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United States Naval Academy
File:Navyacademylogo.JPG
MottoEx Scientia Tridens (From Knowledge, Seapower)
TypeFederal military academy
Established1845 October 10
SuperintendentVADM Rodney Rempt, USN
Undergraduates4,400
Location, ,
CampusNaval base, 338 acres
AthleticsExtensive varsity and intramural program
MascotBill the Goat
Websitewww.usna.edu

The United States Naval Academy (USNA) is an institution for the undergraduate education of officers of the United States Navy and Marine Corps and is located in Annapolis, Maryland near Washington D.C. The Academy is often referred to simply as "Annapolis" although naval officers normally refer to it in conversation as "the Academy," "the Yard," or "the Boat School." Sports media refer to the Academy as Navy, and this usage is officially endorsed. ROTC graduates, Officer Candidate School graduates as well as cadets from the Air Force Academy, Coast Guard Academy, and the U.S. Military Academy (West Point), USNA's traditional rivals, often refer to the Naval Academy as "Canoe U" and "Shipwreck Tech." The U.S. Naval Academy was established October 10, 1845.

The Academy's motto is ex scientia tridens, which is Latin for "from knowledge, seapower". The Academy also supports the Navy core values of Honor, Courage, and Commitment, in addition the general idea of "excellence without arrogance."

Description

The USNA's campus is located in Annapolis, Maryland, on the banks of the Severn River and the Chesapeake Bay.

Students at the Naval Academy are referred to by their military rank (midshipman). Upon graduation, most Naval Academy Midshipmen are commissioned as Ensigns in the U.S. Navy or Second Lieutenants in the Marine Corps and must serve a minimum of five years after their commissioning. Foreign midshipmen are commissioned into the armed forces of their native countries. Also, since 1959, midshipmen have been able to "cross-commission," or request a commission in the Army, Air Force or Coast Guard, provided they meet that service's eligibility standards. Every year, a small number of graduates does this, usually in a one-for-one "trade" with a similarly inclined cadet at one of the other service academies.

Midshipmen who resign or are expelled from the academy in their first two years incur no military service obligation. Those who are separated - voluntarily or involuntarily - after that time are required to serve on active duty in an enlisted status, usually for a period of between two and four years.

There is no graduate school directly associated with the Naval Academy. Instead, the Navy operates the Naval Postgraduate School and the Naval War College separately. The Naval Academy Preparatory School is the official prep school for the Navy and Coast Guard Academies.

Mission

The mission of the United States Naval Academy is to develop midshipmen morally, mentally, and physically, and to imbue them with the highest ideals of duty, honor, and loyalty in order to provide graduates who are dedicated to a career of naval service and have potential for future development in mind and character to assume the highest responsibilities of command, citizenship, and government.

Campus ("The Yard")

Plebes (first year students) marching in front of Bancroft Hall
US Naval Academy campus
Interior of the Naval Academy chapel

It has grown from a 40,000 m² (10-acre) Army post named Fort Severn in 1845 to a 1.37 km² (338-acre) campus in the 21st century. (By comparison, the United States Air Force Academy is 18,000 acres and United States Military Academy is 16,000 acres.) Its principal buildings are:

  • Nimitz Library (housing the departments of Language Studies, Economics and Political Science, plus the library collection itself).
  • Rickover Hall (housing the departments of Mechanical Engineering, Naval Ocean Engineering, Aeronautical and Aerospace Engineering).
  • Maury Hall (housing the departments of Weapons and Systems Engineering plus Electrical Engineering).
  • Michelson Hall (housing the departments of Computer Science and Chemistry).
  • Chauvenet Hall (housing the departments of Mathematics, Physics and Oceanography).
  • Sampson Hall (housing the departments of English and History).
  • Luce Hall (housing the departments of Professional Development and Leadership, Ethics, and Law).
  • Mahan Hall (containing a theater along with the old library in the Hart Room, which has now been converted into a lounge and meeting room).
  • The chapel (also, beneath it, is the crypt of John Paul Jones).
  • Alumni Hall (capable of holding the entire Brigade of Midshipmen and hosting various sporting events, such as basketball).
  • Bancroft Hall (the midshipmen's quarters and the world's largest dormitory).
  • Dahlgren Hall (containing an ice hockey rink and a restaurant area).
  • Lejeune Hall (built in 1982 - home to an Olympic class swimming pool, a mat room for wrestling and hand-to-hand martial arts and the Athletic Hall of Fame).
  • MacDonough Hall (holds a full scale gymnastics area and two boxing rings as well as alternate swimming pools).
  • The Officers' and Faculty Club and officers' quarters spread around the Yard.


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 current Superintendent is Vice Admiral Rodney P. Rempt.

The Commandant of Midshipmen is currently Capt. Bruce E. Grooms, USN, who replaced then Capt. Charles J. Leidig in June 2005. The Deputy Commandant of Midshipmen is Capt. Dennis Sinnett, USN. The Command Master Chief of the United States Naval Academy is CNOCM(SW) Bernard B. Quibilan.

Faculty

The faculty is roughly evenly divided between civilian professors and military instructors. The civilian professors nearly all have a Ph.D. and can be awarded tenure, usually upon promotion from Assistant Professor to Associate Professor. Very few of the military instructors have a Ph.D. but nearly all have a Master's degree. Most of them are assigned to the Academy for only two or three years.

Permanent Military Professors (PMP)

A small number of military instructors are designated as Permanent Military Professors (PMP); all of whom have Ph.D.'s. The PMPs remain at the Academy until statutory retirement. Most of them 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. Additionally, there are Adjunct Professors, hired to fill temporary shortages in various disciplines. The Adjunct Professors are not eligible for tenure.

Moral education

Moral and ethical development is a fundamental element of all aspects of the Naval Academy experience. As future officers in the Navy or Marine Corps, midshipmen will someday be responsible for the priceless lives of many men and women and multi-million dollar equipment. From Plebe Summer through graduation, the Naval Academy's Officer Development Program is a four-year integrated continuum that focuses on the attributes of integrity, honor, and mutual respect. One of the goals of this program is to develop midshipmen who possess a clearer sense of their own moral beliefs and the ability to articulate them. Honor is emphasized through the Honor Concept of the Brigade of Midshipmen.

These Naval Academy "words to live by" are based on the moral values of respect for human dignity, respect for honesty and respect for the property of others. Brigade Honor Committees composed of elected upper-class midshipmen are responsible for the education and training of the Honor Concept. Midshipmen found in violation of the Honor Concept by their peers will be separated from the Naval Academy.

Midshipmen activities

Teamwork: Fourth Class Midshipmen lock arms and use ropes made from uniform items as they brace themselves climbing the Herndon Monument

The Naval Academy's varsity sports teams have no official name, but are usually 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. The sports teams' mascot is a goat named "Bill."

The Midshipmen participate in the NCAA's Division I-A as an independent (i.e., not a member of any conference) in football and in the Patriot League in many other sports. The central sporting event of the year is the Army-Navy Game, considered by many to be the most classic collegiate sports rivalry ever. The three major service academies (Navy, Air Force and Army) compete for the Commander in Chief's Trophy, awarded to the academy that beats the other two in football that year (or retained by the previous winner in the event of a three-way tie).

In 1926, Navy's football team won the U.S. national championship. The Navy lacrosse team has won 17 National Championships and was Runner-Up in 2004. The Navy men's basketball team, lead by David Robinson, finished the 1985-86 season ranked 8th in the nation; Robinson himself was the consensus best all-around American college player at the time.

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. A four-year letterman whose team beat Army each year would wear a sweater with one "N" and four gold stars. (Eight or even more stars are theoretically possible for multiple-sports participants.)

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 "special" non-athletic clubs and activities such as YP squadron (a professional boating club) or Drum and Bugle Corps.

Midshipmen also have the opportunity to participate in a broad range of extracurricular activities including musical performance groups (Drum & Bugle Corps, Men's Glee Club, Women's Glee Club, Gospel Choir, an annual musical, and even a bagpipe band, the Pipes & Drums), religious organizations, academic honor societies, Campus Girl Scouts, the National Eagle Scout Association, a radio station, Navy and Marine Corps professional activities (diving, flying, seamanship, and the Semper Fidelis Society for future Marines), and a broad range of non-NCAA club sports including rugby, hockey, and karate. Fencing, once one of the most successful sports at the Academy before being disbanded in the early 1990s, has been gaining popularity and success recently as a competitive club.

There is even an unofficial (but previous National Champion) croquet team. Legend has it that in the early 1980s, a Mid and 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 the sport of croquet. Since then, thousands attend the annual croquet match between St. John's College and the 28th Company[1] of the Brigade of Midshipmen (originally the 34th Company before the Brigade was reduced to 30 companies). In April of 2006, Navy lost the match against the St. John's team. As of 2006,[2] the Midshipmen had a record of 5 wins and 19 losses to the St John's team.

The Brigade once published a humor magazine called the Log, but this activity was discontinued in 2001. Apparently, the proper balance between the Navy's moral and ethical standards and the Brigade of Midshipmen's off-color humor could not be found, particularly in the wake of the Tailhook scandal of the 1990s. Among the Log's usual features were the notorious "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 (The latter 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). The Log was once famously shown in Playboy Magazine for its parody of the famous periodical, called "Playmid". Playmid was an issue of The Log in 1989. The Playmid issue was considered too controversial and ordered destroyed by Rear Admiral Virgil Hill, the Academy Superintendent at the time, although a few copies survived, including the one which Playboy later showed. Earlier Log attempts to parody Playboy were successful, with the 18 April 1969 version as the most famous; some sections of this issue can be seen online at an alumni website.

The Academy also plays host to the prestigious annual Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference (NAFAC). During this event--the country's largest undergraduate foreign affairs conference--civilian and military delegates from across the nation and around the world gather in Annapolis to discuss pressing international issues, focusing on a new, specific topic each year. Past NAFAC speakers have included President George H.W. Bush, Secretaries of State Madeleine Albright and Dr. Condoleezza Rice, and General Wesley Clark. This gathering is organized and run by a large Midshipman staff; many Midshipmen participate in the conference as moderators, presenters, and delegates as well.

History

The institution was founded as the Naval School in 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 on October 10 with 50 Midshipmen students and seven professors. 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 June 10, 1854.

The Civil War years

At the outbreak of the American Civil War the three upper classes were detached and ordered to sea.

The academy was moved to Fort Adams, Newport, Rhode Island in May 1861, but it was brought back to Annapolis in the summer of 1865.

From the Civil War to World War I

The Spanish-American War greatly increased the academy's importance and the campus was almost wholly rebuilt and much enlarged during 1899-1906. During 1869, Charles Dwight Sigsbee (1845-1923) was assigned duty at Annapololis before serving as a hydrographer in the Bureau of Navigation (1893-1897). He later became Chief Intelligence Officer of the Office of Naval Intelligence (1900-1903).

Notable Graduates

Traditional "hat toss" at the graduation ceremony at the USNA

During the latter half of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th, the Naval Academy was the primary source of U.S. Naval officers. Naval Academy alumni now represent many of the U.S. Navy's most famous names.

More American astronauts have graduated from the Naval Academy than from any other undergraduate institution in the United States, including Alan Shepard, Wally Schirra, Jim Lovell and Bruce McCandless. As of October 2006, six graduates have been nominated as Bioneer EarthSea-Keepers, a new UNEP designator for notable oceanographers.

President Jimmy Carter graduated in the class of 1948 and served as an officer on nuclear submarines.

Appointment Process

By an Act of Congress passed in 1903, two appointments as Midshipmen (as the students have been called since 1902; "naval cadets" and "cadet Midshipmen" were term used at various times in the latter half of the 19th century) 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 process is not political and applicants do not have to know their Congressman to be nominated. Congressman 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 congressman and are in addition to the USNA application.

Additional sources of appointment are open to children of career military personnel (100 per year); 170 appointments per year are for active duty Navy and Marine Corps enlisted personnel; 20 appointments per year are provided for Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps Midshipmen; 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 Naval 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.

Additionally, children of Medal of Honor recipients do not need a nomination but only need to qualify for admission.

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) as well as a complete physical exam including a separate visual acuity test to be eligible for appointment. Candidates with less than 20/20 vision, as well as a range of other injuries or illnesses, must apply for a medical waiver. The physical aptitude test is most often administered by a high school physical education teacher or sports team coach.

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 Britain and France, typically come as shorter term exchange students from their national naval colleges or academies.) For the class of 2009, 11 international students were admitted from 10 different countries (Guyana [2], Honduras, Ireland, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand).

Curricula

Congress authorized the Naval Academy to begin awarding Bachelor of Science degrees in 1933. The Academy later replaced a fixed curriculum taken by all midshipmen with the present core curriculum plus 21 major fields of study, a wide variety of elective courses and advanced study and research opportunities. Currently, all 21 majors are:[3]

  • Aerospace Engineering
  • Arabic
  • Chemistry
  • Chinese
  • Computer Science
  • Economics
  • Electrical Engineering
  • English
  • General Engineering
  • General Science
  • History
  • Information Technology
  • Mathematics
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Naval Architecture
  • Ocean Engineering
  • Oceanography
  • Physics
  • Political Science
  • Quantitative Economics
  • Systems Engineering

Small Satellite Program

The United States Naval Academy (USNA) Small Satellite Program (SSP)[4] was founded in 1999 to actively pursue flight opportunities for miniature satellites designed, constructed, tested, and commanded or controlled by Midshipmen. The Naval Academy's aerospace laboratory facilities are some of the most advanced and extensive in the country.[5] These facilities include structures labs, propulsion and rotor labs, simulation labs, wind tunnels with flow velocities ranging from subsonic to supersonic, computer labs, and the Satellite Ground Station.[6] The SSP provides funds for component purchase and construction, travel in support of testing and integration, coordination with DoD or National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) laboratories or with universities for collaborative projects, and guides Midshipmen through the Department of Defense (DoD) Space Experiments Review Board (SERB) flight selection process.

The satellite development process is a multi-semester effort requiring the contributions of Midshipmen from several consecutive graduating classes. First Class Midshipmen (seniors) in EA470 Spacecraft Design initiate the process in the spring semester of their First Class year with identification of the mission and determination of requirements followed by development of the conceptual design. Students in subsequent classes take the satellite through feasibility study, final design, construction, testing, and launch platform integration. Each Spring, First Class Midshipmen in the design class reinitiate the process with a new satellite concept so that new projects are germinating to take the place of those that are coming to completion and awaiting launch.

The scope of the projects supprted by SSP is limited by the resources of the USNA Department of Aerospace Engineering. The astronautics cadre of the Department consists of five individuals: one full professor (now serving as Department Chair), one permanent military professor, two full-time visiting professors and one half-time visitng professor. These five are assisted by two staff members assigned to the USNA Satellite Ground Station (SGS): one senior engineer and one senior technician. The Midshipmen participating in SSP-sponsored projects are predominantly drawn from First Class (senior) majors in aerospace engineering who have chosen to concentrate on astronautics. This number fluctuates from year to year, current enrollment is 14 for the class of 2006. Financial resources are also thin. Projects are initiated with seed money from a $50K/year grant to the USNA Foundation from The Boeing Co., or from internal USNA funds. Additional funds are occasionally available for specific projects from collaborating federal agencies or sponsors.

Cognizant of these constraints, the SSP has consciously and deliberately entered the spaceflight arena in an incremental manner. USNA-0 was obtained as a complete and tested spacecraft from an experienced university small satellite producer. USNA-1 was designed and built in-house, but with a build-it-simple-and-rugged philosophy. Onboard systems were limited: communications and electrical power only. Missions were sharply defined: the communications system itself was the primary mission, and the secondary mission (an onboard Global Positioning System receiver) needed only power and communications support that both meshed well with the PCSat design. Commercial off-theshelf parts were chosen for ruggedness, simplicity and low cost rather than spaceflight heritage. Pre-flight testing was limited to verification of functionality after vibration and thermal/vacuum environment testing. USNA-2 and USNA-3 are repetitions of the proven PCSat communications system design. USNA-4 is a new satellite design, larger and more complicated than PCSat, but still limited in scope and dedicated to experiments of moderate interest. The project proposed here offers a unique opportunity for SSP to participate fully in cutting-edge science, despite its limited financial and personnel resources.

Currently under-development are the first generation MidSTAR I (USNA) and second generation MidSTAR II (USNA) satellites which stemmed from the USNA MidSTAR Program. Midstar I is in the final stages of preparation for an October 2006 launch.

Women at the Naval Academy

File:WendyLawrenceT38.jpg
Astronaut Wendy B. Lawrence, Class of 1981

The Naval Academy first accepted women as Midshipmen in 1976, when Congress authorized the admission of women to all of the service academies. Women compose about 19 percent [7]. 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 compose about 17 percent of each graduating class.[citation needed]

Following the 2003 US 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 August 25, 2005 showed that during 2004 50% of the women at Annapolis reported instances of sexual harassment while 99 incidents of sexual assault were reported [1]. There had been an earlier incident in 1990 which involved male midshipmen chaining a female midshipman to a urinal after she threw a snowball after them and then taking pictures of her [2].

Academy Superintendent, Vice Admiral Rodney Rempt, USN, 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.”

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.[citation needed] 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.[citation needed]

As of late 2006, Webb is running for the U.S. Senate from Virginia. His opponent, George Allen, has raised the 1979 article as a campaign issue, depicting Webb as being opposed to women in military service. Webb's response read in part, "I am completely comfortable with the roles of women in today's military. [...] To the extent that my writings subjected women at the Academy or the active armed forces to undue hardship, I remain profoundly sorry."[citation needed] In a political advertisement for George Felix Allen five female graduates of the United States Naval Academy said the article helped foster an air of hostility and harassment towards females within the academy.

Items of Interest at the Academy

  • Japanese Bell. This was brought back to the United States by Commodore Matthew Perry following his famous mission to Japan in 1851. 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 Japanese people in the 1980s.
  • 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, or spiritual help for examinations. 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 leprachaun (before Saint Patrick's Day) and a naval officer (during Commissioning Week).
  • Herndon Monument. Every year as part of the year end festivities, this monument is covered with lard and "Plebes" (freshmen or Fourth Class Midshipmen) attempt to climb the monument, remove a "dixie cup" (the headwear of a plebe) and put a hat ("cover") on top. (See the photo at the top of this page...) This symbolizes the successful completion of their first year. Legend also has it that the midshipman who places the sailors cap upon the monument will be the first member of the class to reach the rank of Admiral. 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 Georgia on September 12, 1857. Herndon had followed the long time custom of the sea that a ship's captain is the last person to depart his ship in peril. It was erected in its current location on June 16, 1860 and has never been moved even though the Academy was completely rebuilt between 1899 and 1908.
  • Naval Academy Chapel The historic Chapel, at the center of the campus, across from Herndon Monument, has a high dome visible throughout Annapolis.[8] The Chapel was featured on a postal service stamp in 1995.[9]
  • Commodore Uriah P. Levy Center and Jewish Chapel,[10] primarily funded with private donations, was dedicated on September 23, 2005. The Chapel is named after Commodore Uriah P. Levy and houses a Jewish chapel, the honor board, ethics, character learning center, officer development spaces, a social director, and academic boards. The architecture features Jerusalem stone and the exterior of the building is consistent with the existing architecure of nearby Bancroft Hall.<GO NAVY, BEAT ARMY!>

Reference

Notes