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*[[General]] [[Gordon R. Sullivan]] — [[Chief of Staff of the United States Army|Army Chief of Staff]] from [[1991]] to [[1995]]
*[[General]] [[Gordon R. Sullivan]] — [[Chief of Staff of the United States Army|Army Chief of Staff]] from [[1991]] to [[1995]]
*[[Pierson Mapes]] — President of [[NBC]] from [[1982]] to [[1994]]
*[[Pierson Mapes]] — President of [[NBC]] from [[1982]] to [[1994]]
* Brigadier General Robert McDermott - Former CEO of United Services Automobile Association (USAA) attended Norwich University from 1937 to 1939 before receiving an appointment to the United States Military Academy (USMA--West Point).
*[[Brigadier General]] Robert McDermott - Former CEO of United Services Automobile Association (USAA) attended Norwich University from 1937 to 1939 before receiving an appointment to the United States Military Academy (USMA--West Point).


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 17:35, 16 March 2007

Norwich University
File:Small NU Logo- Black and White.JPG
MottoI Will Try
TypePrivate Military College
Established1819
PresidentDr. Richard W. Schneider, RADM USCGR (Ret.)
Academic staff
112
Undergraduates1,952
Postgraduates1,000
Location, ,
CampusRural,
90 acres (36 hectares)
ROTCAir Force, Army, and Navy
NicknameCadets (NCAA Division III)
Websitehttp://www.norwich.edu

Norwich University (NU) is a private university located in Northfield, Vermont. It is home to both a Corps of Cadets (NUCC) and a smaller traditional student population. The University was originally founded in 1819 at Norwich, Vermont as the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy. It is the oldest private military college in the United States and recognized by the Department of Defense as the "Birthplace of ROTC."

History

Partridge and his academy

The University was founded in 1819 at Norwich by military educator Captain Alden B. Partridge. Captain Partridge believed in the "American System of Education," a liberal curriculum with instruction in civil engineering and military science centered around the concept of the "Citizen Soldier." After leaving West Point because of congressional disapproval of his system, he returned to his native state of Vermont to create the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy. Captain Partridge's goal in founding "the Academy" was to prevent the rise of what he saw as the greatest threat to the security of the young republic: a professional officer class. He believed that a well-trained militia was a dire necessity and developed the American system around that idea. His academy became the inspiration for a number of military colleges throughout the nation, including both the Virginia Military Institute and The Citadel, and later the land grant colleges created through the Morrill Act of 1862.[1]

Fire and hardship: Norwich in the nineteenth century

In 1825 the academy moved to Middletown, Connecticut to provide better naval training to the school's growing corps of cadets. However, in 1829, the state of Connecticut declined to grant Captain Partridge a charter and he moved the school back to Norwich. It wasn't until 1834 that Vermont granted a charter and recognized the institution as "Norwich University." During the 1856 academic year, the first chapter of the Theta Chi Fraternity was founded. After a catastrophic fire in 1866 which devastated the entire campus, the town of Northfield welcomed the struggling school. The Civil War, the fire, and the uncertainty regarding the continuation of the University seriously lowered the attendance, and the school opened in the Fall of 1866 with only nineteen students. The 1870s and '80s saw many financially turbulent times for the institution and the renaming of the school to Lewis College in 1880. In 1881 the student body was reduced to only a dozen men. Later, by 1884, the Vermont Legislature had the name of the school changed back to Norwich. In 1898 the University was designated as the Military College of the State of Vermont.

War and expansion: Norwich in the twentieth century

As part of the Vermont National Guard, the school's Corps of Cadets was mobilized as a squadron of cavalry in the First Vermont Regiment to assist in General John J. Pershing's Mexican Expedition. This greatly disrupted the academic year and in 1916 the War Department designated Norwich as the first site for a Senior ROTC cavalry unit; also in 1916, the first African-American, Harold 'Doc' Martin (NU '20), matriculated. Classes graduated early for both the First and Second World Wars and many Norwich-made officers saw service in all theaters of both conflicts. Professional education offered at Norwich also changed and adapted with the advance of technology. Military flight training began in 1939 and from 1946 to 1947, horse cavalry was completely phased out in favor of armored cavalry.

Graduates returning from European and Pacific fields of battle found a university very different from the one they had left behind. From the late 1940s to the 1960s, Norwich was greatly expanded and added a number of new opportunities. In 1947, the Army Department created a new program uniquely suited to Vermont's harsh climate: a mountain and cold weather warfare unit. Air Force and Navy ROTC programs were established in 1972 and 1984 respectively. The 1972 merger and 1993 integration with Vermont College added two groups to "the Hill," civilian students and women. (Norwich later sold its Vermont College campus and non-traditional degree programs to the Union Institute and University in 2001[2].) By 1974 women were permitted to join the Corps of Cadets (the same year that women were admitted to the Merchant Marine Academy, and a full two years before the other federal service academies).

Looking to the Bicentennial and beyond: Norwich in the twenty-first century

The ending of one century and birth of a new finds Norwich with a robust Corps of Cadets and a thriving traditional student body. Norwich maintains its position as a center of learning for civil service with online graduate programs, the 5 year Master of Architecture program and an NSA sponsored Center of Academic Excellence in Information Assurance.

NU 2019

As the University moves closer to the bicentennial of the school's founding, the NU2019 plan was launched in 2005. Under the guidance of the Alumni Association, the Board of Trustees and the Office of the President, the University has budgeted millions of dollars to radically change and improve the campus. Proposed additions are to include:

  • Traditional Student housing quad separate from the Corps housing on the Upper Parade Ground
  • Harmon Hall dining facility rebuilt into a Campus Service Center
  • A refurbishment of Webb and Ainsworth Halls and a new Humanities & Social Science quad
  • Improved transportation network and general campus beautification
  • Increasing enrollment by five-hundred undergraduate students

Students and organization

The University has 1,950 undergraduate students, 112 full-time faculty (approx. 80% hold a doctorate), and a fluctuating number of adjunct professors. The student/faculty ratio is 14:1 and the male/female ratio is 25:1. The freshman retention rate is 80%. The student body is comprised of students from over 40 different states and 20 countries.

Norwich University has two very different on-campus resident programs: the Corps of Cadets and the traditional student body.

Corps

The Corps side is structured as a regiment commanded by a Cadet Colonel (C/COL) with four battalions each commanded by a Cadet Lieutenant Colonel (C/LTC). Normally, each battalion consists of three companies commanded by a Cadet Captain (C/CPT) which are made of two platoons (1st platoon is the upperclassmen and 2nd platoon the freshmen, or "Rooks"). A Regimental Headquarters Company exists outside of the four battalions, commanded by a Cadet Major (C/MAJ).[citation needed]

1st Battalion 2nd Battalion 3rd Battalion Provisional Battalion
Alpha Delta Golf Regimental Band Company
Bravo Echo Hotel Drill Team
Charlie Foxtrot India Cavalry Troop
Kilo Norwich Independent Battery

Traditional

The Resident Life Department oversees the "civilian" side. Floors in the Residence Halls are under the supervision of a Resident Advisor (RA). The Residence Halls are in turn supervised by Assistant Resident Coordinators (ARC) who report to the Resident Coordinator (RC) and the Director (DoRL) and Assistant Director (ADoRL) of Resident Life. Norwich is unique in that students hold positions that at many other colleges and universities are reserved for professional staff.

Residence Halls and Cadet Barracks

  • Hawkins Hall — Named for General Hawkins, a colonel in the Civil War and later New York State Congressman. Built in 1940 and renovated in 1994
  • Dodge Hall — Named for Grenville M. Dodge, an 1851 graduate, only all-traditional residence hall on the Upper Parade Ground. Originally named Cabot Hall, it was built in 1937 and renovated in 1998
  • Patterson Hall — Named for a 1909 graduate in Civil Engineering and a trustee. Built in 1958
  • Goodyear Hall — Named for Major General A. Conger Goodyear, a trustee and founder of the Museum of Modern Art. Built in 1955 and renovated in 1999
  • Wilson Hall — Named for a Judge and Governor of Vermont, Stanley Calef Wilson.
  • Alumni Hall — First housing-only hall at the Northfield campus, named for the significant alumnus contributions that allowed for its construction. Built in 1905 and renovated in 2005
  • Ransom Hall — Named after Colonel Truman B. Ransom, the second president of the University who was killed leading the assault on Chapultepec during the Mexican-American War. Built in 1957
  • Gerard Hall — Named after industrialist and philanthropist Jacques A. Gerard who became a trustee in 1959. Built in 1962
  • Crawford Hall — Named after David C. Crawford, a 1952 graduate, for whom the School of Engineering is also named, it is the only residence hall not on the Upper Parade Ground and is reserved for traditional students. Built in 1988

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ Reynolds, Terry. "The Education of Engineers in America Before the Morrill Act of 1862." History of Education Quarterly, Vol 32, No 4, Winter 1992.
  2. ^ Nat Frothingham, "Vermont College and Union: One Plus One Equals Three," The Montpelier Bridge, May 2001. http://www.mtbytes.com/mpbridge/article.cfm?articleid=264