, and the plebes lived on board the ship to immediately introduce them to shipboard life and experiences.[13]

The American Civil War

The American Civil War was disruptive to the Naval Academy. Southern sympathy ran high in Maryland. Although riots broke out, Maryland did not declare secession. The United States government was planning to move the school, when the sudden outbreak of hostilities forced a quick departure. Almost immediately the three upper classes were detached and ordered to sea, and the remaining elements of the academy were transported to Fort Adams in Newport, Rhode Island by the USS Constitution in April 1861, where the academy was set up in temporary facilities and opened in May.[14] The Annapolis campus, meanwhile, was turned into a United States Army Hospital.[15]

 
US Naval Academy waterfront in the late 1860s with the barrack/school ships USS Constitution and Santee tied up in the background. Other ships not identified.

The United States Navy was stressed by the situation – 24% of its officers resigned to join the Confederate States Navy, including 95 graduates and 59 midshipmen,[13] along with many key leaders who influenced USNA's founding. As the first superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory, Commander Matthew Fontaine Maury, who advocated[16] for creating the United States Naval Academy also resigned his commission.

The first superintendent, Admiral Franklin Buchanan, joined the Confederate States Navy as its first and primary admiral. Captain Sidney Smith Lee, the second commandant of midshipmen,[17] and older brother of Robert E. Lee, left Federal service in 1861 for the Confederate States Navy. Lieutenant William Harwar Parker, CSN, class of 1848, and instructor at USNA, joined the Virginia State Navy, and then went on to become the superintendent of the Confederate States Naval Academy.

Lieutenant Charles "Savez" Read may have been "anchor man" (graduated last) in the class of 1860, but his later service to the Confederate States Navy included defending New Orleans, service on CSS Arkansas and CSS Florida, and command of a series of captured Union ships that culminated in seizing the US Revenue Cutter Caleb Cushing in Portland, Maine. Lieutenant James Iredell Waddell, CSN, a former instructor at the US Naval Academy, commanded the CSS Shenandoah.

The midshipmen and faculty returned to Annapolis in the summer of 1865, just after the war ended.

Porter's Academy — From the Civil War to the Spanish-American War

Civil War hero Admiral David Dixon Porter became superintendent in 1865. He found the infrastructure at Annapolis a shambles, the result of ill military use during the War. Porter attempted to restore the facilities. He concentrated on recruiting naval officers as opposed to civilians, a change of philosophy. He recruited teachers Stephen B. Luce, future admirals Winfield Scott Schley, George Dewey, and William T. Sampson. The midshipman battalion consisted of four companies. These were bunked in a single wooden building containing 100 rooms, one company to a floor. They held dress parades every evening except Sunday. Students were termed "cadets", though sometimes "cadet midshipmen"; other appellations were used. Porter began organized athletics, usually intramural at the time.[18]

Antoine Joseph Corbesier, an immigrant from Belgium, was appointed to the position of Assistant Swordmaster in 1864, and then Swordmaster at USNA in October 1865. He coached Navy fencers in intercollegiate competition from 1896, when the Naval Academy joined the Intercollegiate Fencing Association, until 1914, when he retired. By special act of Congress, he was commissioned a 1st lieutenant in the Marine Corps on 4 March 1914. He died on 26 March 1915 and is buried on Hospital Point.

In 1867, indoor plumbing and water was supplied to the family quarters. In 1868, the figurehead from USS Delaware, known as "Tecumseh" was erected in the yard. Class rings were first issued in 1869. Weekly dances were held. Wags called the school "Porter's Dancing Academy." President U.S. Grant distributed diplomas to the class of 1869.[18] Porter ensured continued room for expansion by overseeing the purchase of 113 acres (46 ha) across College Creek, later known as hospital point.

In 1871, color competition began, along with the selection of the color company, and a "color girl."[18]

In the 1870s, cuts in the military budget resulted in graduating much smaller classes. In 1872, 25 graduated. Eight of these made the Navy a career.[18] The third class physically hazed the fourth class so ruthlessly that Congress passed an anti-hazing law in 1874. Hazing continued in more stealthy forms.[18]

John H. Conyers of South Carolina was the first African-American admitted on 21 September 1872.[19] After his arrival, he was subject to severe, ongoing hazing, including verbal torment, and beatings. His classmates even attempted to drown him.[20] Three cadets were dismissed as a result, but the abuse, including shunning, continued in more subtle forms and Conyers finally resigned in October 1873.[21]

In 1875, Albert A. Michelson, class of 1873, returned to teach. He began his experiments with optics and the physics of light, which resulted in the first accurate measure of the speed of light.[22][clarification needed][18]

In 1874, the curriculum was altered to study naval topics in the final two years at the academy. In 1878, the academy was awarded a gold medal for academics at the Universal Exposition in Paris.[18]

Many firsts for minorities occurred during this period. In 1877, Kiro Kunitomo, a Japanese citizen, graduated from the academy.[23][24] And then in 1879, Robert F. Lopez was the first Hispanic-American to graduate from the academy.

In the late 19th century, Congress required the academy to teach a formal course in hygiene, the only course required by Congress of any military academy. Tradition holds that a congressman was particularly disgusted by the appearance of a midshipman returned from cruise.[citation needed]

In 1890, Navy adopted the goat mascot after winning its first football game with Army.[11]

The Flagg Academy- Spanish–American War to WW I

 
The graduating class of 1894

The Spanish–American War of 1898 greatly increased the academy's importance and the campus was almost wholly rebuilt and much enlarged between 1899 and 1906. The ground on which most of the academy sat was dredged from the surrounding bodies of water and consisted of silt. This was too fragile for the newer heavy stone buildings. Pilings were sunk from 100 feet (30 m) to 400 feet (120 m) deep. Some wooden with iron caps; modern ones of steel.[9] Today's campus dates from that era. In 1905, Isherwood Hall, containing the Department of Marine Engineering, was constructed.[25]

Prior to that era, about 43 men entered annually. There were 114 joining the class of 1905, 201 with the class of 1908.[26]

The academy built a modern hospital in 1907, the fourth in sequence, on what is today called "Hospital Point."[27]

In 1910, the academy established its own dairy farm. This was closed in 1998.[28]

The Aviation School

On 23 August 1911, the Navy officers on flight duty at Hammondsport, New York, and Dayton, Ohio, were ordered to report for duty at the Engineering Experiment Station, Naval Academy, "in connection with the test of gasoline motors and other experimental work in the development of aviation, including instruction at the aviation school" being set up on Greenbury Point, Annapolis.[29] The "aerodrome" at Greensbury Point sat on 1000 square feet of land and consisted of a building with a rubber-reinforced roof containing three hangars (one for each of the newly purchased airplanes), a workshop, an office, and several bunk rooms. All three airplanes cost a total of $14,000. Over 100 officers applied for aviation duty prior to August 1911. Swimming was among a set of other qualifications that a pilot candidate must have passed before being accepted to aviation duty. Pilot qualifications were in accordance with Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) standards. In the presence of a committee of the Aero Club of America, a pilot candidate had to fly five figure eights around two flags buoyed 1500 feet apart then land within 150 feet of an established mark. This course had to be completed twice. The test also required the prospective aviator to climb to a minimum altitude of 150 ft (officially 50 meters). It was estimated by CAPT Washington Irving Chambers that a student could qualify as a new pilot in about a month, weather permitting. All students wore life preservers. The control wheel of the Curtiss machines featured a "shift control" where the controls could be "thrown" between the student and instructor at any time. The Wright machine was delivered to Greenbury by August 1911, but was not yet configured with water gear.[30] Navy flight training moved to NAS Pensacola, Florida, in January 1914.[31]

In 1912, Reina Mercedes, sunk at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba, was raised and used as the "brig" ship for the academy.[32]

By 1912, the midshipmen were organized into a brigade, its current structure.[33] The prior organization was named a regiment.[34]

In 1914, the Midshipmen Drum and Bugle corps was formed and by 1922 it went defunct. They were revived in 1926.[35]

The brigade and faculty tripled during WWI. The 3rd and 4th wings of Bancroft Hall were built.[11]

In 1918, the great flu pandemic of 1918 infected about half the brigade (1,000 out of 2,000 men); ten midshipmen died.[11]

World War I to World War II

With the advent of the automobile and improved roads, the academy became a tourist attraction.[11]

At the 1920 summer Olympics men's 8+ rowing competition in Brussels, the Navy Academy rowing men's 8+ (The Wonder Crew) won the gold medal. US collegiate boats won the gold medal in the 8+ competition at the next seven Olympics – a standing record as of 2019 for consecutive gold medal wins by any nation in a particular sport.

The Naval Academy football team played the University of Washington in the Rose Bowl tying 14–14. In 1925, the second-class ring dance was started. In 1925, the Midshipmen Drum and Bugle Corps was formally reestablished.[35] In 1926, "Navy Blue and Gold", composed by organist and choirmaster J. W. Crosley, was first sung in public. It became a tradition to sing this alma mater song at the end of student and alumni gatherings such as pep rallies and football games, and on graduation day. In 1926, Navy won the national collegiate football championship title. In the fall of 1929, the Secretary of the Navy gave his approval for graduates to compete for Rhodes Scholarships. Six graduates were selected for that honor that same year. The Association of American Universities accredited the Naval Academy curriculum on 30 October 1930.

In 1930, the class of 1891 presented a bronze replica of Tecumseh to replace the deteriorating wooden figurehead that had been prominently displayed on campus.[18]

President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law an act of Congress (Public Law 73–21, 48 Stat. 73) on 25 May 1933 providing for the Bachelor of Science degree for Naval, Military, and Coast Guard Academies. Four years later, Congress authorized the superintendent to award a Bachelor of Science degree to all living graduates. Reserve officer training was re-established in anticipation of World War II in 1941.

 
The U.S. Naval Academy was honored by the U.S. Post Office on a commemorative stamp, depicting two midshipmen in past (left) and present uniforms, with the Naval Academy seal at center, issued in 1937.[36]

In 1939, the first Yard patrol boat arrived. These were used to train midshipmen in ship handling.[37]

In 1940, the academy stopped using Reina Mercedes as a brig for disciplining midshipmen, and restricted them to Bancroft Hall, instead.[32]

In April 1941, superintendent Rear Admiral Russell Willson refused to allow the school's lacrosse team to play a visiting team from Harvard University because the Harvard team included an African-American player. Harvard's athletic director ordered the player home and the game was played on 4 April, as scheduled, which Navy won 12–0.[38] Dr. Blake R Van Leer would later be appointed by President Harry S. Truman to the Visitor Board. Dr. Van Leer was already a member to The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization who had a focus to work against racism through influential statements on race starting with a declaration of anthropologists.[39][40]

In 1941, the 5th and 6th wings of Bancroft Hall were completed.[11] Landfill was made outboard of the hospital to create a sports field. Fill was made on the north side of the Severn to create an area for seaplanes.[41]

A total of 3,319 graduates were commissioned during World War II. Dr. Chris Lambertsen held the first closed-circuit oxygen SCUBA course in the United States for the Office of Strategic Services maritime unit at the academy on 17 May 1943.[42][43] In 1945, A Department of Aviation was established. That year a vice admiral, Aubrey W. Fitch, became superintendent. The naval academy celebrated its centennial. During the century of its existence, roughly 18,563 midshipmen had graduated, including the class of 1946.[28]

The academy was accredited in 1947 by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.

Modern era: World War II to present

The academy and its support facilities became part of the Severn River Naval Command from 1941 to 1962.[44]

An accelerated course was given to midshipmen during the war years which affected classes entering during the war and graduating later. The students studied year around. This affected the class of 1948 most of all. For the only time, a class was divided by academic standing. 1948A graduated in June 1947; the remainder, called 1948B, a year later.[45]

From 1946 to 1961, N3N amphibious biplanes were used at the academy to introduce midshipmen to flying.[46]

On 3 June 1949, Wesley A. Brown, the sixth African-American to enter the academy,[20] became the first to graduate, followed several years later by Lawrence Chambers, who became the first African-American graduate to make flag rank.[47]

The 1950 Navy fencing team won the NCAA national championship.

The Navy eight-man rowing crew won the gold medal at 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki, Finland. They were also named National Intercollegiate Champions.[48] In 1955, the tradition of greasing Herndon Monument for plebes to climb to exchange their plebe "dixie cup" covers (hats) for a midshipman's cover started.

In 1957, the moored training ship Reina Mercedes, ruined by a hurricane, was scrapped.[32]

The 1959 fencing team won the NCAA national championship, and became the first to do so by placing first in all three weapons (foil, épée, and saber). All 3 fencers were selected for the 1960 Olympics team, as was head coach Andre Deladrier. The Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, funded by donations, was dedicated 26 September 1959.

From 1959 to 1973, land was reclaimed from the Chesapeake Bay and Severn River, removal of Isherwood, Melville, and Griffin Halls, and by moving the stadium off-campus. This allowed room for expansion of Bancroft Hall, and the addition of Mitscher, Michelson, Chauvenet, Alumni, Rickover, and Hopper Halls, and the Nimitz Library. Encroached parade grounds and athletic fields were moved riverside onto the newly filled areas.[49]

Joe Bellino (Class of 1961) was awarded the Heisman Trophy on 22 June 1960. In 1961, the Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference was started. The U.S. Department of the Interior designated the campus of the U.S. Naval Academy as a National Historic Landmark on 21 August 1961.

The 1962 fencing team won the NCAA national championship.

In 1963, Roger Staubach, Class of 1965, was awarded the Heisman Trophy.

In 1963, the academy changed from a marking system based on 4.0 to a letter grade. Midshipmen began referring to the statue of Tecumseh as the "god of 2.0" instead of "the god of 2.5", the former failing mark.[50]

The academy started the Trident Scholar Program in 1963. From 3 to 16 juniors are selected for independent study during their final year.[51]

Professor Samuel Massie became the first African-American faculty member in 1966. On 4 June 1969, the first designated engineering degrees were granted to qualified graduates of the Class of 1969.[48] During the period 1968 to 1972, the academy moved beyond engineering to include more than 20 majors. From 1845 to 1968, midshipmen studied identical courses, with the exception of a choice of foreign language. In 1970, the "James Forrestal Lecture" was created, named for the first U.S. Secretary of Defense in 1947/1949. This has resulted in various leaders speaking to midshipmen, including U.S. Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, football coach Dick Vermeil, and Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, and others.[52]

In 1972, Lieutenant Commander Georgia Clark became the first female officer instructor, and Dr. Rae Jean Goodman was appointed to the faculty as the first civilian woman. Later in 1972, a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia terminated compulsory chapel attendance, a tradition which had been in effect since 1853.[53] In September 1973, the new expansive library facility complex was completed and named for Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Class of 1905.

On 8 August 1975, Congress authorized women to attend service academies. The Class of 1980 was inducted with 81 female midshipmen. In 1980, the academy included "Hispanic/Latino" as a racial category for demographic purposes; four women identified themselves as Hispanic in the class of 1981, and these women become the first Hispanic females to graduate from the academy: Carmel Gilliland (who had the highest class rank), Lilia Ramirez (who retired with the rank of commander), Ina Marie Gomez, and Trinora Pinto.[54] In 1979, the traditional "June Week" was renamed "Commissioning Week" because graduation had been moved earlier to May.[48]

In May 1980, Elizabeth Anne Belzer (later Rowe) became the first woman graduate. Janie L. Mines was the first U.S.N.A. African-American woman graduate.[55] On 23 May 1984, Kristine Holderied became the first woman to graduate at the head of the class. In addition, the Class of 1984 included the first naturalized Korean-American graduates, all choosing commissions in the U.S. Navy. The four Korean-American ensigns were Walter Lee, Thomas Kymn, Andrew Kim, and Se-Hun Oh.

In 1982, Isherwood, Griffin, and Melville Halls were demolished.[28]

On 30 July 1987, the Computing Sciences Accreditation Board (CSAB) granted accreditation for the Computer Science program.[48] In 1991, Midshipman Juliane Gallina, class of 1992, became the first woman brigade commander. On 29 January 1994, the first genderless service assignment was held. All billets were opened equally to men and women with the exception of special warfare and submarine duty.

 
Naval Academy Midshipmen celebrate after graduation.

On 12 March 1995, Lieutenant Commander Wendy B. Lawrence, Class of 1981, became a mission specialist in the space shuttle Endeavour. She is the first woman USNA graduate to fly in space.

To celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis (1845–1995), the U.S. Postal Service printed a commemorative postage stamp; the First Day of Issue was 10 October 1995.

Freedom 7, America's first space capsule shot into sub-orbit in 1961, was placed on display at the visitor center as the centerpiece of the "Grads in Space" exhibit on 23 September 1998. The late Rear Admiral Alan Shepard, Class of 1945, had flown Mercury program capsule "Freedom 7" 116.5 miles (187.5 km) into space on 5 May 1961. His historic flight marked America's first step in the space race.[48]

On 11 September 2001, the academy lost 14 alumni in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and The Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. The academy and its bounds was placed under unprecedented high security.[48]

In August 2007, Superintendent Vice Admiral Jeffrey Fowler changed academy policy to limit liberty, required more squad interaction to emphasize that "we are a nation at war."[56]

On 3 November 2007, the Navy football team defeated long-time rival Notre Dame for the first time in 43 years: 46–44 in triple overtime. The two teams have met every year since 1926 and continue a rivalry that became amicable when Notre Dame volunteered to open its facilities for training of naval officers in World War II.[57] The Navy was credited with saving the University of Notre Dame after its enrollment fell during World War II to about 250 students. The Navy trained 12,000 men to become officers.[58]

In November 2007, Memorial Hall was the venue for a 50-nation Annapolis Conference on a Palestinian-Israeli peace process discussion.

In 2017, hospital functions were moved across the Severn.[27]

In 2019 the USNA team represented the US in the King's Cup at the Henley Royal Regatta.[59] The race commemorated the centenary of the 1919 Royal Henley Peace Regatta, and included the original WWI allies Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand, the UK and the USA, joined in 2019 by Germany and the Netherlands. After exciting eliminations, the USNA mixed crew won the final race beating the strong German team.[60]


Training ships

Rank structure

The student body is known as the Brigade of Midshipmen. Students attending the U.S. Naval Academy are appointed to the rank of midshipman and serve on active duty in that rank. "Naval Academy midshipmen are classified as officers of the line but are officers only in a qualified sense. They rank just below chief warrant officers."[62][63]

Legally, midshipmen are a special grade of officer that ranks above the most senior enlisted grades (E-9) and below the lowest grade of chief warrant officer (W-2) in the Navy and Coast Guard (the Navy and Coast Guard discontinued the rank of warrant officer, WO-1, in 1975). Additionally, midshipmen rank below warrant officer (W-1) in the Marine Corps[64] and the Army,[65] and below second lieutenant (O-1) in the Air Force (the Air Force ceased appointing warrant officers in 1959 and the last USAF WO died in 2008).[66]

Midshipmen are classified not as freshmen, sophomores, juniors, and seniors, but as fourth class, third class, second class, and first class, respectively.

 
Rank structure

A member of the entering class—the fourth class, the lowest rank of midshipmen—is also known as a "plebe" (plural plebes). Because the first year at the academy is one of transformation from a civilian into a military officer, plebes must conform to a number of rules and regulations not placed on their seniors—the upper three classes of midshipmen—and have additional tasks and responsibilities that disappear upon promotion to midshipman third class.

Third class midshipmen have been assimilated into the brigade and are treated with more respect because they are upperclassmen. They are commonly called "youngsters." Because of their new stature and rank, the youngsters are allowed such privileges as watching television, listening to music, watching movies, and napping.

Second class midshipmen are charged with training plebes. They report directly to the first class, and issue orders as necessary to carry out their responsibilities. Second class midshipmen are allowed to drive their own cars (but may not park them on campus) and are allowed to enter or exit the Yard (campus) in civilian attire (weekends only).

First class midshipmen have more freedoms and liberty in the brigade. While they must participate in mandatory sports and military activities and maintain academic standards, they are also charged with the leadership of the brigade. They are commonly called "firsties". Firsties are allowed to park their cars on campus and have greater leave and liberty privileges than any other class.[67]

The brigade is divided into two regiments of three battalions each. Five companies make up each battalion, for a total of 30 companies. The midshipman command structure is headed by a first class midshipman known as the brigade commander, chosen for outstanding leadership performance. The brigade commander is responsible for much of the brigade's day-to-day activities as well as the professional training of midshipmen. Overseeing all brigade activities is the commandant of midshipmen, an active-duty Navy captain or Marine Corps colonel. Working for the commandant, experienced Navy and Marine Corps officers are assigned as company and battalion officers.[68]

Uniforms

Midshipmen at the academy wear service dress uniforms similar to those of U.S. Navy officers, with shoulder-board and/or sleeve insignia varying by school year or midshipman officer rank. All wear gold anchor insignia on both lapel collars of the service dress blue jacket. Shoulder boards, worn on summer white, service/full dress white, and dinner dress white uniforms as well as a "soft shoulder board" version on the white, button-up shirt of the service/full dress blue uniform have a gold anchor and a number of slanted stripes indicating year, except for midshipman first class whose have a single, horizontal stripe and midshipman officers (also first class), whose shoulder boards have a small gold star in place of the anchor and have 1 through 6 horizontal stripes indicating their position.

On the winter and summer working uniform shirt, a freshman (Midshipman Fourth Class or "plebe") wears no collar insignia, a sophomore (Midshipman Third Class or "Youngster") wears a single fouled anchor on the right collar point, a Junior (Midshipman Second Class) fouled anchors on each collar point, and a Senior (Midshipman First Class or "Firstie") wears fouled anchors with perched eagles. First class midshipmen in officer billets replace those devices with their respective midshipman officer collar insignia.

Midshipman officer collar insignia are a series of gold bars, from the rank of Midshipman Ensign (one bar or stripe) to Midshipman Captain (six bars or stripes) in the Brigade of Midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Depending on the season, midshipmen wear Summer Whites or Service Dress Blues as their dress uniform, and working blues as their daily class uniform. In 2008, the first class midshipmen wore the service khaki as the daily uniform, but this option was repealed following the graduation of the class of 2011. First class midshipmen may wear their service selection uniform on second semester "Warrior" Wednesdays (i.e., naval aviator and naval flight officer selectees wear flight suits; submarine and surface warfare selectees wear coveralls or Navy Working Uniforms with their new command ballcaps; Marine Corps selectees wear MARPAT camouflage utilities). A unique uniform consisting of a Navy blue double-breasted jacket with brass buttons and high collar, blue or white high-rise trousers (white worn during Graduation Week), and duty belt with silver NA buckle, is worn for formal parades during spring and autumn parade seasons.

During commissioning week (formerly known as "June week"), the uniform is summer whites.

Campus

 
U.S. Naval Academy campus
 
Plebes (first year students) marching in front of Bancroft Hall
 
Interior of the Naval Academy chapel
 
The pool in the Lejeune Hall

The campus (or "Yard") has grown from a 40,000 square metres (9.9 acres) Army post named Fort Severn in 1845 to a 1.37 square kilometres (340 acres) campus in the 21st century. By comparison, the United States Air Force Academy is 73 square kilometres (18,000 acres) and United States Military Academy is 65 square kilometres (16,000 acres).

Halls and principal buildings

  • Bancroft Hall is the largest building at the Naval Academy and the largest college dormitory in the world.[69] It houses all midshipmen. Open to the public are Memorial Hall, a midshipman-maintained memorial to graduates who have died during military operations, and the Rotunda, the ceremonial entrance to Bancroft Hall. The Commander-in-Chief's Trophy resides in the Rotunda while Navy is in possession of it.[70][71] It was named for the academy's founder, Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft, and designed by Ernest Flagg.
  • The Naval Academy Chapel, at the center of the campus, across from Herndon Monument, has a high dome that is visible throughout Annapolis.[72] Designed by Ernest Flagg. The chapel was featured on the U.S. Postal Service postage stamp honoring the academy's 150th anniversary in 1995.[73] John Paul Jones lies in the crypt beneath the chapel. Tradition states that if a plebe can place a midshipman cover (hat) on top of the chapel, plebe year will be over for all Fourth Class midshipmen. This tradition, however, is considered dangerous and is discouraged by the academy.[74]
  • Commodore Uriah P. Levy Center and Jewish Chapel,[75] primarily funded with private donations, was dedicated on 23 September 2005. The chapel was named for Commodore Uriah P. Levy and houses a Jewish chapel, the honor board, ethics,[clarification needed] character learning center, officer development spaces, a social director, and academic boards. Built featuring Jerusalem stone, the architecture of the exterior is consistent with nearby Bancroft Hall.
  • Alumni Hall is the primary assembly hall for the Brigade of Midshipmen and has two dining facilities. It hosts various sporting events (including the men's and women's intercollegiate basketball games) and is used by alumni for reunions. The Bob Hope Performing Arts Center is located there.
  • archives – see Nimitz Library (below)
  • Armel-Leftwich Visitor Center—inside Gate 1 and attached to the Halsey Field House—houses the USNA Guide Service, the USNA Gift Shop, a 12-minute film, and various exhibits, including the Graduates in Space exhibit, a sample midshipman's room, a model of the USS Maryland (BB-46), and an exhibit on the life and times of John Paul Jones, who is buried in the crypt beneath the Naval Academy Chapel. Walking tours include five types of adult tours and two types of student tours.[76]
  • Athletic Hall of Fame – see Lejeune Hall (below)
  • Chauvenet Hall, housing the departments of mathematics, physics, and oceanography, was named for William Chauvenet, an early professor at the US Naval Academy.
  • Dahlgren Hall contains a large multi-purpose room and a restaurant area. It was once used as an armory for the academy, for drill purposes, and contained the Ordnance and Gunnery Department and classrooms. It was named for John A. Dahlgren.
  • The Dyer Tennis Clubhouse is used by the tennis team and contains locker rooms, offices, a racquet stringing room, a lounge, and a viewing deck overlooking the tennis courts. It was named for Vice Admiral George Dyer (Class of 1919).[77][78]
  • Halsey Field House contains an indoor track, squash and tennis courts, five basketball courts, a 65 tatami dojo for Aikido/Judo, a climbing wall, and assorted athletic and workout facilities and offices.[79] Before construction of Alumni Hall, it was used by Navy basketball teams and was the site of midshipman assemblies. It was named for William F. Halsey, Jr.
  • Hubbard Hall – used by the crew team – is a three-story building on Dorsey Creek, 250 yards (230 m) from the Severn River.[77] Also known as the Boat House, it was renovated in 1993 and now includes the Fisher Rowing Center. It was named for Rear Admiral John Hubbard (Class of 1870).[77][80]
  • King Hall is the dining hall that seats the Brigade of Midshipmen together at one time. It was named for Ernest J. King. Daily fare ranges from eggs, to sandwiches, to prime rib and the annual crab feast.
  • Larson Hall- the administration building "Larson Hall" is named in honor of Adm. Charles R. Larson, Naval Academy Class of 1958, who died 26 July 2014. The building was built in 1907, renovated in 2014, and serves as the headquarters of the Naval Academy superintendent and immediate staff.
  • Lejeune Hall, built in 1982, contains an Olympic-class swimming pool and diving tower, a mat room for wrestling and hand-to-hand martial arts, and the Athletic Hall of Fame. Named for John A. Lejeune, it is the first USNA building to be named for a Marine Corps officer.[81][82]
  • Library – see Nimitz Library (below)
  • Luce Hall, housing the departments of Professional Development and Leadership, Ethics, and Law, was named for Stephen Luce.
  • MacDonough Hall contains a full-scale gymnastics area, two boxing rings, and alternate swimming pools. It was named for Thomas MacDonough.
  • Mahan Hall contains a theater along with the old library in the Hart Room, which has now been converted into a lounge and meeting room. It was named for Alfred Thayer Mahan. Designed by Ernest Flagg.
  • Maury Hall contains the departments of Weapons and Systems Engineering plus Electrical Engineering. It was named for Matthew Fontaine Maury. Designed by Ernest Flagg.
  • Michelson Hall, housing the departments of Computer Science and Chemistry, was named for Albert A. Michelson, the first American to win the Nobel Prize in Physics.
  • museum – see Preble Hall (below)
  • The Nimitz Library contains the academy's library collection, the academy's archives (William W. Jeffries Memorial Archives), and the departments of Language Studies, Economics and Political Science. It was named for Chester W. Nimitz.
  • The Officers' and Faculty Club and officers quarters spread around the Yard.
  • Preble Hall houses the U.S. Naval Academy Museum.[83] It was named for Edward Preble. It maintains a collection of Naval Academy class rings from 1869 through to the present. Tradition dictates that the first deceased class member's ring is donated to the museum to represent that class in the official class ring display.
  • Ricketts Hall contains the basketball, football, and lacrosse offices, the locker room for the varsity football team, and one of the academy's three "strength and conditioning facilities," where midshipman athletes train.[77] It was named for Claude V. Ricketts.
  • Rickover Hall houses the departments of Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering, Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering. It was named for Hyman G. Rickover.
  • The Robert Crown Sailing Center contains offices, team classrooms, locker rooms, and equipment repair and storage facilities. It also houses the ICSA College Sailing Hall of Fame. Also on display in the Hall are the Naval Academy's sailing trophies and awards.[84]
  • Sampson Hall, housing the departments of English and History, was named for William T. Sampson. Designed by Ernest Flagg.
  • visitor center – see Armel-Leftwich Visitor Center (above)
  • Wesley Brown Field House houses physical education, varsity sports, intramural athletics, club sports, and personal-fitness programs and equipment. The cross country and track and field teams, the sprint football team, the women's lacrosse team, and sixteen club sports all use this building. It has a full-length, retractable football field. When the field is retracted, you can then use the 200-meter track (with hydraulically controlled banked curves) and three permanent basketball courts. It also has eight locker rooms and a medical facility. It was named for Wesley A. Brown, Class of 1949, who was the academy's first African American graduate.

Monuments and memorials

  • Gokoku-ji Bell. A copy of the original bell which was brought back to the United States in 1855 by Commodore Matthew Perry following his mission to Japan. The bell is placed in front of Bancroft Hall and rung in a semi-annual ceremony for each victory that Navy has registered over Army, to include one of the nation's oldest football rivalries, the Army–Navy Game. The current bell is an exact replica of the original, which the United States Navy returned to the people of Okinawa in 1987.[85]
  • Tecumseh Statue. This statue is a bronze replica of the figurehead of ship-of-the-line USS Delaware. It was presented to the academy by the Class of 1891. This bust, one of the most famous relics on the campus, is commonly known as Tecumseh. However, when it adorned the American man-of-war, it commemorated not Tecumseh but Tamanend, the revered Delaware chief who welcomed William Penn to America. The original wooden figurehead is in the Naval Academy fieldhouse. In times past, the bronze replica was considered a good-luck "mascot" for the midshipmen, who threw pennies at it and offered left-handed salutes whenever they wanted a 'favor', such as a sports win over West Point and spiritual help for examinations. It is also referred to as the god of 2.0 because 2.0 is the minimum passing GPA at USNA, and the mids offer pennies to Tecumseh to help achieve this. Today it is used as a morale booster during football weeks and on special occasions when Tecumseh is painted in themes to include super heroes, action heroes, humorous figures, a leprechaun (before Saint Patrick's Day) and a naval officer (during Commissioning Week).
  • Battle ensigns. Famous flags of the U.S. Navy and captured flags from enemy ships are displayed throughout the academy. The most famous, perhaps, is the "Don't Give Up the Ship" flag flown by Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry at the Battle of Lake Erie on 10 September 1813; it bears the dying words of Captain James Lawrence, captain of the USS Chesapeake. It was displayed in Memorial Hall, which is in the portion of Bancroft Hall open to the general public until 2004. It underwent conservation and is now on display in the Museum in Preble Hall. The only British royal standard taken by capture[citation needed] was displayed in Mahan Hall. It was taken at Toronto (then York) in the War of 1812.
  • Herndon Monument. The Monument was commissioned by the officers of the U.S. Navy as a tribute to Commander William Lewis Herndon (1813–1857) after his loss in the Pacific Mail Steamer Central America during a hurricane off the North Carolina coast on 12 September 1857. Herndon had followed a longtime custom of the sea[citation needed] that a ship's captain is the last person to depart his ship in peril. It was erected in its current location on 16 June 1860 and has never been moved, even though the academy was completely rebuilt between 1899 and 1908.
  • Memorial Hall – in Bancroft Hall – is a midshipman-kept memorial to graduates who died during military operations. It includes an honor roll, scrolls, and plaques.
  • Pearl Harbor memorial. At Alumni Hall, a wall is reserved by the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association to commemorate those who were killed during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
  • Tripoli Monument – the oldest military monument in the U.S., honors the US servicemen of the First Barbary War: Master Commandant Richard Somers, Lieutenant James Caldwell, James Decatur (brother of Stephen Decatur), John Dorsey, Joseph Israel, and Henry Wadsworth. Originally known as the Naval Monument, it was carved of Carrara marble in Italy in 1806 and brought to the U.S. as ballast on board the USS Constitution ("Old Ironsides"). From its original location in the Washington Navy Yard, it was moved to the west terrace of the national Capitol and finally, in 1860, to the Naval Academy.[86]
  • USS Samuel B. Roberts memorial. In Alumni Hall, a concourse is dedicated to Lieutenant Lloyd Garnett and his shipmates aboard USS Samuel B. Roberts, who earned their ship the reputation as the "destroyer escort that fought like a battleship" in the Battle of Leyte Gulf during World War II.
 
Mexican War Monument to Midshipmen Shubrick, Clemson, Hynson, and Pillsbury

Brigade sports complex

The complex includes McMullen Hockey Arena where the men's ice-hockey team is located; rugby venues, an indoor hitting, chipping and putting facility for the golf team, and the Tose Family Tennis Center – including the Fluegel-Moore Tennis Stadium.[77]

Cemetery and columbarium

Glenn Warner Soccer Facility

Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium

Terwilliger Brothers Field

The academy baseball team plays at the Terwilliger Brothers Field at Max Bishop Stadium.

Supervision of the Academy

In 1850, the academy was placed under the jurisdiction of the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography but was transferred to the Bureau of Navigation when that organization was established in 1862. The academy was placed under the direct care of the Navy Department in 1867, but for many years the Bureau of Navigation provided administrative routine and financial management.

As of 2004, the Superintendent of the Naval Academy reports directly to the Chief of Naval Operations. The board of visitors annually audits the academy. Its recommendations constitute a mandate to the administration. It is composed of officials appointed by Congress and the president.[88] In 1945 colonel, civil rights advocate and inventor Blake R Van Leer was appointed to the board by President Harry S. Truman.[89] The 2020 recommendations include changing the historic names of buildings named after people who deserted the Union for the Confederacy during the American Civil War.[90]

Faculty

Roughly 500 faculty members are evenly divided between civilian professors and military instructors. The civilian professors nearly all have a PhD and can be awarded tenure, usually upon promotion from assistant professor to associate professor. Fewer of the military instructors have a PhD but nearly all have a master's degree. Most of them are assigned to the academy for only two or three years. Additionally, there are adjunct professors, hired to fill temporary shortages in various disciplines. The adjunct professors are not eligible for tenure.

Permanent military professors (PMP)

A small number of officers at the academy are designated as permanent military professors (PMP), initially at the academic rank of assistant professor. All PMPs have PhDs, and remain at the academy until statutory retirement. Most are commanders in the Navy; a few are captains. Like civilian professors, they seek academic promotion to the rank of associate professor and professor. However, they are not eligible for tenure.

Class of 1957 Distinguished Chair of Naval Heritage

The Class of 1957 Distinguished Chair of Naval Heritage is an academic professorial chair in the history department.[91] In order to preserve and promote a better understanding of professional naval heritage in midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy, the academy's Class of 1957 donated the funds to permanently endow this position. It is designed to be a visiting position for a distinguished senior academic historian, who is to hold the post for one or two years. The position was first occupied in 2006 and, in addition to teaching requirements, the occupant is expected to give the McMullen Seapower Lecture at the academy's biennial McMullen Naval History Symposium.

Chair holders

Appointment process

By an Act of Congress passed in 1903, two midshipman appointments were allowed for each senator, representative, and delegate in Congress, two for the District of Columbia, and five each year at large. Currently each member of Congress and the vice president can have five appointees attending the Naval Academy at any time. When any appointee graduates or otherwise leaves the academy, a vacancy is created. Candidates are nominated by their senator, representative, or delegate in Congress, and those appointed at large are nominated by the vice president. The applicants do not have to know their Congressman to be nominated. Congressmen generally nominate ten people per vacancy. They can nominate people in a competitive manner, or they can have a principal nomination. In a competitive nomination, all ten applicants are reviewed by the academy, to see who is the most qualified. If the congressman appoints a principal nominee, then as long as that candidate is physically, medically, and academically found qualified by the academy, he or she will be admitted, even if there are more qualified applicants. The degree of difficulty in obtaining a nomination varies greatly according to the number of applicants in a particular state. The process of obtaining a nomination typically consists of completing an application, completing one or more essays, and obtaining one or more letters of recommendation and often requires an interview either in person or over the phone. These requirements are set by the respective senator or representative and are in addition to the USNA application.[92]

The Secretary of the Navy may appoint 170 enlisted members of the Regular and Reserve Navy and Marine Corps to the Naval Academy each year. Additional sources of appointment are open to children of career military personnel (100 per year) and 65 appointments are available to children of military members who were killed in action, or were rendered 100% disabled due to injuries received in action, or are currently prisoners of war or missing in action. Typically five to ten candidates are nominated for each appointment, which are normally awarded competitively; candidates who do not receive the appointment they are competing for may still be admitted to the academy as a qualified alternate. If a candidate is considered qualified but not picked up, they may receive an indirect admission to either a Naval Academy Foundation prep school or the Naval Academy Preparatory School in Newport; the following year, these candidates enlist in the Navy Reserve (or, in the case of prior enlisted members, remain in the Navy) and are eligible for Secretary of the Navy nominations, which are granted as a matter of course. To receive an appointment to the Naval Academy, students at the Naval Academy Preparatory School must first pass with a 2.2 QPA (a combination of GPA and Fitness Assessments), although this is waiverable. A candidate must also receive a recommendation for appointment from the commanding officer. The appointment process has been criticized as giving preferential treatment towards athletes.[93]

Children of Medal of Honor recipients are automatically appointed to the Naval Academy; they only need to meet admission requirements.[94]

Admissions requirements

To be admitted, candidates must be between seventeen and twenty-three years of age upon entrance, unmarried with no children, and of good moral character. The current process includes a college application, personality testing, standardized testing, and personal references. Candidates for admission must also undergo a physical aptitude test (the CFA or Candidate Fitness Assessment [formerly the Physical Readiness Examination]) as well as a complete physical exam including a separate visual acuity test to be eligible for appointment. A medical waiver will automatically be sought on behalf of candidates with less than 20/20 vision, as well as a range of other injuries or illnesses. The physical aptitude test is most often administered by a high school physical education teacher or sports team coach.[94]

A small number of international students, usually from smaller allied or friendly countries, are admitted into each class. (International students from larger allies, such as France and the United Kingdom, typically come as shorter-term exchange students from their national naval colleges or academies.) The Class of 2025 includes 16 international students from: Egypt (1), Fiji (1), Ghana (1), Indonesia (2), Jordan (1), Malaysia (1), Maldives (1), Peru (1), Philippines (2), Sri Lanka (1), Taiwan (1), Thailand (1), and Tunisia (2).[95]

Seven second class cadets each from West Point, the Air Force Academy, and the Coast Guard Academy, spend a fall semester at Annapolis. The same applies for midshipmen exchanged out to those academies at the same time. The exchange process is competitive.[96]

Academics

The Naval Academy received accreditation as an approved "technological institution" in 1930. In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt signed into law an act of Congress providing for the Bachelor of Science degree for the Naval, Military, and Coast Guard Academies. The Class of 1933 was the first to receive this degree and have it written in the diploma. In 1937, an act of Congress extended to the superintendent of the Naval Academy the authority to award the Bachelor of Science degree to all living graduates. The academy later replaced a fixed curriculum taken by all midshipmen with the present core curriculum plus 22 major fields of study.[97]

Academic departments at the Naval Academy are organized into three divisions: Engineering and Weapons, known as Division I, Mathematics and Science, known as Division II, and Humanities and Social Sciences, known as Division III.[[:Category:|]]

In its 2021 edition, U.S. News & World Report ranked the U.S. Naval Academy as the No. 1 top public school, No. 6 in national liberal arts colleges in the U.S., and No. 5 for Best Undergraduate Engineering program at schools where doctorates not offered.[98] In 2016, Forbes ranked the U.S. Naval Academy as No. 24 overall in its report "America's Top Colleges".[99]

Moral education

Moral and ethical development is fundamental to all aspects of the Naval Academy. From Plebe Summer through graduation, the Officer Development Program, a four-year integrated program, focuses on integrity, honor, and mutual respect based on the moral values of respect for human dignity, respect for honesty and respect for the property of others.[100]

One of the goals of the program is to develop midshipmen to possess a sense of their own moral beliefs and the ability to express them. Honor is emphasized through the Honor Concept of the Brigade of Midshipmen, which states:

Midshipmen are persons of integrity: They stand for that which is right.

They tell the truth and ensure that the full truth is known. They do not lie.

They embrace fairness in all actions. They ensure that work submitted as their own is their own, and that assistance received from any source is authorized and properly documented. They do not cheat.

They respect the property of others and ensure that others are able to benefit from the use of their own property. They do not steal.[101]

Similar ideals are expressed in the honor codes of the other service academies. However, midshipmen are allowed to confront someone they see violating the code without formally reporting it. It is believed that this method is a better way of developing the honor of midshipmen as opposed to the non-toleration clauses of the other service academies and is a better way of building honor and trust.

Brigade Honor Committees composed of upper-class midshipmen are responsible for the education and training of the Honor Concept. Depending on the severity of the offense, midshipmen found in violation of the Honor Concept by their peers can be separated from the Naval Academy.[100]

Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference (NAFAC)

Since 1961, the academy has hosted the annual Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference (NAFAC), the country's largest undergraduate, foreign-affairs conference. NAFAC provides a forum for addressing pressing international concerns and seeks to explore current issues from both a civilian and military perspective.

Each year a unique theme is chosen for NAFAC. Noteworthy individuals with expertise in relevant fields are then invited to address the conference delegates, who represent civilian and military colleges from across the United States and around the globe.

The entire conference is organized and run by midshipmen, who also serve as moderators, presenters, and delegates. The midshipman director is responsible for every aspect of the conference, including the conference theme, and is generally charged with leading a staff of over 250 midshipmen.[102]

Naval Academy Science and Engineering Conference (NASEC)

The Naval Academy Science and Engineering Conference (NASEC), hosted annually since 2000, is an undergraduate STEM conference. Held in November each year, approximately 45 midshipmen join 150 attendees from other colleges and universities across the country meet and discuss significant science and engineering challenges. The delegates hear from leaders in scientific research and policy from academia, industry, and government, and participate in group discussions on the conference themes.[103]

The conference serves as both a leadership opportunity for the midshipmen staff who organize and run the event, and as a venue to expose midshipmen to cutting-edge science and engineering challenges.

McMullen Naval History Symposium

Since 1973, the Naval Academy has hosted a major international conference for naval historians. In 2006 it was named after John J. McMullen, USNA Class of 1940.

Small Satellite Program

The United States Naval Academy (USNA) Small Satellite Program (SSP)[104] was founded in 1999 to actively pursue flight opportunities for miniature satellites designed, constructed, tested, and commanded or controlled by midshipmen.

The USNA MidSTAR Program's first satellite, MidSTAR I was launched 8 March 2007.[105] The planned MidSTAR II was canceled.

Postgraduate studies

Because the majority of graduates commence directly into their military commissions, the Naval Academy offers no graduate degree programs. However, a number of programs allow midshipmen to obtain graduate degrees before fulfilling their service obligation. The Immediate Graduate Education Program (IGEP) allows newly commissioned Ensigns or Second Lieutenants to proceed directly to graduate school and complete a master's degree. The Voluntary Graduate Education Program (VGEP) allows the midshipman to begin their studies the second semester of their senior year at a local university, usually University of Maryland, Johns Hopkins University, Georgetown University, or George Washington University, and complete the degree by the following semester. Midshipmen accepted into prestigious scholarships, such as the Rhodes Scholarship are permitted to complete their studies before fulfilling their service obligation. Finally, the Bowman Scholarship allows Navy Nuclear Power candidates to complete their master's degrees at the Naval Postgraduate School before continuing into the Navy.

Student activities

Student body composition as of May 2, 2022
Race and ethnicity[106] Total
White 61% 61
 
Hispanic 12% 12
 
Other[a] 11% 11
 
Asian 8% 8
 
Black 7% 7
 
Foreign national 1% 1
 
Economic diversity
Data Not Available

Athletics

 
The 1926 National Championship football team

Participation in athletics is, in general, mandatory at the Naval Academy and most midshipmen not on an intercollegiate team must participate actively in intramural or club sports. There are exceptions for non-athletic Brigade Support Activities such as YP Squadron (a professional surface warfare training activity providing midshipmen the opportunity to earn the Craftmaster Badge) or the Drum and Bugle Corps.

Varsity-letter winners wear a specially issued blue cardigan with a large gold "N" patch affixed. Teams that beat Army in a year are awarded a gold star to affix near the "N" for each such victory.

The U.S. Naval Academy's varsity sports teams[107] have no official name but usually are referred to in media as "the Midshipmen" (since all athletes are, in fact, midshipmen), or more informally as "the Mids". The term "middies" is generally considered derogatory.[108] The sports teams' mascot is a goat named "Bill."

The Midshipmen participate in the NCAA's Division I FBS as a member of the American Athletic Conference in football and in the NCAA Division I-level Patriot League in many other sports. The academy fields 30 varsity sports teams and 13 club sports teams (along with 19 intramural sports teams).[107][109]

 
Plebes receive basic martial arts instruction during Plebe Summer training
 
Plebes paddle pontoon boats during a team-building portion of Sea Trials

The most important sporting event at the academy is the annual Army–Navy Game, in football. The 2015 season marks Navy's 14th consecutive victory over Army. The three major service academies (Navy, Air Force, and Army) compete for the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy, which is awarded to the academy that defeats the others in football that year (or retained by the previous winner in the event of a three-way tie). Navy won the trophy in 2012 after two years of residence at the Air Force Academy. Keenan Reynolds (quarterback 2012–2015) set numerous Navy and NCAA records, including the FBS career rushing touchdown record, arguably becoming Navy's best quarterback ever. Reynolds finished fifth in the prestigious Heisman Trophy voting. In the Army-Navy rivalry, Reynolds became the first quarterback to beat Army in four seasons.[110]

Naval Academy sports teams have many accomplishments at the international and national levels. In 1926, Navy's football team won the U.S. national championship based on both the Boand and Houlgate mathematical poll systems.[111] and the Navy men's lacrosse team won 21 USILL or USILA national championships and was the NCAA Division I runner-up in 1975 and 2004. The men's fencing team won NCAA Division I championships in 1950, 1959, and 1962 and was runner-up in 1948, 1953, 1960, and 1963,[112] and NCAA Division I championships were also earned by the 1945 men's outdoor track and field team[113] and the 1964 men's soccer team.[114]

The academy lightweight crew won the 2004 and 2021 National Championship. The lightweights are accredited with two Jope Cup Championships as well, finishing the Eastern Sprints with the highest number of points in 2006 and 2007. The college's heavyweight crew won Olympic gold medals in men's eights in 1920 and 1952,[115] and from 1907 to 1995 at Intercollegiate Rowing Association regatta the team earned 30 championships.[116] In intercollegiate shooting, the Naval Academy has won nine National Rifle Association rifle team trophies, seven air pistol team championships, and five standard pistol team titles.[117] Navy's squash team was the national nine-man team champion in 1957, 1959, and 1967,[118] and the boxing team was National Collegiate Boxing Association champion in 1987, 1996, 1997, 1998, and 2005.[119]

There is an unofficial (but previous National Champion) croquet team.[120] Legend has it that in the early 1980s, a Mid and a Johnnie (slang for a student enrolled at St. John's College, Annapolis), were in a bar and the Mid challenged the Johnnie by stating that Midshipmen could beat St. John's at any sport. The St. John's student selected croquet. Since then, thousands attend the annual croquet match between St. John's and the 28th Company[121] of the Brigade of Midshipmen (originally the 34th Company before the brigade was reduced to 30 companies).[122] As of 2017, the Midshipmen had a record of 7 wins and 28 losses to the St John's team.[123]

Other extra-curricular activities

 
A bagpiper with the Naval Academy Pipes and Drums

Midshipmen have the opportunity to participate in a broad range of other extracurricular activities including musical performance groups (Drum & Bugle Corps, Men's Glee Club, Women's Glee Club, Gospel Choir, an annual musical, a midshipman orchestra, and a bagpipe band, the Pipes & Drums), religious organizations, academic honor societies such as Omicron Delta Epsilon (an economics honor society), Campus Girl Scouts, the National Eagle Scout Association, a radio station (WRNV),[124] and Navy and Marine Corps professional activities (diving, flying, seamanship, and the Semper Fidelis Society for future Marines). The midshipman theatrical company, The Masqueraders, put on one production annually in Mahan Hall. There is an intercollegiate debate team.[125] Colleges from along the East Coast attend the annual U.S. Naval Academy Debate Tournament. Midshipmen also participate in the Sandhurst Competition, a military skills event.[126]

The brigade began publishing a humor magazine called The Log in 1913.[127] This magazine was discontinued in 2001[128] but returned to print in the fall of 2008. Among The Log's usual features were "Salty Sam," an anonymous member of the senior class who served as a gossip columnist, and the "Company Cuties," photos of male midshipmen's girlfriends. (This last was deemed offensive to women, and despite attempts to incorporate the boyfriends of female midshipmen in some issues, the "Company Cuties" were dropped from The Log's format by 1991.)[129] The Log was once featured in Playboy Magazine for its parody of the famous periodical,[130] called "Playmid." "Playmid" was an issue of The Log in 1989 and was ordered destroyed by Rear Admiral Virgil L. Hill Jr., the Academy Superintendent at the time, but a handful of copies did survive. Earlier Log attempts to parody were much more successful, with 18 April 1969, version as the most famous; some sections of this issue can be seen online at an alumni website.[131] In September 1949, the Log began publishing a half-sized Splinter bi-weekly, to alternate with its larger sized publication.[132][133]

Song

Notable among a number of songs commonly played and sung at various events such as commencement and convocation, and athletic games is: "Anchors Aweigh", the United States Naval Academy fight song. According to "College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology" published in 1998, "Anchors Aweigh" ranks as the fifth greatest fight song of all time. "Blue and Gold" is the name of Naval Academy's Alma Mater.[134]

Police

The Naval District Washington-Naval Support Activity Annapolis Police Department, formerly known as the US Naval Academy Police Department until 2010, is a full DOD law enforcement agency. It is composed of both DoD Department of Navy Civilian Police, and Navy Masters-at-Arms who are responsible for policing the US Naval Academy complex. They enforce Maryland, federal and military law and local instructions, offer assistance to those in need, and provide a visible deterrent for criminal activity.[135]

Women at the Naval Academy

 
Astronaut Wendy B. Lawrence, Class of 1981

The Naval Academy first accepted women as midshipmen in 1976, after Congress authorized the admission of women to all of the service academies. Women account for about 22 percent of entering plebes.[b] They pursue the same academic and professional training as do their male classmates, except that certain physical aptitude standards for women are lower than for men, mirroring the standards of the Navy itself. Women have most recently composed about 17 percent of each graduating class, however this number continues to rise. The first pregnant midshipman graduated in 2009. While regulations expressly forbade this, the woman was able to receive a waiver from the Department of the Navy.[137]

In 2006, Michelle J. Howard, class of 1982, became the first female graduate of the Naval Academy to be selected for admiral; she was also the first admiral from her class. Margaret D. Klein, class of 1981, became the first female commandant of midshipmen in December 2006.

Following the 2003 U.S. Air Force Academy sexual assault scandal and due to concern with sexual assault in the U.S. military the Department of Defense was required to establish a task force to investigate sexual harassment and assault at the United States military academies in the law funding the military for fiscal 2004. The report, issued 25 August 2005 showed that during 2004 50% of the women at Annapolis reported instances of sexual harassment while 99 incidents of sexual assault were reported.[138] There had been an earlier incident in 1990 which involved male midshipmen chaining a female midshipman to a urinal and then taking pictures of her after she threw a snowball at them.[139]

Academy Superintendent Vice Admiral Rodney Rempt issued a statement: "With the benefit of the Defense Task Force's assessment and recommendations, we will continue to strive to establish a climate which encourages reporting of these incidents, so we can support the victim and deal with allegations fairly and appropriately. The very idea that any member of the Naval Academy family could be part of an environment that fosters sexual harassment, misconduct, or even assault is of great concern to me, and it is contrary to all we are trying to do and achieve. Preventing and deterring this unacceptable behavior is a leadership issue that I and all the Academy leaders take to heart. The public trusts that the Service Academies will adhere to the highest standards and that we will serve as beacons that exemplify character, dignity and respect. We will increase our efforts to meet that trust." Superintendent Rempt was criticized in 2006 for not allowing former Navy quarterback Lamar Owens to graduate, despite his acquittal on a rape charge. Some alumni have attributed this to an overeagerness on Rempt's part to placate critics urging a crackdown on sexual assault and harassment.[140]

In 1979, James H. Webb published a provocative essay opposing the integration of women at the Naval Academy titled "Women Can't Fight." Webb was an instructor at the Naval Academy in 1979 when he wrote the article for Washingtonian magazine that was critical of women in combat and of them attending the service academies. The article, in which he referred to the dorm at the Naval Academy that housed 4,000 men and 300 women as "a horny woman's dream," was written three years after the academy admitted women. Webb said he did not write the headline.[141]

On 7 November 2006, Webb was elected to the U.S. Senate from Virginia. His election opponent, then senator George Allen, raised the 1979 article as a campaign issue, depicting Webb as being opposed to women in military service. Webb's response read in part, "To the extent that my writings subjected women at the Academy or the active armed forces to undue hardship, I remain profoundly sorry." He then went on to assert: "I am completely comfortable with the roles of women in today's military."[142] In a political advertisement for Allen five female graduates of the United States Naval Academy had said the article helped foster an air of hostility and harassment towards females within the academy.

The Navy Secretary Ray Mabus on 21 December 2012, issued a statement of shame over a recent sexual abuse study which showed the nation's service academies continue to have trouble maintaining safe teaching environments regarding sexual abuse. Reported sexual assaults the prior year declined from 22 to 13 at Annapolis. The former superintendent, Vice Admiral Mike Miller, enforced a new academy policy, as of January 2013, related to training, victim support, campus security, leadership presence on weekends, and a general review of alcohol policy based on other information in the recent report which shows the actual number of sexual assaults has not declined and that offenses are not reported.[143]

Traditions

 
United States Naval Academy flag

Traditions are practices handed down from class to class at the academy. Many have been recorded over the years in academy publications. Some are as old as a century or more but few have persisted totally unchanged.

  • Anchors Aweigh is a popular song written historically at the Naval Academy, subsequently coming to stand for the entire United States Navy. The lyrics are by Midshipman Alfred H. Miles, set to music by 2nd Lieutenant Zimmerman, USMC, bandmaster of the Naval Academy Band starting in 1887. After writing "Anchors Aweigh" they dedicated it to the Class of 1907. The song is sung during sporting events, pep rallies, and played by the Drum and Bugle Corps during noon meal formations. Members of the Navy and Marine Corps, unless marching, are supposed to come to attention while it is playing. The original verse (quoted below) is learned by midshipmen as plebes.

Anchors Aweigh
Stand Navy down the field
Sails set to the sky
We'll never change our course
So Army you steer shy-y-y-y
Roll up the score, Navy
Anchors Aweigh
Sail Navy down the field
And sink the Army, sink the Army Grey![144]

  • "Beat Army" is a stock phrase, most often said in the autumn before the Army-Navy Football Game to which it refers. It is generally used in a traditional or ad hoc authoritative context, such as after the singing of the academy's Alma Mater, "Blue and Gold," at a rally. As an example of an ad hoc context, midshipmen officers with the approval of commanding officers may require it to be spoken smartly by plebes while squaring corners.
  • "Blue and Gold" is the name of Naval Academy's Alma Mater.[134] The song is sung at the conclusion of every sporting event, at the end of pep rallies and at alumni gatherings. It is also sung in most companies by the plebes at the conclusion of the day during Plebe Summer and end of the week during the academic year; this event is also referred to as "Blue and Gold," which is a short gathering to review the day for better or worse with the upperclass midshipmen. The original lyrics are:

Blue and Gold
Now college men from sea to sea may sing of colors true,
But who has better right than we, to hoist a symbol hue,
For sailor men in battle fair, since fighting days of old,
Have proved the sailor's right to wear, the Navy Blue and Gold!

The second verse is sung at each graduation and commissioning ceremony and is often performed by the Glee Clubs.

Four years together by the bay where Severn joins the tide,
And by the service called away we scatter far and wide.
But still when two or three shall meet and old tales be retold,
From low to highest in the Fleet, we'll pledge the Blue and Gold!

The wording of the first and third lines was changed slightly in 2004 to make them gender neutral. The current first stanza is:

Blue and Gold
Now colleges from sea to sea may sing of colors true,
But who has better right than we, to hoist a symbol hue?
For sailors brave in battle fair, since fighting days of old,
Have proved the sailor's right to wear, the Navy Blue and Gold![145]

  • Cover Toss – At the end of graduation the new ensigns in the Navy or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps (typically) discard their now obsolete midshipman covers (hats) by tossing them into the air to celebrate change of status. Various additional practices have included putting a small sum of money inside the cover for the benefit of children attending, or putting one's name and address inside to receive a letter and cake. The Cover Toss tradition started in 1912.
  • Goat Court[146] refers to either of two light wells inside the third and fourth wings of Bancroft, lined with five stories of room windows. The bottoms, forming a roof over the basement, feature large HVAC units. Policies of assignment to the more desirable, outside rooms have varied, but generally rank is the chief consideration.
  • Herndon Monument Climb – a year-end informal ritual (analogous to the "cover toss" at graduation) marking the passage from plebe to third-classman. The new upperclassmen raise a classmate to the top of the monument to replace a dixie cup sailor cover with the combination cover traditional to midshipmen.[146][147] For the event, Herndon is covered with lard. Only teamwork will result in the changing of caps. In 2008, the dixie cup removed and the cover placed belonged to Midshipman Kristen Dickmann, Class of 2011, who had died a few days previously. These were the first women's caps used for the Climb.[148]
  • Jimmy Legs.[146] In modern USNA contexts, a disallowed slang term referring to any or all of the NDW-NSA Annapolis Police Department (see above), who provide security for the grounds, and enforcement for some of the regulations, such as the one forbidding town visits over the wall (whether wall or chain-link fence) at night. This is not a legitimate "salty" term; that is, a bona fide English word of antique provenience now used only in naval contexts.[c] Accordingly, its use was forbidden in the 1990s policy of "mutual respect" intended to help counter the confrontational crises of the period.[149]
  • The Laws of the Navy – a parody of Rudyard Kipling's poem The Law of the Jungle. The imaginary character narrating the poem assumes the role of a wise senior officer offering advice to the junior officers of the wardroom on the appropriate attitudes to have and the appropriate way to behave aboard a ship, delivered in the form of twenty-seven "laws." The uninitiated should understand that "law" is entirely poetical and analogous, and that the "laws" are not and never were part of any regulatory code in or out of any of the world's navies. Furthermore, the advice is of little import in the operation and management of real ships in the real navy. The poem was composed by Rear Admiral Ronald Hopwood, Royal Navy, originally appearing in the Army and Navy Gazette, 23 July 1896.[150] By the mid-1920s the poem began to be published in the USNA's Reef Points, the official midshipman handbook and training manual issued to all plebes during their induction.
  • Plebe Rates – a set of responses and passages memorized by midshipmen during Plebe Summer which serve as memory training and camaraderie building exercises. These are listed in Reef Points, and are a staple of the first year for all midshipmen. Some serve the purpose of admonishing young midshipmen with useful advice on leadership and hard work, while others are simply whimsical tongue-twisters meant to be recited as rapidly as possible such as "Sir, sir, is a subservient word surviving from the surly days in old Serbia, when certain serfs, ...", etc. Since these exercises are memorized by all midshipmen, they serve as a unifying common heritage of academy culture, and often even the saltiest graduate can decades later still recite them flawlessly.
  • Red Beach[147][151] – the red tiled plaza behind Memorial Hall on top of the wardroom in between 5th and 6th wings of Bancroft Hall, used as a place of formation for part of the brigade. It also serves as a place for restrictees to march punishment tours. During warm weather this area in the past served as a place for midshipmen to sun bathe which is where the name "red beach" is derived.
  • Reef Points – is a pocket-sized volume sturdily bound and issued to each midshipman upon indoctrination. Reef Points contains information the midshipman will need to get through the storm of plebe year. As part of memory training the plebe is asked to memorize stock pieces for instant recital on demand. Past issues tend to be rare books. New ones must be issued or purchased. In imitation, some institutions issue their own Reef Points. Named for reef points on a sailing vessel, which are short pieces of line used to tie the bottom of the mainsail to the boom or spar so as to shorten the sail during a storm, diminishing the force on it and helping it to get through the gale without breakage of sail or mast.
  • Ring Dance – held in May, this event is when the second class midshipmen receive their class rings at a formal dance complete with fireworks. The event is held in Dahlgren Hall. Traditionally, the Midshipman's date wears the ring around her/his neck, and the couple dips the ring in water from all seven seas.[146]
  • Salty Sam – is the personification of the reformation movement in the United States Navy through her Naval Academy graduates.[152] Spiritually the first Salty Sam was perhaps the "natural leader of the navy's Young Turks"[153] William Sims (Class of 1880), who became the leading reformer of the Navy, retiring as a full admiral.

Many of his letters today are relished not because of the reforms there advocated but because of the hilarious way he presented them ... he was addicted to poetry as a means of expression; he put forth his ideas in rhyme whenever possible, sometimes to the despair of his more serious fellows – but others were occasionally enticed to respond in kind. The war on paper could well be waged in poetry, he felt, for it at least kept the mind higher. The older and more senior he became, the more would he try to lighten the mood of his cohorts by humor in prose and poetry, though the latter, many said, became increasingly atrocious the more elevated its author's naval rank. Still it served its purpose admirably. As a junior officer it was a way to cloak his ideas in a patina of genteel wardroom horseplay, with the barb of criticism perfunctorily covered.

— Capt. Edward L. Beach, USN[153]
In later years Salty Sam led the enlightenment of Sims through The Log at USNA. Salty Sam reflects the spirit of Sims by questioning today's paradigms to ready the Navy for the future. The secret and anonymous tradition of Salty Sam is to teach Midshipman to bridle criticism in the ways of Sims humor, but to seek to inspire change and reform through the argument of the obvious.
  • The Steam Tunnels, also later known as the Ho Chi Minh trail[146] are a network of underground brick-encased tunnels carrying steam pipes from the old Isherwood Hall, named after Benjamin F. Isherwood who served as the Engineer-in-Chief of the Navy during the American Civil War. The pipes carried steam to Bancroft Hall and Mahan Hall, primarily for heating the buildings. Adjuncts to the tunnels lead underground to the basement levels of Michelson Hall, Chauvenet Hall, and Rickover Hall. The tunnels serve as a natural infiltration route for midshipman pranks, especially during the week leading up to the Army-Navy football game. The original Isherwood Hall was located partially under the current Alumni hall and behind Mahan Hall toward the Nimitz Library. The Steam Plant was located under the front left of Rickover Hall and plaza, in the middle of the current 300 feet (91 m) tow-tank. The Steam Tunnels were left in place after Isherwood Hall was demolished.

Notable alumni

Graduates include over 50 U.S. astronauts, including six who flew to the Moon,[d] more than from any other undergraduate institution in the U.S. Over 990 noted scholars in a variety of academic fields are Academy graduates, including 46 Rhodes Scholars and 24 Marshall Scholars. Alumni include one President of the United States, Jimmy Carter, who is also a Nobel laureate, as is Albert A. Michelson (1907 – Nobel Prize in Physics). 73 alumni have earned the Medal of Honor.

Shipmate, the official magazine of the USNA Alumni Association, is distributed worldwide to members of the association and to midshipmen, parents, faculty, administrators, donors, legislators, and friends.[154]

In 2012, Sam Tan Wei Shen, a Singaporean, was the first foreigner to graduate first in his class in the history of the academy.[155]

The USNA Alumni Association defines "alumni" as graduates and former midshipmen who did not graduate, after the last Academy class of which they were a member has graduated.[156] This policy to include non-graduates dates to 1931—during the Great Depression—when many midshipmen had to leave the Naval Academy to support their families.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Other consists of Multiracial Americans & those who prefer to not say.
  2. ^ According to the Class Profiles published by the Academy, the percentage of women upon admission for the classes of 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009,[136] and 2010 was 16, 16.7, 20.1, 19.3, and 22.2 percent, respectively.[citation needed]
  3. ^ The etymology remains unknown. The unsupported conjectures of random writers are of no scholarly merit. The appearance of the term in an anonymous midshipman ditty published in 1889 shows that it was established at least as early as then: "Adios Jimmy Legs, you chief of all spies, Adios Jimmy legs, on you there is no flies," to be found in Gibbs, G.F. (1889). Junk: a collection of songs and poems by cadets at the United States Naval Academy. Washington, D.C.: Patentee Publishing Company. The pages are not numbered. A nautical encyclopedia of the times defines Jimmy Legs as "A sobriquet for the master-at-arms," Hamersly, LR (1884). "Jimmy Legs". A naval encyclopædia: comprising a dictionary of nautical words and phrases biographical notices, and records of naval officers; special articles of naval art and science. Philadelphia: L.R. Hamersly & Co.
  4. ^ Jim Lovell, Bill Anders and Tom Stafford orbited the Moon, and Alan Shepard, Jim Irwin and Charlie Duke were three of the twelve astronauts who walked on the Moon.

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Bibliography

  • 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
  • Beach, Captain Edward L (1986). The United States Navy. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-03-044711-9.
  • Conrad, James Lee (2003). Rebel Reefers: The Organization and Midshipmen of the Confederate States Naval Academy. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81237-1.
  • Gelfand, H. Michael (2006). Sea Change at Annapolis: The United States Naval Academy, 1949-2000. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-7747-0.
  • Poyer, David (September 2018). . Shipmate. Vol. 81, no. 6. pp. 13–16. Archived from the original on 11 September 2018.

External links

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website

Coordinates: 38°58′58″N 76°29′06″W / 38.9828°N 76.4851°W / 38.9828; -76.4851

united, states, naval, academy, usna, redirects, here, other, uses, usna, disambiguation, census, designated, place, naval, academy, maryland, naval, academy, usna, navy, federal, service, academy, annapolis, maryland, established, october, 1845, during, tenur. USNA redirects here For other uses see USNA disambiguation For the census designated place see Naval Academy Maryland CDP The United States Naval Academy US Naval Academy USNA or Navy is a federal service academy in Annapolis Maryland It was established on 10 October 1845 during the tenure of George Bancroft as Secretary of the Navy The Naval Academy is the second oldest of the five U S service academies and it educates midshipmen for service in the officer corps of the United States Navy and United States Marine Corps The 338 acre 137 ha campus is located on the former grounds of Fort Severn at the confluence of the Severn River and Chesapeake Bay in Anne Arundel County 33 miles 53 km east of Washington D C and 26 miles 42 km southeast of Baltimore The entire campus known colloquially as the Yard is a National Historic Landmark and home to many historic sites buildings and monuments It replaced Philadelphia Naval Asylum in Philadelphia that had served as the first United States Naval Academy from 1838 to 1845 when the Naval Academy formed in Annapolis 4 United States Naval AcademyMottoEx Scientia Tridens Latin Motto in EnglishFrom Knowledge SeapowerTypeU S service academyEstablished10 October 1845 177 years ago 1845 10 10 Academic affiliationsSpace grantSuperintendentVice Admiral Sean S BuckProvostAndrew T PhillipsCommandant of MidshipmenColonel James J P McDonough IIIAcademic staff510Students4 576LocationAnnapolis Maryland United StatesCampusUrban 338 acres 1 370 000 m2 Colors Navy Blue GoldNicknameMidshipmenSporting affiliationsNCAA Division I Patriot LeagueAAC CSFL EARC EIGL EIWAMascotBill the GoatWebsitewww wbr usna wbr eduU S Naval AcademyU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic Landmark DistrictShow map of MarylandShow map of the United StatesLocationMaryland Ave and Hanover St Annapolis MarylandBuilt1845 1845 ArchitectErnest FlaggEngineerSeverud AssociatesArchitectural styleBeaux Arts 2 NRHP reference No 66000386 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHP15 October 1966Designated NHLD4 July 1961 3 Candidates for admission generally must apply directly to the academy and apply separately for a nomination usually from a member of Congress Students are officers in training with the rank of midshipman Tuition for midshipmen is fully funded by the Navy in exchange for an active duty service obligation upon graduation Approximately 1 200 plebes an abbreviation of the Ancient Roman word plebeian enter the academy each summer for the rigorous Plebe Summer About 1 000 midshipmen graduate Graduates are commissioned as either ensigns in the Navy or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps but a small number can also be cross commissioned as officers in other U S services and the services of allied nations The United States Naval Academy has some of the highest paid graduates in the country according to starting salary 5 The academic program grants a Bachelor of Science degree with a curriculum that grades midshipmen s performance upon a broad academic program military leadership performance and mandatory participation in competitive athletics Midshipmen are required to adhere to the academy s Honor Concept Rotunda steps leading to Memorial Hall Contents 1 Other Navy schools 2 History 2 1 Identity 2 2 Early years 2 3 The American Civil War 2 4 Porter s Academy From the Civil War to the Spanish American War 2 5 The Flagg Academy Spanish American War to WW I 2 5 1 The Aviation School 2 5 2 World War I to World War II 2 6 Modern era World War II to present 3 Training ships 4 Rank structure 5 Uniforms 6 Campus 6 1 Halls and principal buildings 6 2 Monuments and memorials 6 3 Brigade sports complex 6 4 Cemetery and columbarium 6 5 Glenn Warner Soccer Facility 6 6 Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium 6 7 Terwilliger Brothers Field 7 Supervision of the Academy 8 Faculty 8 1 Permanent military professors PMP 8 2 Class of 1957 Distinguished Chair of Naval Heritage 8 2 1 Chair holders 9 Appointment process 9 1 Admissions requirements 10 Academics 10 1 Moral education 10 2 Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference NAFAC 10 3 Naval Academy Science and Engineering Conference NASEC 10 4 McMullen Naval History Symposium 10 5 Small Satellite Program 10 6 Postgraduate studies 11 Student activities 11 1 Athletics 11 2 Other extra curricular activities 11 3 Song 12 Police 13 Women at the Naval Academy 14 Traditions 15 Notable alumni 16 See also 17 Notes 18 Footnotes 19 Bibliography 20 External linksOther Navy schools EditThe Navy operates the Naval Postgraduate School and the Naval War College separately The Naval Academy Preparatory School NAPS in Newport Rhode Island is the official preparatory school for the Naval Academy The Naval Academy Foundation also provides post graduate high school education for a year of preparatory school at various private High school campuses across the U S before entering the academy for a very limited number of applicants 6 clarification needed History Edit U S Naval Academy in 1853 Stereoscopic views of midshipman quarters and mess hall c 1905 The first nautical school for officers was conceived by Commodore Arthur Sinclair in 1819 while in command of the Norfolk Navy Yard Due to his zeal and perseverance the Nautical School was opened on board the frigate Guerriere on 3 Dec 1821 with between 40 and 50 midshipmen attached to the ship The curriculum was diversified with Naval Tactics Astronomy Geography French History English Grammar and International Relations The school operated until 1828 when Guerriere was ordered to duty in the Pacific 7 It was from that small start that the U S Naval Academy at Annapolis grew 8 The history of the academy can be divided into four eras 9 1 use of original Fort Severn 1845 1861 2 Porter s Academy 1865 1903 3 Flagg Academy 1903 1941 4 modern era 1941 present Identity Edit The academy s Latin motto is Ex Scientia Tridens which means Through Knowledge Sea Power It appears on a design devised by the lawyer writer editor encyclopedist and naval academy graduate 1867 Park Benjamin Jr It was adopted by the Navy Department in 1898 due to the efforts of another graduate also 1867 and collaborator Jacob W Miller Benjamin states 10 The seal or coat of arms of the Naval Academy has for its crest a hand grasping a trident below which is a shield bearing an ancient galley coming into action bows on and below that an open book indicative of education and finally bears the motto Ex Scientia Tridens From knowledge sea power The trident emblem of the Roman god Neptune represents seapower citation needed Early years Edit The institution was founded as the Naval School on 10 October 1845 by Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft The campus was established at Annapolis on the grounds of the former U S Army post Fort Severn The school opened with 50 midshipman students and seven professors The decision to establish an academy on land may have been in part a result of the Somers Affair an alleged mutiny involving the Secretary of War s son that resulted in his execution at sea Commodore Matthew Perry had a considerable interest in naval education supporting an apprentice system to train new seamen and helped establish the curriculum for the United States Naval Academy He was also a vocal proponent of modernization of the navy Originally a course of study for five years was prescribed Only the first and last were spent at the school with the other three being passed at sea The present name was adopted when the school was reorganized in 1850 and placed under the supervision of the chief of the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography Under the immediate charge of the superintendent the course of study was extended to seven years with the first two and the last two to be spent at the school and the intervening three years at sea The four years of study were made consecutive in 1851 and practice cruises were substituted for the three consecutive years at sea The first class of naval academy students graduated on 10 June 1854 They were considered as passed midshipmen until 1912 when graduates were first sworn in as officers 11 In 1850 Edward Seager joined the faculty as the first instructor of drawing and he also served as the first fencing instructor He held the position of teacher of the art of defence from 1851 to 1859 12 In 1860 the Tripoli Monument was moved to the academy grounds Later that year in August the model of the USS Somers experiment was resurrected when USS Constitution then 60 years old was recommissioned as a school ship for the fourth class midshipmen after a conversion and refitting begun in 1857 She was anchored at the yard and the plebes lived on board the ship to immediately introduce them to shipboard life and experiences 13 The American Civil War Edit The American Civil War was disruptive to the Naval Academy Southern sympathy ran high in Maryland Although riots broke out Maryland did not declare secession The United States government was planning to move the school when the sudden outbreak of hostilities forced a quick departure Almost immediately the three upper classes were detached and ordered to sea and the remaining elements of the academy were transported to Fort Adams in Newport Rhode Island by the USS Constitution in April 1861 where the academy was set up in temporary facilities and opened in May 14 The Annapolis campus meanwhile was turned into a United States Army Hospital 15 US Naval Academy waterfront in the late 1860s with the barrack school ships USS Constitution and Santee tied up in the background Other ships not identified The United States Navy was stressed by the situation 24 of its officers resigned to join the Confederate States Navy including 95 graduates and 59 midshipmen 13 along with many key leaders who influenced USNA s founding As the first superintendent of the United States Naval Observatory Commander Matthew Fontaine Maury who advocated 16 for creating the United States Naval Academy also resigned his commission The first superintendent Admiral Franklin Buchanan joined the Confederate States Navy as its first and primary admiral Captain Sidney Smith Lee the second commandant of midshipmen 17 and older brother of Robert E Lee left Federal service in 1861 for the Confederate States Navy Lieutenant William Harwar Parker CSN class of 1848 and instructor at USNA joined the Virginia State Navy and then went on to become the superintendent of the Confederate States Naval Academy Lieutenant Charles Savez Read may have been anchor man graduated last in the class of 1860 but his later service to the Confederate States Navy included defending New Orleans service on CSS Arkansas and CSS Florida and command of a series of captured Union ships that culminated in seizing the US Revenue Cutter Caleb Cushing in Portland Maine Lieutenant James Iredell Waddell CSN a former instructor at the US Naval Academy commanded the CSS Shenandoah The midshipmen and faculty returned to Annapolis in the summer of 1865 just after the war ended Porter s Academy From the Civil War to the Spanish American War Edit David Dixon Porter Civil War hero Admiral David Dixon Porter became superintendent in 1865 He found the infrastructure at Annapolis a shambles the result of ill military use during the War Porter attempted to restore the facilities He concentrated on recruiting naval officers as opposed to civilians a change of philosophy He recruited teachers Stephen B Luce future admirals Winfield Scott Schley George Dewey and William T Sampson The midshipman battalion consisted of four companies These were bunked in a single wooden building containing 100 rooms one company to a floor They held dress parades every evening except Sunday Students were termed cadets though sometimes cadet midshipmen other appellations were used Porter began organized athletics usually intramural at the time 18 Antoine Joseph Corbesier an immigrant from Belgium was appointed to the position of Assistant Swordmaster in 1864 and then Swordmaster at USNA in October 1865 He coached Navy fencers in intercollegiate competition from 1896 when the Naval Academy joined the Intercollegiate Fencing Association until 1914 when he retired By special act of Congress he was commissioned a 1st lieutenant in the Marine Corps on 4 March 1914 He died on 26 March 1915 and is buried on Hospital Point In 1867 indoor plumbing and water was supplied to the family quarters In 1868 the figurehead from USS Delaware known as Tecumseh was erected in the yard Class rings were first issued in 1869 Weekly dances were held Wags called the school Porter s Dancing Academy President U S Grant distributed diplomas to the class of 1869 18 Porter ensured continued room for expansion by overseeing the purchase of 113 acres 46 ha across College Creek later known as hospital point In 1871 color competition began along with the selection of the color company and a color girl 18 In the 1870s cuts in the military budget resulted in graduating much smaller classes In 1872 25 graduated Eight of these made the Navy a career 18 The third class physically hazed the fourth class so ruthlessly that Congress passed an anti hazing law in 1874 Hazing continued in more stealthy forms 18 John H Conyers of South Carolina was the first African American admitted on 21 September 1872 19 After his arrival he was subject to severe ongoing hazing including verbal torment and beatings His classmates even attempted to drown him 20 Three cadets were dismissed as a result but the abuse including shunning continued in more subtle forms and Conyers finally resigned in October 1873 21 In 1875 Albert A Michelson class of 1873 returned to teach He began his experiments with optics and the physics of light which resulted in the first accurate measure of the speed of light 22 clarification needed 18 In 1874 the curriculum was altered to study naval topics in the final two years at the academy In 1878 the academy was awarded a gold medal for academics at the Universal Exposition in Paris 18 Many firsts for minorities occurred during this period In 1877 Kiro Kunitomo a Japanese citizen graduated from the academy 23 24 And then in 1879 Robert F Lopez was the first Hispanic American to graduate from the academy In the late 19th century Congress required the academy to teach a formal course in hygiene the only course required by Congress of any military academy Tradition holds that a congressman was particularly disgusted by the appearance of a midshipman returned from cruise citation needed In 1890 Navy adopted the goat mascot after winning its first football game with Army 11 The Flagg Academy Spanish American War to WW I Edit The graduating class of 1894 The Spanish American War of 1898 greatly increased the academy s importance and the campus was almost wholly rebuilt and much enlarged between 1899 and 1906 The ground on which most of the academy sat was dredged from the surrounding bodies of water and consisted of silt This was too fragile for the newer heavy stone buildings Pilings were sunk from 100 feet 30 m to 400 feet 120 m deep Some wooden with iron caps modern ones of steel 9 Today s campus dates from that era In 1905 Isherwood Hall containing the Department of Marine Engineering was constructed 25 Prior to that era about 43 men entered annually There were 114 joining the class of 1905 201 with the class of 1908 26 The academy built a modern hospital in 1907 the fourth in sequence on what is today called Hospital Point 27 In 1910 the academy established its own dairy farm This was closed in 1998 28 The Aviation School Edit On 23 August 1911 the Navy officers on flight duty at Hammondsport New York and Dayton Ohio were ordered to report for duty at the Engineering Experiment Station Naval Academy in connection with the test of gasoline motors and other experimental work in the development of aviation including instruction at the aviation school being set up on Greenbury Point Annapolis 29 The aerodrome at Greensbury Point sat on 1000 square feet of land and consisted of a building with a rubber reinforced roof containing three hangars one for each of the newly purchased airplanes a workshop an office and several bunk rooms All three airplanes cost a total of 14 000 Over 100 officers applied for aviation duty prior to August 1911 Swimming was among a set of other qualifications that a pilot candidate must have passed before being accepted to aviation duty Pilot qualifications were in accordance with Federation Aeronautique Internationale FAI standards In the presence of a committee of the Aero Club of America a pilot candidate had to fly five figure eights around two flags buoyed 1500 feet apart then land within 150 feet of an established mark This course had to be completed twice The test also required the prospective aviator to climb to a minimum altitude of 150 ft officially 50 meters It was estimated by CAPT Washington Irving Chambers that a student could qualify as a new pilot in about a month weather permitting All students wore life preservers The control wheel of the Curtiss machines featured a shift control where the controls could be thrown between the student and instructor at any time The Wright machine was delivered to Greenbury by August 1911 but was not yet configured with water gear 30 Navy flight training moved to NAS Pensacola Florida in January 1914 31 In 1912 Reina Mercedes sunk at the Battle of Santiago de Cuba was raised and used as the brig ship for the academy 32 By 1912 the midshipmen were organized into a brigade its current structure 33 The prior organization was named a regiment 34 In 1914 the Midshipmen Drum and Bugle corps was formed and by 1922 it went defunct They were revived in 1926 35 The brigade and faculty tripled during WWI The 3rd and 4th wings of Bancroft Hall were built 11 In 1918 the great flu pandemic of 1918 infected about half the brigade 1 000 out of 2 000 men ten midshipmen died 11 World War I to World War II Edit With the advent of the automobile and improved roads the academy became a tourist attraction 11 At the 1920 summer Olympics men s 8 rowing competition in Brussels the Navy Academy rowing men s 8 The Wonder Crew won the gold medal US collegiate boats won the gold medal in the 8 competition at the next seven Olympics a standing record as of 2019 for consecutive gold medal wins by any nation in a particular sport The Naval Academy football team played the University of Washington in the Rose Bowl tying 14 14 In 1925 the second class ring dance was started In 1925 the Midshipmen Drum and Bugle Corps was formally reestablished 35 In 1926 Navy Blue and Gold composed by organist and choirmaster J W Crosley was first sung in public It became a tradition to sing this alma mater song at the end of student and alumni gatherings such as pep rallies and football games and on graduation day In 1926 Navy won the national collegiate football championship title In the fall of 1929 the Secretary of the Navy gave his approval for graduates to compete for Rhodes Scholarships Six graduates were selected for that honor that same year The Association of American Universities accredited the Naval Academy curriculum on 30 October 1930 In 1930 the class of 1891 presented a bronze replica of Tecumseh to replace the deteriorating wooden figurehead that had been prominently displayed on campus 18 President Franklin D Roosevelt signed into law an act of Congress Public Law 73 21 48 Stat 73 on 25 May 1933 providing for the Bachelor of Science degree for Naval Military and Coast Guard Academies Four years later Congress authorized the superintendent to award a Bachelor of Science degree to all living graduates Reserve officer training was re established in anticipation of World War II in 1941 The U S Naval Academy was honored by the U S Post Office on a commemorative stamp depicting two midshipmen in past left and present uniforms with the Naval Academy seal at center issued in 1937 36 In 1939 the first Yard patrol boat arrived These were used to train midshipmen in ship handling 37 In 1940 the academy stopped using Reina Mercedes as a brig for disciplining midshipmen and restricted them to Bancroft Hall instead 32 In April 1941 superintendent Rear Admiral Russell Willson refused to allow the school s lacrosse team to play a visiting team from Harvard University because the Harvard team included an African American player Harvard s athletic director ordered the player home and the game was played on 4 April as scheduled which Navy won 12 0 38 Dr Blake R Van Leer would later be appointed by President Harry S Truman to the Visitor Board Dr Van Leer was already a member to The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization who had a focus to work against racism through influential statements on race starting with a declaration of anthropologists 39 40 In 1941 the 5th and 6th wings of Bancroft Hall were completed 11 Landfill was made outboard of the hospital to create a sports field Fill was made on the north side of the Severn to create an area for seaplanes 41 A total of 3 319 graduates were commissioned during World War II Dr Chris Lambertsen held the first closed circuit oxygen SCUBA course in the United States for the Office of Strategic Services maritime unit at the academy on 17 May 1943 42 43 In 1945 A Department of Aviation was established That year a vice admiral Aubrey W Fitch became superintendent The naval academy celebrated its centennial During the century of its existence roughly 18 563 midshipmen had graduated including the class of 1946 28 The academy was accredited in 1947 by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education Modern era World War II to present Edit The academy and its support facilities became part of the Severn River Naval Command from 1941 to 1962 44 An accelerated course was given to midshipmen during the war years which affected classes entering during the war and graduating later The students studied year around This affected the class of 1948 most of all For the only time a class was divided by academic standing 1948A graduated in June 1947 the remainder called 1948B a year later 45 From 1946 to 1961 N3N amphibious biplanes were used at the academy to introduce midshipmen to flying 46 On 3 June 1949 Wesley A Brown the sixth African American to enter the academy 20 became the first to graduate followed several years later by Lawrence Chambers who became the first African American graduate to make flag rank 47 The 1950 Navy fencing team won the NCAA national championship The Navy eight man rowing crew won the gold medal at 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki Finland They were also named National Intercollegiate Champions 48 In 1955 the tradition of greasing Herndon Monument for plebes to climb to exchange their plebe dixie cup covers hats for a midshipman s cover started In 1957 the moored training ship Reina Mercedes ruined by a hurricane was scrapped 32 The 1959 fencing team won the NCAA national championship and became the first to do so by placing first in all three weapons foil epee and saber All 3 fencers were selected for the 1960 Olympics team as was head coach Andre Deladrier The Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium funded by donations was dedicated 26 September 1959 From 1959 to 1973 land was reclaimed from the Chesapeake Bay and Severn River removal of Isherwood Melville and Griffin Halls and by moving the stadium off campus This allowed room for expansion of Bancroft Hall and the addition of Mitscher Michelson Chauvenet Alumni Rickover and Hopper Halls and the Nimitz Library Encroached parade grounds and athletic fields were moved riverside onto the newly filled areas 49 Joe Bellino Class of 1961 was awarded the Heisman Trophy on 22 June 1960 In 1961 the Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference was started The U S Department of the Interior designated the campus of the U S Naval Academy as a National Historic Landmark on 21 August 1961 The 1962 fencing team won the NCAA national championship In 1963 Roger Staubach Class of 1965 was awarded the Heisman Trophy In 1963 the academy changed from a marking system based on 4 0 to a letter grade Midshipmen began referring to the statue of Tecumseh as the god of 2 0 instead of the god of 2 5 the former failing mark 50 The academy started the Trident Scholar Program in 1963 From 3 to 16 juniors are selected for independent study during their final year 51 Professor Samuel Massie became the first African American faculty member in 1966 On 4 June 1969 the first designated engineering degrees were granted to qualified graduates of the Class of 1969 48 During the period 1968 to 1972 the academy moved beyond engineering to include more than 20 majors From 1845 to 1968 midshipmen studied identical courses with the exception of a choice of foreign language In 1970 the James Forrestal Lecture was created named for the first U S Secretary of Defense in 1947 1949 This has resulted in various leaders speaking to midshipmen including U S Secretary of State Henry Kissinger football coach Dick Vermeil and Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and others 52 In 1972 Lieutenant Commander Georgia Clark became the first female officer instructor and Dr Rae Jean Goodman was appointed to the faculty as the first civilian woman Later in 1972 a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia terminated compulsory chapel attendance a tradition which had been in effect since 1853 53 In September 1973 the new expansive library facility complex was completed and named for Fleet Admiral Chester W Nimitz Class of 1905 On 8 August 1975 Congress authorized women to attend service academies The Class of 1980 was inducted with 81 female midshipmen In 1980 the academy included Hispanic Latino as a racial category for demographic purposes four women identified themselves as Hispanic in the class of 1981 and these women become the first Hispanic females to graduate from the academy Carmel Gilliland who had the highest class rank Lilia Ramirez who retired with the rank of commander Ina Marie Gomez and Trinora Pinto 54 In 1979 the traditional June Week was renamed Commissioning Week because graduation had been moved earlier to May 48 In May 1980 Elizabeth Anne Belzer later Rowe became the first woman graduate Janie L Mines was the first U S N A African American woman graduate 55 On 23 May 1984 Kristine Holderied became the first woman to graduate at the head of the class In addition the Class of 1984 included the first naturalized Korean American graduates all choosing commissions in the U S Navy The four Korean American ensigns were Walter Lee Thomas Kymn Andrew Kim and Se Hun Oh In 1982 Isherwood Griffin and Melville Halls were demolished 28 On 30 July 1987 the Computing Sciences Accreditation Board CSAB granted accreditation for the Computer Science program 48 In 1991 Midshipman Juliane Gallina class of 1992 became the first woman brigade commander On 29 January 1994 the first genderless service assignment was held All billets were opened equally to men and women with the exception of special warfare and submarine duty Naval Academy Midshipmen celebrate after graduation On 12 March 1995 Lieutenant Commander Wendy B Lawrence Class of 1981 became a mission specialist in the space shuttle Endeavour She is the first woman USNA graduate to fly in space To celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the U S Naval Academy at Annapolis 1845 1995 the U S Postal Service printed a commemorative postage stamp the First Day of Issue was 10 October 1995 Freedom 7 America s first space capsule shot into sub orbit in 1961 was placed on display at the visitor center as the centerpiece of the Grads in Space exhibit on 23 September 1998 The late Rear Admiral Alan Shepard Class of 1945 had flown Mercury program capsule Freedom 7 116 5 miles 187 5 km into space on 5 May 1961 His historic flight marked America s first step in the space race 48 On 11 September 2001 the academy lost 14 alumni in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City and The Pentagon in Arlington Virginia The academy and its bounds was placed under unprecedented high security 48 In August 2007 Superintendent Vice Admiral Jeffrey Fowler changed academy policy to limit liberty required more squad interaction to emphasize that we are a nation at war 56 On 3 November 2007 the Navy football team defeated long time rival Notre Dame for the first time in 43 years 46 44 in triple overtime The two teams have met every year since 1926 and continue a rivalry that became amicable when Notre Dame volunteered to open its facilities for training of naval officers in World War II 57 The Navy was credited with saving the University of Notre Dame after its enrollment fell during World War II to about 250 students The Navy trained 12 000 men to become officers 58 In November 2007 Memorial Hall was the venue for a 50 nation Annapolis Conference on a Palestinian Israeli peace process discussion In 2017 hospital functions were moved across the Severn 27 In 2019 the USNA team represented the US in the King s Cup at the Henley Royal Regatta 59 The race commemorated the centenary of the 1919 Royal Henley Peace Regatta and included the original WWI allies Australia Canada France New Zealand the UK and the USA joined in 2019 by Germany and the Netherlands After exciting eliminations the USNA mixed crew won the final race beating the strong German team 60 Training ships EditAcademy training ships 1850 1957USS Preble 1839 1850 1856 Placed in ordinary guns mast sails rigging were removed USS Santee 1855 1862 1912 USS Constitution 1862 1865 USS Savannah 1842 1862 1870 USS Plymouth 1844 1855 1856 and 1859 1860 USS Phlox 1865 1873 Steamer USS Dale 1839 1867 1884 61 USS Constellation 1854 1893 1894 Stationary At Norfolk Virginia USS Bancroft 1892 1893 1896 The first ship to be specifically designed for training The academy roster outgrew the ship and it was retired USS Monongahela 1862 1894 1899 USS Hartford 1858 1899 1912 USS Chesapeake 1900 1906 Renamed USS Severn 1898 in 1905 USS Reina Mercedes 1912 1957 Rank structure EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources United States Naval Academy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The student body is known as the Brigade of Midshipmen Students attending the U S Naval Academy are appointed to the rank of midshipman and serve on active duty in that rank Naval Academy midshipmen are classified as officers of the line but are officers only in a qualified sense They rank just below chief warrant officers 62 63 Legally midshipmen are a special grade of officer that ranks above the most senior enlisted grades E 9 and below the lowest grade of chief warrant officer W 2 in the Navy and Coast Guard the Navy and Coast Guard discontinued the rank of warrant officer WO 1 in 1975 Additionally midshipmen rank below warrant officer W 1 in the Marine Corps 64 and the Army 65 and below second lieutenant O 1 in the Air Force the Air Force ceased appointing warrant officers in 1959 and the last USAF WO died in 2008 66 Midshipmen are classified not as freshmen sophomores juniors and seniors but as fourth class third class second class and first class respectively Rank structure A member of the entering class the fourth class the lowest rank of midshipmen is also known as a plebe plural plebes Because the first year at the academy is one of transformation from a civilian into a military officer plebes must conform to a number of rules and regulations not placed on their seniors the upper three classes of midshipmen and have additional tasks and responsibilities that disappear upon promotion to midshipman third class Third class midshipmen have been assimilated into the brigade and are treated with more respect because they are upperclassmen They are commonly called youngsters Because of their new stature and rank the youngsters are allowed such privileges as watching television listening to music watching movies and napping Second class midshipmen are charged with training plebes They report directly to the first class and issue orders as necessary to carry out their responsibilities Second class midshipmen are allowed to drive their own cars but may not park them on campus and are allowed to enter or exit the Yard campus in civilian attire weekends only First class midshipmen have more freedoms and liberty in the brigade While they must participate in mandatory sports and military activities and maintain academic standards they are also charged with the leadership of the brigade They are commonly called firsties Firsties are allowed to park their cars on campus and have greater leave and liberty privileges than any other class 67 The brigade is divided into two regiments of three battalions each Five companies make up each battalion for a total of 30 companies The midshipman command structure is headed by a first class midshipman known as the brigade commander chosen for outstanding leadership performance The brigade commander is responsible for much of the brigade s day to day activities as well as the professional training of midshipmen Overseeing all brigade activities is the commandant of midshipmen an active duty Navy captain or Marine Corps colonel Working for the commandant experienced Navy and Marine Corps officers are assigned as company and battalion officers 68 Uniforms EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Midshipman United States Navy and Marine Corps Uniforms of the United States Navy and Uniforms of the United States Marine Corps Wear by Navy personnel Midshipmen at the academy wear service dress uniforms similar to those of U S Navy officers with shoulder board and or sleeve insignia varying by school year or midshipman officer rank All wear gold anchor insignia on both lapel collars of the service dress blue jacket Shoulder boards worn on summer white service full dress white and dinner dress white uniforms as well as a soft shoulder board version on the white button up shirt of the service full dress blue uniform have a gold anchor and a number of slanted stripes indicating year except for midshipman first class whose have a single horizontal stripe and midshipman officers also first class whose shoulder boards have a small gold star in place of the anchor and have 1 through 6 horizontal stripes indicating their position On the winter and summer working uniform shirt a freshman Midshipman Fourth Class or plebe wears no collar insignia a sophomore Midshipman Third Class or Youngster wears a single fouled anchor on the right collar point a Junior Midshipman Second Class fouled anchors on each collar point and a Senior Midshipman First Class or Firstie wears fouled anchors with perched eagles First class midshipmen in officer billets replace those devices with their respective midshipman officer collar insignia Midshipman officer collar insignia are a series of gold bars from the rank of Midshipman Ensign one bar or stripe to Midshipman Captain six bars or stripes in the Brigade of Midshipmen at the U S Naval Academy Depending on the season midshipmen wear Summer Whites or Service Dress Blues as their dress uniform and working blues as their daily class uniform In 2008 the first class midshipmen wore the service khaki as the daily uniform but this option was repealed following the graduation of the class of 2011 First class midshipmen may wear their service selection uniform on second semester Warrior Wednesdays i e naval aviator and naval flight officer selectees wear flight suits submarine and surface warfare selectees wear coveralls or Navy Working Uniforms with their new command ballcaps Marine Corps selectees wear MARPAT camouflage utilities A unique uniform consisting of a Navy blue double breasted jacket with brass buttons and high collar blue or white high rise trousers white worn during Graduation Week and duty belt with silver NA buckle is worn for formal parades during spring and autumn parade seasons During commissioning week formerly known as June week the uniform is summer whites Campus Edit U S Naval Academy campus Plebes first year students marching in front of Bancroft Hall Interior of the Naval Academy chapel The pool in the Lejeune Hall The campus or Yard has grown from a 40 000 square metres 9 9 acres Army post named Fort Severn in 1845 to a 1 37 square kilometres 340 acres campus in the 21st century By comparison the United States Air Force Academy is 73 square kilometres 18 000 acres and United States Military Academy is 65 square kilometres 16 000 acres Halls and principal buildings Edit Bancroft Hall is the largest building at the Naval Academy and the largest college dormitory in the world 69 It houses all midshipmen Open to the public are Memorial Hall a midshipman maintained memorial to graduates who have died during military operations and the Rotunda the ceremonial entrance to Bancroft Hall The Commander in Chief s Trophy resides in the Rotunda while Navy is in possession of it 70 71 It was named for the academy s founder Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft and designed by Ernest Flagg The Naval Academy Chapel at the center of the campus across from Herndon Monument has a high dome that is visible throughout Annapolis 72 Designed by Ernest Flagg The chapel was featured on the U S Postal Service postage stamp honoring the academy s 150th anniversary in 1995 73 John Paul Jones lies in the crypt beneath the chapel Tradition states that if a plebe can place a midshipman cover hat on top of the chapel plebe year will be over for all Fourth Class midshipmen This tradition however is considered dangerous and is discouraged by the academy 74 Commodore Uriah P Levy Center and Jewish Chapel 75 primarily funded with private donations was dedicated on 23 September 2005 The chapel was named for Commodore Uriah P Levy and houses a Jewish chapel the honor board ethics clarification needed character learning center officer development spaces a social director and academic boards Built featuring Jerusalem stone the architecture of the exterior is consistent with nearby Bancroft Hall Alumni Hall is the primary assembly hall for the Brigade of Midshipmen and has two dining facilities It hosts various sporting events including the men s and women s intercollegiate basketball games and is used by alumni for reunions The Bob Hope Performing Arts Center is located there archives see Nimitz Library below Armel Leftwich Visitor Center inside Gate 1 and attached to the Halsey Field House houses the USNA Guide Service the USNA Gift Shop a 12 minute film and various exhibits including the Graduates in Space exhibit a sample midshipman s room a model of the USS Maryland BB 46 and an exhibit on the life and times of John Paul Jones who is buried in the crypt beneath the Naval Academy Chapel Walking tours include five types of adult tours and two types of student tours 76 Athletic Hall of Fame see Lejeune Hall below Chauvenet Hall housing the departments of mathematics physics and oceanography was named for William Chauvenet an early professor at the US Naval Academy Dahlgren Hall contains a large multi purpose room and a restaurant area It was once used as an armory for the academy for drill purposes and contained the Ordnance and Gunnery Department and classrooms It was named for John A Dahlgren The Dyer Tennis Clubhouse is used by the tennis team and contains locker rooms offices a racquet stringing room a lounge and a viewing deck overlooking the tennis courts It was named for Vice Admiral George Dyer Class of 1919 77 78 Halsey Field House contains an indoor track squash and tennis courts five basketball courts a 65 tatami dojo for Aikido Judo a climbing wall and assorted athletic and workout facilities and offices 79 Before construction of Alumni Hall it was used by Navy basketball teams and was the site of midshipman assemblies It was named for William F Halsey Jr Hubbard Hall used by the crew team is a three story building on Dorsey Creek 250 yards 230 m from the Severn River 77 Also known as the Boat House it was renovated in 1993 and now includes the Fisher Rowing Center It was named for Rear Admiral John Hubbard Class of 1870 77 80 King Hall is the dining hall that seats the Brigade of Midshipmen together at one time It was named for Ernest J King Daily fare ranges from eggs to sandwiches to prime rib and the annual crab feast Larson Hall the administration building Larson Hall is named in honor of Adm Charles R Larson Naval Academy Class of 1958 who died 26 July 2014 The building was built in 1907 renovated in 2014 and serves as the headquarters of the Naval Academy superintendent and immediate staff Lejeune Hall built in 1982 contains an Olympic class swimming pool and diving tower a mat room for wrestling and hand to hand martial arts and the Athletic Hall of Fame Named for John A Lejeune it is the first USNA building to be named for a Marine Corps officer 81 82 Library see Nimitz Library below Luce Hall housing the departments of Professional Development and Leadership Ethics and Law was named for Stephen Luce MacDonough Hall contains a full scale gymnastics area two boxing rings and alternate swimming pools It was named for Thomas MacDonough Mahan Hall contains a theater along with the old library in the Hart Room which has now been converted into a lounge and meeting room It was named for Alfred Thayer Mahan Designed by Ernest Flagg Maury Hall contains the departments of Weapons and Systems Engineering plus Electrical Engineering It was named for Matthew Fontaine Maury Designed by Ernest Flagg Michelson Hall housing the departments of Computer Science and Chemistry was named for Albert A Michelson the first American to win the Nobel Prize in Physics museum see Preble Hall below The Nimitz Library contains the academy s library collection the academy s archives William W Jeffries Memorial Archives and the departments of Language Studies Economics and Political Science It was named for Chester W Nimitz The Officers and Faculty Club and officers quarters spread around the Yard Preble Hall houses the U S Naval Academy Museum 83 It was named for Edward Preble It maintains a collection of Naval Academy class rings from 1869 through to the present Tradition dictates that the first deceased class member s ring is donated to the museum to represent that class in the official class ring display Ricketts Hall contains the basketball football and lacrosse offices the locker room for the varsity football team and one of the academy s three strength and conditioning facilities where midshipman athletes train 77 It was named for Claude V Ricketts Rickover Hall houses the departments of Electrical Engineering Computer Engineering Mechanical Engineering Naval Architecture and Ocean Engineering Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering It was named for Hyman G Rickover The Robert Crown Sailing Center contains offices team classrooms locker rooms and equipment repair and storage facilities It also houses the ICSA College Sailing Hall of Fame Also on display in the Hall are the Naval Academy s sailing trophies and awards 84 Sampson Hall housing the departments of English and History was named for William T Sampson Designed by Ernest Flagg visitor center see Armel Leftwich Visitor Center above Wesley Brown Field House houses physical education varsity sports intramural athletics club sports and personal fitness programs and equipment The cross country and track and field teams the sprint football team the women s lacrosse team and sixteen club sports all use this building It has a full length retractable football field When the field is retracted you can then use the 200 meter track with hydraulically controlled banked curves and three permanent basketball courts It also has eight locker rooms and a medical facility It was named for Wesley A Brown Class of 1949 who was the academy s first African American graduate Monuments and memorials Edit See also United States Navy Memorial Other Navy memorials Gokoku ji Bell A copy of the original bell which was brought back to the United States in 1855 by Commodore Matthew Perry following his mission to Japan The bell is placed in front of Bancroft Hall and rung in a semi annual ceremony for each victory that Navy has registered over Army to include one of the nation s oldest football rivalries the Army Navy Game The current bell is an exact replica of the original which the United States Navy returned to the people of Okinawa in 1987 85 Tecumseh Statue This statue is a bronze replica of the figurehead of ship of the line USS Delaware It was presented to the academy by the Class of 1891 This bust one of the most famous relics on the campus is commonly known as Tecumseh However when it adorned the American man of war it commemorated not Tecumseh but Tamanend the revered Delaware chief who welcomed William Penn to America The original wooden figurehead is in the Naval Academy fieldhouse In times past the bronze replica was considered a good luck mascot for the midshipmen who threw pennies at it and offered left handed salutes whenever they wanted a favor such as a sports win over West Point and spiritual help for examinations It is also referred to as the god of 2 0 because 2 0 is the minimum passing GPA at USNA and the mids offer pennies to Tecumseh to help achieve this Today it is used as a morale booster during football weeks and on special occasions when Tecumseh is painted in themes to include super heroes action heroes humorous figures a leprechaun before Saint Patrick s Day and a naval officer during Commissioning Week Battle ensigns Famous flags of the U S Navy and captured flags from enemy ships are displayed throughout the academy The most famous perhaps is the Don t Give Up the Ship flag flown by Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry at the Battle of Lake Erie on 10 September 1813 it bears the dying words of Captain James Lawrence captain of the USS Chesapeake It was displayed in Memorial Hall which is in the portion of Bancroft Hall open to the general public until 2004 It underwent conservation and is now on display in the Museum in Preble Hall The only British royal standard taken by capture citation needed was displayed in Mahan Hall It was taken at Toronto then York in the War of 1812 Herndon Monument The Monument was commissioned by the officers of the U S Navy as a tribute to Commander William Lewis Herndon 1813 1857 after his loss in the Pacific Mail Steamer Central America during a hurricane off the North Carolina coast on 12 September 1857 Herndon had followed a longtime custom of the sea citation needed that a ship s captain is the last person to depart his ship in peril It was erected in its current location on 16 June 1860 and has never been moved even though the academy was completely rebuilt between 1899 and 1908 Memorial Hall in Bancroft Hall is a midshipman kept memorial to graduates who died during military operations It includes an honor roll scrolls and plaques Pearl Harbor memorial At Alumni Hall a wall is reserved by the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association to commemorate those who were killed during the attack on Pearl Harbor Tripoli Monument the oldest military monument in the U S honors the US servicemen of the First Barbary War Master Commandant Richard Somers Lieutenant James Caldwell James Decatur brother of Stephen Decatur John Dorsey Joseph Israel and Henry Wadsworth Originally known as the Naval Monument it was carved of Carrara marble in Italy in 1806 and brought to the U S as ballast on board the USS Constitution Old Ironsides From its original location in the Washington Navy Yard it was moved to the west terrace of the national Capitol and finally in 1860 to the Naval Academy 86 USS Samuel B Roberts memorial In Alumni Hall a concourse is dedicated to Lieutenant Lloyd Garnett and his shipmates aboard USS Samuel B Roberts who earned their ship the reputation as the destroyer escort that fought like a battleship in the Battle of Leyte Gulf during World War II Mexican War Monument to Midshipmen Shubrick Clemson Hynson and Pillsbury The Mexican War Midshipmen s Monument at the intersection of Stribling Walk 16 000 bricks and Chapel Walk is in memory of one midshipman Shubrick who lost his life in the siege of Veracruz in 1847 and three midshipmen Clemson Hynson Pillsbury who lost their lives when the brig Somers sank in 1846 87 The Macedonian Monument at the end of Stribling Walk opposite Mahan Hall is the figurehead of HMS Macedonian Macedonian was defeated in battle by the frigate United States 25 October 1812 Brigade sports complex Edit The complex includes McMullen Hockey Arena where the men s ice hockey team is located rugby venues an indoor hitting chipping and putting facility for the golf team and the Tose Family Tennis Center including the Fluegel Moore Tennis Stadium 77 Cemetery and columbarium Edit Main article United States Naval Academy Cemetery Glenn Warner Soccer Facility Edit Main article Glenn Warner Soccer Facility Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium Edit Main article Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium Terwilliger Brothers Field Edit The academy baseball team plays at the Terwilliger Brothers Field at Max Bishop Stadium Supervision of the Academy EditIn 1850 the academy was placed under the jurisdiction of the Navy s Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography but was transferred to the Bureau of Navigation when that organization was established in 1862 The academy was placed under the direct care of the Navy Department in 1867 but for many years the Bureau of Navigation provided administrative routine and financial management As of 2004 the Superintendent of the Naval Academy reports directly to the Chief of Naval Operations The board of visitors annually audits the academy Its recommendations constitute a mandate to the administration It is composed of officials appointed by Congress and the president 88 In 1945 colonel civil rights advocate and inventor Blake R Van Leer was appointed to the board by President Harry S Truman 89 The 2020 recommendations include changing the historic names of buildings named after people who deserted the Union for the Confederacy during the American Civil War 90 Faculty EditRoughly 500 faculty members are evenly divided between civilian professors and military instructors The civilian professors nearly all have a PhD and can be awarded tenure usually upon promotion from assistant professor to associate professor Fewer of the military instructors have a PhD but nearly all have a master s degree Most of them are assigned to the academy for only two or three years Additionally there are adjunct professors hired to fill temporary shortages in various disciplines The adjunct professors are not eligible for tenure Permanent military professors PMP Edit A small number of officers at the academy are designated as permanent military professors PMP initially at the academic rank of assistant professor All PMPs have PhDs and remain at the academy until statutory retirement Most are commanders in the Navy a few are captains Like civilian professors they seek academic promotion to the rank of associate professor and professor However they are not eligible for tenure Class of 1957 Distinguished Chair of Naval Heritage Edit The Class of 1957 Distinguished Chair of Naval Heritage is an academic professorial chair in the history department 91 In order to preserve and promote a better understanding of professional naval heritage in midshipmen at the U S Naval Academy the academy s Class of 1957 donated the funds to permanently endow this position It is designed to be a visiting position for a distinguished senior academic historian who is to hold the post for one or two years The position was first occupied in 2006 and in addition to teaching requirements the occupant is expected to give the McMullen Seapower Lecture at the academy s biennial McMullen Naval History Symposium Chair holders Edit Williamson Murray January 2006 June 2007 Andrew Gordon August 2007 June 2009 Ronald H Spector August 2009 June 2010 John H Schroeder August 2010 June 2011 Craig Symonds August 2011 June 2012 James C Bradford August 2012 June 2013 Gene Allen Smith August 2013 June 2014 William F Trimble August 2014 June 2015 David Alan Rosenberg August 2015 June 2016 Nicholas A Lambert August 2016 June 2018 Kathleen Broome Williams August 2018 Appointment process EditBy an Act of Congress passed in 1903 two midshipman appointments were allowed for each senator representative and delegate in Congress two for the District of Columbia and five each year at large Currently each member of Congress and the vice president can have five appointees attending the Naval Academy at any time When any appointee graduates or otherwise leaves the academy a vacancy is created Candidates are nominated by their senator representative or delegate in Congress and those appointed at large are nominated by the vice president The applicants do not have to know their Congressman to be nominated Congressmen generally nominate ten people per vacancy They can nominate people in a competitive manner or they can have a principal nomination In a competitive nomination all ten applicants are reviewed by the academy to see who is the most qualified If the congressman appoints a principal nominee then as long as that candidate is physically medically and academically found qualified by the academy he or she will be admitted even if there are more qualified applicants The degree of difficulty in obtaining a nomination varies greatly according to the number of applicants in a particular state The process of obtaining a nomination typically consists of completing an application completing one or more essays and obtaining one or more letters of recommendation and often requires an interview either in person or over the phone These requirements are set by the respective senator or representative and are in addition to the USNA application 92 The Secretary of the Navy may appoint 170 enlisted members of the Regular and Reserve Navy and Marine Corps to the Naval Academy each year Additional sources of appointment are open to children of career military personnel 100 per year and 65 appointments are available to children of military members who were killed in action or were rendered 100 disabled due to injuries received in action or are currently prisoners of war or missing in action Typically five to ten candidates are nominated for each appointment which are normally awarded competitively candidates who do not receive the appointment they are competing for may still be admitted to the academy as a qualified alternate If a candidate is considered qualified but not picked up they may receive an indirect admission to either a Naval Academy Foundation prep school or the Naval Academy Preparatory School in Newport the following year these candidates enlist in the Navy Reserve or in the case of prior enlisted members remain in the Navy and are eligible for Secretary of the Navy nominations which are granted as a matter of course To receive an appointment to the Naval Academy students at the Naval Academy Preparatory School must first pass with a 2 2 QPA a combination of GPA and Fitness Assessments although this is waiverable A candidate must also receive a recommendation for appointment from the commanding officer The appointment process has been criticized as giving preferential treatment towards athletes 93 Children of Medal of Honor recipients are automatically appointed to the Naval Academy they only need to meet admission requirements 94 Admissions requirements Edit To be admitted candidates must be between seventeen and twenty three years of age upon entrance unmarried with no children and of good moral character The current process includes a college application personality testing standardized testing and personal references Candidates for admission must also undergo a physical aptitude test the CFA or Candidate Fitness Assessment formerly the Physical Readiness Examination as well as a complete physical exam including a separate visual acuity test to be eligible for appointment A medical waiver will automatically be sought on behalf of candidates with less than 20 20 vision as well as a range of other injuries or illnesses The physical aptitude test is most often administered by a high school physical education teacher or sports team coach 94 A small number of international students usually from smaller allied or friendly countries are admitted into each class International students from larger allies such as France and the United Kingdom typically come as shorter term exchange students from their national naval colleges or academies The Class of 2025 includes 16 international students from Egypt 1 Fiji 1 Ghana 1 Indonesia 2 Jordan 1 Malaysia 1 Maldives 1 Peru 1 Philippines 2 Sri Lanka 1 Taiwan 1 Thailand 1 and Tunisia 2 95 Seven second class cadets each from West Point the Air Force Academy and the Coast Guard Academy spend a fall semester at Annapolis The same applies for midshipmen exchanged out to those academies at the same time The exchange process is competitive 96 Academics EditThe Naval Academy received accreditation as an approved technological institution in 1930 In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt signed into law an act of Congress providing for the Bachelor of Science degree for the Naval Military and Coast Guard Academies The Class of 1933 was the first to receive this degree and have it written in the diploma In 1937 an act of Congress extended to the superintendent of the Naval Academy the authority to award the Bachelor of Science degree to all living graduates The academy later replaced a fixed curriculum taken by all midshipmen with the present core curriculum plus 22 major fields of study 97 Academic departments at the Naval Academy are organized into three divisions Engineering and Weapons known as Division I Mathematics and Science known as Division II and Humanities and Social Sciences known as Division III Category In its 2021 edition U S News amp World Report ranked the U S Naval Academy as the No 1 top public school No 6 in national liberal arts colleges in the U S and No 5 for Best Undergraduate Engineering program at schools where doctorates not offered 98 In 2016 Forbes ranked the U S Naval Academy as No 24 overall in its report America s Top Colleges 99 Moral education Edit Moral and ethical development is fundamental to all aspects of the Naval Academy From Plebe Summer through graduation the Officer Development Program a four year integrated program focuses on integrity honor and mutual respect based on the moral values of respect for human dignity respect for honesty and respect for the property of others 100 One of the goals of the program is to develop midshipmen to possess a sense of their own moral beliefs and the ability to express them Honor is emphasized through the Honor Concept of the Brigade of Midshipmen which states Midshipmen are persons of integrity They stand for that which is right They tell the truth and ensure that the full truth is known They do not lie They embrace fairness in all actions They ensure that work submitted as their own is their own and that assistance received from any source is authorized and properly documented They do not cheat They respect the property of others and ensure that others are able to benefit from the use of their own property They do not steal 101 Similar ideals are expressed in the honor codes of the other service academies However midshipmen are allowed to confront someone they see violating the code without formally reporting it It is believed that this method is a better way of developing the honor of midshipmen as opposed to the non toleration clauses of the other service academies and is a better way of building honor and trust Brigade Honor Committees composed of upper class midshipmen are responsible for the education and training of the Honor Concept Depending on the severity of the offense midshipmen found in violation of the Honor Concept by their peers can be separated from the Naval Academy 100 Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference NAFAC Edit Main article Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference Since 1961 the academy has hosted the annual Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference NAFAC the country s largest undergraduate foreign affairs conference NAFAC provides a forum for addressing pressing international concerns and seeks to explore current issues from both a civilian and military perspective Each year a unique theme is chosen for NAFAC Noteworthy individuals with expertise in relevant fields are then invited to address the conference delegates who represent civilian and military colleges from across the United States and around the globe The entire conference is organized and run by midshipmen who also serve as moderators presenters and delegates The midshipman director is responsible for every aspect of the conference including the conference theme and is generally charged with leading a staff of over 250 midshipmen 102 Naval Academy Science and Engineering Conference NASEC Edit The Naval Academy Science and Engineering Conference NASEC hosted annually since 2000 is an undergraduate STEM conference Held in November each year approximately 45 midshipmen join 150 attendees from other colleges and universities across the country meet and discuss significant science and engineering challenges The delegates hear from leaders in scientific research and policy from academia industry and government and participate in group discussions on the conference themes 103 The conference serves as both a leadership opportunity for the midshipmen staff who organize and run the event and as a venue to expose midshipmen to cutting edge science and engineering challenges McMullen Naval History Symposium Edit Main article McMullen Naval History SymposiumSince 1973 the Naval Academy has hosted a major international conference for naval historians In 2006 it was named after John J McMullen USNA Class of 1940 Small Satellite Program Edit Main article Small Satellite Program United States Naval Academy The United States Naval Academy USNA Small Satellite Program SSP 104 was founded in 1999 to actively pursue flight opportunities for miniature satellites designed constructed tested and commanded or controlled by midshipmen The USNA MidSTAR Program s first satellite MidSTAR I was launched 8 March 2007 105 The planned MidSTAR II was canceled Postgraduate studies Edit Because the majority of graduates commence directly into their military commissions the Naval Academy offers no graduate degree programs However a number of programs allow midshipmen to obtain graduate degrees before fulfilling their service obligation The Immediate Graduate Education Program IGEP allows newly commissioned Ensigns or Second Lieutenants to proceed directly to graduate school and complete a master s degree The Voluntary Graduate Education Program VGEP allows the midshipman to begin their studies the second semester of their senior year at a local university usually University of Maryland Johns Hopkins University Georgetown University or George Washington University and complete the degree by the following semester Midshipmen accepted into prestigious scholarships such as the Rhodes Scholarship are permitted to complete their studies before fulfilling their service obligation Finally the Bowman Scholarship allows Navy Nuclear Power candidates to complete their master s degrees at the Naval Postgraduate School before continuing into the Navy Student activities EditStudent body composition as of May 2 2022 Race and ethnicity 106 TotalWhite 61 61 Hispanic 12 12 Other a 11 11 Asian 8 8 Black 7 7 Foreign national 1 1 Economic diversityData Not AvailableAthletics Edit Main article Navy Midshipmen See also Midshipmen baseball football lacrosse men s basketball and men s soccer The 1926 National Championship football team Participation in athletics is in general mandatory at the Naval Academy and most midshipmen not on an intercollegiate team must participate actively in intramural or club sports There are exceptions for non athletic Brigade Support Activities such as YP Squadron a professional surface warfare training activity providing midshipmen the opportunity to earn the Craftmaster Badge or the Drum and Bugle Corps Varsity letter winners wear a specially issued blue cardigan with a large gold N patch affixed Teams that beat Army in a year are awarded a gold star to affix near the N for each such victory The U S Naval Academy s varsity sports teams 107 have no official name but usually are referred to in media as the Midshipmen since all athletes are in fact midshipmen or more informally as the Mids The term middies is generally considered derogatory 108 The sports teams mascot is a goat named Bill The Midshipmen participate in the NCAA s Division I FBS as a member of the American Athletic Conference in football and in the NCAA Division I level Patriot League in many other sports The academy fields 30 varsity sports teams and 13 club sports teams along with 19 intramural sports teams 107 109 Plebes receive basic martial arts instruction during Plebe Summer training Plebes paddle pontoon boats during a team building portion of Sea Trials The most important sporting event at the academy is the annual Army Navy Game in football The 2015 season marks Navy s 14th consecutive victory over Army The three major service academies Navy Air Force and Army compete for the Commander in Chief s Trophy which is awarded to the academy that defeats the others in football that year or retained by the previous winner in the event of a three way tie Navy won the trophy in 2012 after two years of residence at the Air Force Academy Keenan Reynolds quarterback 2012 2015 set numerous Navy and NCAA records including the FBS career rushing touchdown record arguably becoming Navy s best quarterback ever Reynolds finished fifth in the prestigious Heisman Trophy voting In the Army Navy rivalry Reynolds became the first quarterback to beat Army in four seasons 110 Naval Academy sports teams have many accomplishments at the international and national levels In 1926 Navy s football team won the U S national championship based on both the Boand and Houlgate mathematical poll systems 111 and the Navy men s lacrosse team won 21 USILL or USILA national championships and was the NCAA Division I runner up in 1975 and 2004 The men s fencing team won NCAA Division I championships in 1950 1959 and 1962 and was runner up in 1948 1953 1960 and 1963 112 and NCAA Division I championships were also earned by the 1945 men s outdoor track and field team 113 and the 1964 men s soccer team 114 The academy lightweight crew won the 2004 and 2021 National Championship The lightweights are accredited with two Jope Cup Championships as well finishing the Eastern Sprints with the highest number of points in 2006 and 2007 The college s heavyweight crew won Olympic gold medals in men s eights in 1920 and 1952 115 and from 1907 to 1995 at Intercollegiate Rowing Association regatta the team earned 30 championships 116 In intercollegiate shooting the Naval Academy has won nine National Rifle Association rifle team trophies seven air pistol team championships and five standard pistol team titles 117 Navy s squash team was the national nine man team champion in 1957 1959 and 1967 118 and the boxing team was National Collegiate Boxing Association champion in 1987 1996 1997 1998 and 2005 119 There is an unofficial but previous National Champion croquet team 120 Legend has it that in the early 1980s a Mid and a Johnnie slang for a student enrolled at St John s College Annapolis were in a bar and the Mid challenged the Johnnie by stating that Midshipmen could beat St John s at any sport The St John s student selected croquet Since then thousands attend the annual croquet match between St John s and the 28th Company 121 of the Brigade of Midshipmen originally the 34th Company before the brigade was reduced to 30 companies 122 As of 2017 the Midshipmen had a record of 7 wins and 28 losses to the St John s team 123 Other extra curricular activities Edit A bagpiper with the Naval Academy Pipes and Drums Midshipmen have the opportunity to participate in a broad range of other extracurricular activities including musical performance groups Drum amp Bugle Corps Men s Glee Club Women s Glee Club Gospel Choir an annual musical a midshipman orchestra and a bagpipe band the Pipes amp Drums religious organizations academic honor societies such as Omicron Delta Epsilon an economics honor society Campus Girl Scouts the National Eagle Scout Association a radio station WRNV 124 and Navy and Marine Corps professional activities diving flying seamanship and the Semper Fidelis Society for future Marines The midshipman theatrical company The Masqueraders put on one production annually in Mahan Hall There is an intercollegiate debate team 125 Colleges from along the East Coast attend the annual U S Naval Academy Debate Tournament Midshipmen also participate in the Sandhurst Competition a military skills event 126 The brigade began publishing a humor magazine called The Log in 1913 127 This magazine was discontinued in 2001 128 but returned to print in the fall of 2008 Among The Log s usual features were Salty Sam an anonymous member of the senior class who served as a gossip columnist and the Company Cuties photos of male midshipmen s girlfriends This last was deemed offensive to women and despite attempts to incorporate the boyfriends of female midshipmen in some issues the Company Cuties were dropped from The Log s format by 1991 129 The Log was once featured in Playboy Magazine for its parody of the famous periodical 130 called Playmid Playmid was an issue of The Log in 1989 and was ordered destroyed by Rear Admiral Virgil L Hill Jr the Academy Superintendent at the time but a handful of copies did survive Earlier Log attempts to parody were much more successful with 18 April 1969 version as the most famous some sections of this issue can be seen online at an alumni website 131 In September 1949 the Log began publishing a half sized Splinter bi weekly to alternate with its larger sized publication 132 133 Song Edit See also A selection of Naval Academy traditions Notable among a number of songs commonly played and sung at various events such as commencement and convocation and athletic games is Anchors Aweigh the United States Naval Academy fight song According to College Fight Songs An Annotated Anthology published in 1998 Anchors Aweigh ranks as the fifth greatest fight song of all time Blue and Gold is the name of Naval Academy s Alma Mater 134 Police EditThe Naval District Washington Naval Support Activity Annapolis Police Department formerly known as the US Naval Academy Police Department until 2010 is a full DOD law enforcement agency It is composed of both DoD Department of Navy Civilian Police and Navy Masters at Arms who are responsible for policing the US Naval Academy complex They enforce Maryland federal and military law and local instructions offer assistance to those in need and provide a visible deterrent for criminal activity 135 Women at the Naval Academy Edit Astronaut Wendy B Lawrence Class of 1981 The Naval Academy first accepted women as midshipmen in 1976 after Congress authorized the admission of women to all of the service academies Women account for about 22 percent of entering plebes b They pursue the same academic and professional training as do their male classmates except that certain physical aptitude standards for women are lower than for men mirroring the standards of the Navy itself Women have most recently composed about 17 percent of each graduating class however this number continues to rise The first pregnant midshipman graduated in 2009 While regulations expressly forbade this the woman was able to receive a waiver from the Department of the Navy 137 In 2006 Michelle J Howard class of 1982 became the first female graduate of the Naval Academy to be selected for admiral she was also the first admiral from her class Margaret D Klein class of 1981 became the first female commandant of midshipmen in December 2006 Following the 2003 U S Air Force Academy sexual assault scandal and due to concern with sexual assault in the U S military the Department of Defense was required to establish a task force to investigate sexual harassment and assault at the United States military academies in the law funding the military for fiscal 2004 The report issued 25 August 2005 showed that during 2004 50 of the women at Annapolis reported instances of sexual harassment while 99 incidents of sexual assault were reported 138 There had been an earlier incident in 1990 which involved male midshipmen chaining a female midshipman to a urinal and then taking pictures of her after she threw a snowball at them 139 Academy Superintendent Vice Admiral Rodney Rempt issued a statement With the benefit of the Defense Task Force s assessment and recommendations we will continue to strive to establish a climate which encourages reporting of these incidents so we can support the victim and deal with allegations fairly and appropriately The very idea that any member of the Naval Academy family could be part of an environment that fosters sexual harassment misconduct or even assault is of great concern to me and it is contrary to all we are trying to do and achieve Preventing and deterring this unacceptable behavior is a leadership issue that I and all the Academy leaders take to heart The public trusts that the Service Academies will adhere to the highest standards and that we will serve as beacons that exemplify character dignity and respect We will increase our efforts to meet that trust Superintendent Rempt was criticized in 2006 for not allowing former Navy quarterback Lamar Owens to graduate despite his acquittal on a rape charge Some alumni have attributed this to an overeagerness on Rempt s part to placate critics urging a crackdown on sexual assault and harassment 140 In 1979 James H Webb published a provocative essay opposing the integration of women at the Naval Academy titled Women Can t Fight Webb was an instructor at the Naval Academy in 1979 when he wrote the article for Washingtonian magazine that was critical of women in combat and of them attending the service academies The article in which he referred to the dorm at the Naval Academy that housed 4 000 men and 300 women as a horny woman s dream was written three years after the academy admitted women Webb said he did not write the headline 141 On 7 November 2006 Webb was elected to the U S Senate from Virginia His election opponent then senator George Allen raised the 1979 article as a campaign issue depicting Webb as being opposed to women in military service Webb s response read in part To the extent that my writings subjected women at the Academy or the active armed forces to undue hardship I remain profoundly sorry He then went on to assert I am completely comfortable with the roles of women in today s military 142 In a political advertisement for Allen five female graduates of the United States Naval Academy had said the article helped foster an air of hostility and harassment towards females within the academy The Navy Secretary Ray Mabus on 21 December 2012 issued a statement of shame over a recent sexual abuse study which showed the nation s service academies continue to have trouble maintaining safe teaching environments regarding sexual abuse Reported sexual assaults the prior year declined from 22 to 13 at Annapolis The former superintendent Vice Admiral Mike Miller enforced a new academy policy as of January 2013 related to training victim support campus security leadership presence on weekends and a general review of alcohol policy based on other information in the recent report which shows the actual number of sexual assaults has not declined and that offenses are not reported 143 Traditions Edit United States Naval Academy flag Anchors Aweigh historical source source 1929 acetate recording performance of Anchors Aweigh by the United States Navy Band Anchors Aweigh modern source source An instrumental sample of a single verse of Anchors Aweigh played by a modern brass band Problems playing these files See media help Traditions are practices handed down from class to class at the academy Many have been recorded over the years in academy publications Some are as old as a century or more but few have persisted totally unchanged Anchors Aweigh is a popular song written historically at the Naval Academy subsequently coming to stand for the entire United States Navy The lyrics are by Midshipman Alfred H Miles set to music by 2nd Lieutenant Zimmerman USMC bandmaster of the Naval Academy Band starting in 1887 After writing Anchors Aweigh they dedicated it to the Class of 1907 The song is sung during sporting events pep rallies and played by the Drum and Bugle Corps during noon meal formations Members of the Navy and Marine Corps unless marching are supposed to come to attention while it is playing The original verse quoted below is learned by midshipmen as plebes Anchors Aweigh Stand Navy down the field Sails set to the sky We ll never change our course So Army you steer shy y y y Roll up the score Navy Anchors Aweigh Sail Navy down the field And sink the Army sink the Army Grey 144 Beat Army is a stock phrase most often said in the autumn before the Army Navy Football Game to which it refers It is generally used in a traditional or ad hoc authoritative context such as after the singing of the academy s Alma Mater Blue and Gold at a rally As an example of an ad hoc context midshipmen officers with the approval of commanding officers may require it to be spoken smartly by plebes while squaring corners Blue and Gold is the name of Naval Academy s Alma Mater 134 The song is sung at the conclusion of every sporting event at the end of pep rallies and at alumni gatherings It is also sung in most companies by the plebes at the conclusion of the day during Plebe Summer and end of the week during the academic year this event is also referred to as Blue and Gold which is a short gathering to review the day for better or worse with the upperclass midshipmen The original lyrics are Blue and Gold Now college men from sea to sea may sing of colors true But who has better right than we to hoist a symbol hue For sailor men in battle fair since fighting days of old Have proved the sailor s right to wear the Navy Blue and Gold The second verse is sung at each graduation and commissioning ceremony and is often performed by the Glee Clubs Four years together by the bay where Severn joins the tide And by the service called away we scatter far and wide But still when two or three shall meet and old tales be retold From low to highest in the Fleet we ll pledge the Blue and Gold The wording of the first and third lines was changed slightly in 2004 to make them gender neutral The current first stanza is Blue and Gold Now colleges from sea to sea may sing of colors true But who has better right than we to hoist a symbol hue For sailors brave in battle fair since fighting days of old Have proved the sailor s right to wear the Navy Blue and Gold 145 Cover Toss At the end of graduation the new ensigns in the Navy or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps typically discard their now obsolete midshipman covers hats by tossing them into the air to celebrate change of status Various additional practices have included putting a small sum of money inside the cover for the benefit of children attending or putting one s name and address inside to receive a letter and cake The Cover Toss tradition started in 1912 Goat Court 146 refers to either of two light wells inside the third and fourth wings of Bancroft lined with five stories of room windows The bottoms forming a roof over the basement feature large HVAC units Policies of assignment to the more desirable outside rooms have varied but generally rank is the chief consideration Herndon Monument Climb a year end informal ritual analogous to the cover toss at graduation marking the passage from plebe to third classman The new upperclassmen raise a classmate to the top of the monument to replace a dixie cup sailor cover with the combination cover traditional to midshipmen 146 147 For the event Herndon is covered with lard Only teamwork will result in the changing of caps In 2008 the dixie cup removed and the cover placed belonged to Midshipman Kristen Dickmann Class of 2011 who had died a few days previously These were the first women s caps used for the Climb 148 Jimmy Legs 146 In modern USNA contexts a disallowed slang term referring to any or all of the NDW NSA Annapolis Police Department see above who provide security for the grounds and enforcement for some of the regulations such as the one forbidding town visits over the wall whether wall or chain link fence at night This is not a legitimate salty term that is a bona fide English word of antique provenience now used only in naval contexts c Accordingly its use was forbidden in the 1990s policy of mutual respect intended to help counter the confrontational crises of the period 149 The Laws of the Navy a parody of Rudyard Kipling s poem The Law of the Jungle The imaginary character narrating the poem assumes the role of a wise senior officer offering advice to the junior officers of the wardroom on the appropriate attitudes to have and the appropriate way to behave aboard a ship delivered in the form of twenty seven laws The uninitiated should understand that law is entirely poetical and analogous and that the laws are not and never were part of any regulatory code in or out of any of the world s navies Furthermore the advice is of little import in the operation and management of real ships in the real navy The poem was composed by Rear Admiral Ronald Hopwood Royal Navy originally appearing in the Army and Navy Gazette 23 July 1896 150 By the mid 1920s the poem began to be published in the USNA s Reef Points the official midshipman handbook and training manual issued to all plebes during their induction Plebe Rates a set of responses and passages memorized by midshipmen during Plebe Summer which serve as memory training and camaraderie building exercises These are listed in Reef Points and are a staple of the first year for all midshipmen Some serve the purpose of admonishing young midshipmen with useful advice on leadership and hard work while others are simply whimsical tongue twisters meant to be recited as rapidly as possible such as Sir sir is a subservient word surviving from the surly days in old Serbia when certain serfs etc Since these exercises are memorized by all midshipmen they serve as a unifying common heritage of academy culture and often even the saltiest graduate can decades later still recite them flawlessly Red Beach 147 151 the red tiled plaza behind Memorial Hall on top of the wardroom in between 5th and 6th wings of Bancroft Hall used as a place of formation for part of the brigade It also serves as a place for restrictees to march punishment tours During warm weather this area in the past served as a place for midshipmen to sun bathe which is where the name red beach is derived Reef Points is a pocket sized volume sturdily bound and issued to each midshipman upon indoctrination Reef Points contains information the midshipman will need to get through the storm of plebe year As part of memory training the plebe is asked to memorize stock pieces for instant recital on demand Past issues tend to be rare books New ones must be issued or purchased In imitation some institutions issue their own Reef Points Named for reef points on a sailing vessel which are short pieces of line used to tie the bottom of the mainsail to the boom or spar so as to shorten the sail during a storm diminishing the force on it and helping it to get through the gale without breakage of sail or mast Ring Dance held in May this event is when the second class midshipmen receive their class rings at a formal dance complete with fireworks The event is held in Dahlgren Hall Traditionally the Midshipman s date wears the ring around her his neck and the couple dips the ring in water from all seven seas 146 Salty Sam is the personification of the reformation movement in the United States Navy through her Naval Academy graduates 152 Spiritually the first Salty Sam was perhaps the natural leader of the navy s Young Turks 153 William Sims Class of 1880 who became the leading reformer of the Navy retiring as a full admiral Many of his letters today are relished not because of the reforms there advocated but because of the hilarious way he presented them he was addicted to poetry as a means of expression he put forth his ideas in rhyme whenever possible sometimes to the despair of his more serious fellows but others were occasionally enticed to respond in kind The war on paper could well be waged in poetry he felt for it at least kept the mind higher The older and more senior he became the more would he try to lighten the mood of his cohorts by humor in prose and poetry though the latter many said became increasingly atrocious the more elevated its author s naval rank Still it served its purpose admirably As a junior officer it was a way to cloak his ideas in a patina of genteel wardroom horseplay with the barb of criticism perfunctorily covered Capt Edward L Beach USN 153 In later years Salty Sam led the enlightenment of Sims through The Log at USNA Salty Sam reflects the spirit of Sims by questioning today s paradigms to ready the Navy for the future The secret and anonymous tradition of Salty Sam is to teach Midshipman to bridle criticism in the ways of Sims humor but to seek to inspire change and reform through the argument of the obvious The Steam Tunnels also later known as the Ho Chi Minh trail 146 are a network of underground brick encased tunnels carrying steam pipes from the old Isherwood Hall named after Benjamin F Isherwood who served as the Engineer in Chief of the Navy during the American Civil War The pipes carried steam to Bancroft Hall and Mahan Hall primarily for heating the buildings Adjuncts to the tunnels lead underground to the basement levels of Michelson Hall Chauvenet Hall and Rickover Hall The tunnels serve as a natural infiltration route for midshipman pranks especially during the week leading up to the Army Navy football game The original Isherwood Hall was located partially under the current Alumni hall and behind Mahan Hall toward the Nimitz Library The Steam Plant was located under the front left of Rickover Hall and plaza in the middle of the current 300 feet 91 m tow tank The Steam Tunnels were left in place after Isherwood Hall was demolished Notable alumni EditMain articles List of United States Naval Academy alumni and List of Medal of Honor recipients educated at the United States Naval Academy Notable graduates George Dewey Class of 1858 Albert A Michelson Class of 1873 William Daniel Leahy Class of 1897 Ernest King Class of 1901 William F Halsey Jr Class of 1904 Chester William Nimitz Class of 1905 Frank Jack Fletcher Class of 1906 Isaac Campbell Kidd Class of 1906 John Sidney McCain Sr Class of 1906 Raymond A Spruance Class of 1906 Richmond Kelly Turner Class of 1908 Daniel Judson Callaghan Class of 1911 Norman Scott Class of 1911 Hyman G Rickover Class of 1922 Robert Anson Heinlein Class of 1929 John Sidney McCain Jr Class of 1931 Alan Bartlett Shepard Jr Class of 1945 Walter Marty Schirra Jr Class of 1946 James Earl Carter Jr Class of 1947 Jeremiah A Denton Jr Class of 1947 James Bond Stockdale Class of 1947 James Benson Irwin Class of 1951 James Arthur Lovell Jr Class of 1952 Thomas Patten Stafford Class of 1952 Henry Ross Perot Class of 1953 William Alison Anders Class of 1955 Charles Moss Duke Jr Class of 1957 John Sidney McCain III Class of 1958 Bruce McCandless II Class of 1958 Robert McFarlane Class of 1959 Joe Bellino Class of 1961 Roger Thomas Staubach Class of 1965 Oliver Laurence North Class of 1968 James Henry Webb Jr Class of 1968 Montel WilliamsClass of 1980 Wendy B Lawrence Class of 1981 Napoleon McCallum Class of 1985 James Byrne Class of 1987 William D Byrne Jr Class of 1987 Marc H Dalton Class of 1987 John Fuller Class of 1987 Kenneth HamClass of 1987 Gregory N HarrisClass of 1987 Gregory MasielloClass of 1987 David Maurice Robinson Class of 1987 Timothy J WhiteClass of 1987 Sunita Lyn Williams Class of 1987 Doug Wojcik Class of 1987 Keenan Reynolds Class of 2016Graduates include over 50 U S astronauts including six who flew to the Moon d more than from any other undergraduate institution in the U S Over 990 noted scholars in a variety of academic fields are Academy graduates including 46 Rhodes Scholars and 24 Marshall Scholars Alumni include one President of the United States Jimmy Carter who is also a Nobel laureate as is Albert A Michelson 1907 Nobel Prize in Physics 73 alumni have earned the Medal of Honor Shipmate the official magazine of the USNA Alumni Association is distributed worldwide to members of the association and to midshipmen parents faculty administrators donors legislators and friends 154 In 2012 Sam Tan Wei Shen a Singaporean was the first foreigner to graduate first in his class in the history of the academy 155 The USNA Alumni Association defines alumni as graduates and former midshipmen who did not graduate after the last Academy class of which they were a member has graduated 156 This policy to include non graduates dates to 1931 during the Great Depression when many midshipmen had to leave the Naval Academy to support their families See also Edit Maryland portalAlumni House United States Naval Academy Annapolis 2006 film Hispanics in the United States Naval Academy Mace of Parliament of Upper Canada Naval Academy Bridge Navy Blue and Gold film Old Goat Award USNA Out United States Merchant Marine AcademyNotes Edit Other consists of Multiracial Americans amp those who prefer to not say According to the Class Profiles published by the Academy the percentage of women upon admission for the classes of 2006 2007 2008 2009 136 and 2010 was 16 16 7 20 1 19 3 and 22 2 percent respectively citation needed The etymology remains unknown The unsupported conjectures of random writers are of no scholarly merit The appearance of the term in an anonymous midshipman ditty published in 1889 shows that it was established at least as early as then Adios Jimmy Legs you chief of all spies Adios Jimmy legs on you there is no flies to be found in Gibbs G F 1889 Junk a collection of songs and poems by cadets at the United States Naval Academy Washington D C Patentee Publishing Company The pages are not numbered A nautical encyclopedia of the times defines Jimmy Legs as A sobriquet for the master at arms Hamersly LR 1884 Jimmy Legs A naval encyclopaedia comprising a dictionary of nautical words and phrases biographical notices and records of naval officers special articles of naval art and science Philadelphia L R Hamersly amp Co Jim Lovell Bill Anders and Tom Stafford orbited the Moon and Alan Shepard Jim Irwin and Charlie Duke were three of the twelve astronauts who walked on the Moon Footnotes Edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service 9 July 2010 Marilynn Larew 28 July 1977 National Historic Register of Historic Places Nomination Form National Park Service and Accompanying photos United States Naval Academy National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Archived from the original on 18 July 2014 Retrieved 16 July 2014 Toll Brothers History Meets Modern Luxury Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Colleges with the highest paid grads CNN 10 September 2014 USNA Alumni Association and Foundation March 2014 Barnett Lelia Montague October 1920 Commodore Sinclair and The Nautical School Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine Vol LIV no 10 p 553 Thorpe Robert September 2017 Mersey Built The Role of Merseyside in the American Civil War Vernon Press p 278 ISBN 978 1 62273 281 4 a b Poyer 2018 pp 13 16 Benjamin Park 1900 The United States naval academy being the yarn of the American midshipman Naval Cadet New York and London G P Putnam s Sons p 349 The whole is the design of the author and was adopted by the Navy Department in 1898 Up to that year the naval academy had possessed no authorized device although it had printed on its registers an arbitrary symbol The occasion which led to the adoption of the present design was the building of a new club house by the University Club of New York on the exterior of which the coats of arms of the several colleges were placed as an embellishment and this brought the fact to general notice that the naval academy had no badge of the kind The matter was at once taken up by Mr Jacob W Miller of the class of 1867 and mainly through his endeavors the desired approval of the Navy Department was secured a b c d e f Cheevers Jim 2018 The U S Naval Academy during the Great War Shipmate Vol 81 no 7 pp 34 40 Lull Edward 1869 Description and History of the United States Naval Academy From its Origin to the Present Time United States Naval Academy pp 62 93 a b Conrad 2003 p 6 Duchesneau John T Troost Cramer Kathleen 2014 Fort Adams A History Charleston SC The History Press p 44 ISBN 978 1 62619 528 8 Echoes from Life in Camp Mathew Fontaine Maury Benefactor of Mankind History navy mil Retrieved 23 March 2015 Commandants U S Naval Academy Alumni Association amp Foundation Archived from the original on 31 May 2009 a b c d e f g h Cheevers James April 1995 article Shipmate Vol 58 no 3 pp 23 26 full citation needed Black History Legends Nuggets Retrieved 9 March 2013 a b Schneller Robert J 2005 Breaking the Color Barrier the U S Naval Academy s First Black Midshipmen and the Struggle for Racial Equality New York New York Univ Press ISBN 978 0814740132 Clare Rod July 2005 The Sixth Wave Black Integration in the U S Naval Academy Retrieved 9 March 2013 Albert A Michelson Biographical Nobelprize org Nobel Media AB 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2014 Asian Pacific American Heritage Month WindJammer Commander Fleet Activities Okinawa May 2008 p 5 Archived from the original PDF on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 9 February 2017 Williams Rudi 11 June 2002 Asian Pacific American Military Timeline The Chinese Historical and Cultural Project Archived from the original Timeline on 30 January 2009 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Survey Historic American Buildings U S Naval Academy Isherwood Hall Annapolis Anne Arundel County MD www loc gov Register of alumni graduates and former naval cadets and midshipmen 1916 Annual Reunion 1866 Retrieved 12 January 2018 a b Schramm Bill March April 2021 58 class news Shipmate Vol 84 no 2 p 58 a b c USNA Timeline www usna edu Ray Thomas October 1971 Annapolis The Navy s First Aerodrome Proceedings Magazine U S Naval Institute Times Picayune Our Aero Amphibian Fleet John Elfreth Watkins 20 August 1911 Page 1 Shettle Jr M L United States Naval Air Stations of World War II Volume I Eastern States Schaertel Publishing Co Bowersville Georgia 1995 Library of Congress card number 94 68879 ISBN 0 9643388 0 7 page 177 a b c Poyer David March April 2009 The Most Kissed Man in America Shipmate p 41 full citation needed Academy United States Naval 12 January 2018 Annual Register of the United States Naval Academy Annapolis Md Earle Ralph 1917 Life at the U S Naval Academy the making of the American naval officer New York London G P Putnam s Sons via Internet Archive a b About History U S Naval Academy Drum and Bugle Corps U S Naval Academy 5 cent Naval Academy Seal amp Midshipmen Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 23 May 2014 John Pike 15 May 1947 Annapolis Globalsecurity org Doan Lurita 2 August 2009 On race Harvard still must learn Newspaper editorial Los Angeles Times Fisher Donald M 2002 Lacrosse A History of the Game The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 6938 2 Gup Ted 12 December 2004 Southern Discomfort Newspaper article Boston Globe UNESCO 1950 Statement by experts on race problems Paris 20 July 1950 UNESCO SS 1 UNESDOC database PDF Archived PDF from the original on 7 April 2012 Retrieved 8 June 2012 Summary Minutes of Meeting United States National Commission for the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization 1956 Poyer 2018 pp 12 13 Butler FK 2004 Closed circuit oxygen diving in the U S Navy Undersea Hyperb Med 31 1 3 20 PMID 15233156 Archived from the original on 13 May 2010 Retrieved 19 March 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Hawkins T 2000 OSS Maritime The Blast 32 1 NSA Annapolis About Cnic navy mil Retrieved 10 October 2011 The Midshipman Culture and Educational Reform University of Delaware Press 2004 ISBN 9780874138641 Dunn Robert F May June 2011 Early Aviation at Annapolis Shipmate Vol 74 no 4 p 16 African American Flag Officers in the US Navy Department of the Navy 4 September 2007 Archived from the original on 1 May 2013 a b c d e f A brief history of USNA Interactive USNA Historic Timeline U S Naval Academy Retrieved 5 May 2015 Poyer 2018 pp 14 16 Poyer David August 2008 The Mystery of Tecumseh Shipmate full citation needed Trident Scholar Program U S Naval Academy Washington Post 6 June 2009 page B5 Obit Commander of First Vessel to Surface at North Pole Anderson v Laird Dc findacase com 31 July 1970 Capt Gottschalk from the USNA Institutional Research office Retrieved 31 May 2007 Gates Henry Louis 2011 Life upon these shores looking at African American history 1513 2008 1st ed New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0307593429 Vogel Steve 17 August 2007 Naval Academy Sets Tough Wartime Rules The Washington Post p B01 Notre Dame Navy More than football tradition Media www ndsmcobserver com Archived from the original on 23 July 2009 Retrieved 10 October 2011 College Football Tradition University of Notre Dame Official Athletic Site 11 November 2005 Henley Royal Regatta King s Cup Official YouTube video of the final race YouTube Sailing Vessel of War The Career of the USS Dale Tracy Lawson Author tracylawsonbooks com 5 May 2013 Brackin William L 1991 Naval Orientation NAVEDTRA 12966 United States Navy Naval Education and Training Command p 9 9 Insignias Midshipman Naval History amp Heritage Command Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved 14 December 2016 U S Navy Regulations Chapter 10 Precedence Authority and Command Section 1 Precedence 1001 Officers of the Naval Service 1002 Precedence of Officers 1003 Relative Rank and Precedence of Officers of Different Services Section 2 Authority 1037 Authority of Warrant Officers et al and Section 4 Succession to Command 1085 Succession to Command by Chief Warrant Officers and Warrant Officers Army Regulation 600 20 Personnel General Army Command Policy Chapter 1 Introduction Table 1 2 Comparable grades among the Services p 5 Warrant Officer Historical Foundation Warrant Officer Programs of the Other U S Uniformed Services U S Air Force General Information of Midshipmen U S Naval Academy Archived from the original on 24 December 2007 Retrieved 9 January 2008 Brigade of Midshipmen U S Naval Academy Retrieved 22 December 2008 Academy marks completion of Bancroft Hall renovation The Baltimore Sun 16 May 2003 Annapolis Maryland Area Information Azinet LLC The U S Naval Academy KNLS American Highway Archived from the original on 10 June 2008 U S Naval Academy Chaplain Center U S Naval Academy Postal Service Honors Naval Academy with a 150 Year Anniversary Commemorative Stamp A Brief History of the United States Naval Academy U S Naval Academy Archived from the original on 30 December 2006 Rahman Rema Plebe cover tops Naval Academy chapel capitalgazette com Retrieved 18 January 2018 Press Kit Uriah P Levy Center Dedication Ceremony 18 September 2005 U S Naval Academy Archived from the original on 20 February 2007 Visitor Center webpage USNA official website Retrieved 8 January 2011 a b c d e See Navy Midshipmen Facilities See Facilities Dyer Tennis Clubhouse Naval Academy Varsity Athletics official website Retrieved 10 February 2010 Halsey Field House USNA Athletics website Archived 9 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Hubbard Hall US Naval Academy Retrieved 28 May 2010 Archived 9 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Facilities Lejeune Hall Naval Academy Varsity Athletics official website Retrieved 8 January 2011 Also in Lejeune Hall are two Heisman Trophies won by Joseph Bellino in 1960 and Roger Staubach in 1963 and the Eastman Award won by basketball star David Robinson in 1987 Bailey Steve 22 August 2008 In Annapolis Md the Past Is Always at Hand The New York Times Retrieved 18 March 2010 United States Naval Academy Museum official webpage 2 May 2002 Facilities Robert Crown Sailing Center Naval Academy Varsity Athletics official website Retrieved 8 January 2011 Honan William A 1465 Bell War Booty To Go Back To Okinawa New York Times 6 April 1991 Accessed 22 July 2008 Giovanni C Micali Tripoli Monument at the U S Naval Academy in Annapolis Maryland dcmemorials com Retrieved 26 October 2011 Mexican War Midshipmen s Monument Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 5 May 2014 Board of Visitors Office of the Superintendent United States Naval Academy Retrieved 30 October 2020 Naval Academy visitor board PDF Retrieved 7 June 2015 Brian Witte 11 June 2020 Naval Academy board chair calls to remove Confederate names from buildings Navy Times Retrieved 30 October 2020 McMullen Seapower Symposium Program for 2013 Apply For Nomination United States Naval Academy 2009 Retrieved 8 February 2009 Fleming Bruce 20 May 2010 The Academies March Toward Mediocrity The New York Times a b Admissions PDF 2005 2006 USNA Catalog U S Naval Academy Archived PDF from the original on 14 June 2007 Retrieved 9 February 2017 USNA Class of 2018 profile PDF Retrieved 26 December 2015 Brandon O Connor 6 December 2018 West Point cadets take part in prisoner exchange before Army Navy game Retrieved 30 October 2020 Academic Education United States Naval Academy 2009 Colleges Rankings United States Naval Academy U S News amp World Report Retrieved 4 April 2021 America s Top Colleges Forbes 5 July 2016 a b About USNA Usna edu 25 August 2011 Honor Concept Brigade Honor Program website Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Academy Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved 17 April 2010 Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference Usna edu Retrieved 10 October 2011 NASEC 2016 Academic Research USNA www usna edu Retrieved 27 February 2017 Web Documents Midstar 2 23 February 2007 Archived from the original on 2 March 2007 Retrieved 10 April 2006 The Midshipman Space Technology Applications Research MidSTAR Program web ew usna edu Archived from the original on 26 July 2006 Retrieved 10 April 2006 College Scorecard United States Naval Academy United States Department of Education Retrieved 8 May 2022 a b USNA Athletics Information U S Naval Academy The term Middie is not appropriate Traditions U S Naval Academy Facts Figures and History Archived 6 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine at Nickname Naval Academy Varsity Athletics official website Retrieved 14 February 2010 Wesley Brown Field House Facts sheet Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine USNA Public Affairs Office Athletics Department webpage Naval Academy Varsity Athletics official website Retrieved 9 February 2010 Navy s Keenan Reynolds Extends Streak vs Army The New York Times 13 December 2015 Official 2007 NCAA Division I Football Record Book PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 June 2008 Official 2002 NCAA Winter Championships Records Book PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 June 2008 Division I Outdoor Track and Field History NCAA com Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 1964 Division I Men s Championship Bracket PDF NCAA org p 4 Retrieved 22 November 2012 U S Team Boatings Men 1900 1979 Friends of Rowing History Archived from the original on 5 December 2008 Intercollegiate Rowing Association Friends of Rowing History Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2008 National Trophy Index NRA Archived from the original on 31 October 2012 CSA Men s Team Championship Historical Information College Squash Association Archived from the original on 15 June 2008 NCBA National Collegiate Boxing Association Collegeboxing org Archived from the original on 21 November 2009 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Navy Midshipmen history ncaaticketsnow com Archived from the original on 24 March 2013 The Capital HometownAnnapolis com 19 April 2006 Archived from the original on 25 February 2012 Winters Wendy 24 April 2006 Johnnies Score an Easy Win Over Navy in Croquet The Capital Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 14 May 2008 Croquet Fact Sheet St John s College Retrieved 15 April 2017 STAFF WRNV Archived from the original on 3 December 2008 US Naval Academy Political Science Department Department Activities Usna edu Archived from the original on 14 September 2011 Retrieved 10 October 2011 Sandhurst 2010 Department of Military Instruction U S Military Academy website Retrieved 28 June 2010 Archived 27 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine History The LOG USNA Retrieved 26 August 2015 The Life and Death of the Log Part II PDF Retrieved 26 August 2015 Gelfand H Michael April 2002 Revolutionary Change at Evolutionary Speed Women and the United States Naval Academy International Journal of Naval History 1 1 Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 The Log parodied a national magazine once each year Not Politically Correct Homeport Splinter The Log 5 16 1 20 May 1955 reference a b Ensemble Recordings Music Department U S Naval Academy Security Department Police Website of the United States Naval Academy United States Naval Academy Retrieved 3 July 2013 Class of 2009 Profile U S Naval Academy Archived from the original on 26 September 2012 Retrieved 6 February 2016 Pregnant midshipman was granted rare waiver Navy Times Article title bare URL PDF Gender experts cite academy culture Archived from the original on 5 November 2004 McCaffrey Raymond Vogel Steve 17 December 2006 Case Stirs Criticism of Naval Academy Chief The Washington Post Huffington Post http www huffingtonpost com nathaniel bach jim webbs baggage b 103203 html page 4 Allsep Michael 2010 The Odyssey of James Webb An Adaptive Gender Perspective In Parco James E Levy David A eds Attitudes Aren t Free Thinking Deeply about Diversity in the US Armed Forces Maxwell Air Force Base Alabama Air University Press pp 313 315 Hlad Jennifer 21 December 2012 Navy calls for changes after report on sex assaults at military academies Stars and Stripes Retrieved 6 June 2017 Anchors Aweigh Naval Academy Band USNA Retrieved 4 June 2017 Navy Blue amp Gold Parents of USNA Midshipmen Retrieved 5 June 2017 a b c d e Glossary of Navy Terms Usna parents org Retrieved 10 October 2011 a b NAVspeak Glossary Translations of Navy Slang for Parents of Midshipmen attending the US Naval Academy Usna org Archived from the original on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 10 October 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Hernandez Nelson 16 May 2008 Plebes Rise To Occasion As Tradition Carries On The Washington Post Fleming B 2011 Annapolis Autumn Life Death And Literature at the U S Naval Academy New York New Press pp 55 56 Hopwood RA The Laws of the Navy Department of the Navy Naval Historical Center Archived from the original on 3 May 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link United States Naval Academy Lucky Bag Yearbook Annapolis MD Class of 1974 Page 707 E yearbook com 10 July 1973 Beach 1986 p 387 a b Beach 1986 p 388 Shipmate Magazine U S Naval Academy Alumni Association and Foundation Retrieved 2 June 2017 Chow Jermyn 31 May 2012 Singaporean is first foreigner to be tops at US naval academy The Straits Times Singapore Press Holdings Archived from the original on 4 July 2012 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Bylaws of The United States Naval Academy Alumni Association Inc Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Bibliography Edit1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica Beach Captain Edward L 1986 The United States Navy Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 03 044711 9 Conrad James Lee 2003 Rebel Reefers The Organization and Midshipmen of the Confederate States Naval Academy Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81237 1 Gelfand H Michael 2006 Sea Change at Annapolis The United States Naval Academy 1949 2000 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 7747 0 Poyer David September 2018 Stealing from Neptune Shipmate Vol 81 no 6 pp 13 16 Archived from the original on 11 September 2018 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Naval Academy Wikiquote has quotations related to United States Naval Academy Official website Official athletics website Coordinates 38 58 58 N 76 29 06 W 38 9828 N 76 4851 W 38 9828 76 4851 Retrieved 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