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Transcript of un ted states naval academy - Forgotten Books
A N N U A L REGIST ER
OF T HE
UN TED STATES NAVAL ACADEMYA N N APOL IS, M D .
OC TOBER I 1 924
EIGHTIETH ACADEMIC YEAR
WA SHINGTON
GOV ERNM ENT PRINTING OFFIC E
I924
A D D ITION A L C OPIE S
OF THIS PU B LICA TION M A Y B E PROC U RED FROMTHE SU PERIN TEN D ENT OF D OCU M ENTS
GOV ERNM ENT PRINTING OFFICEWASHINGTON,D . 0.
A T
20 C E N TS PE R C OPY
C ON T E N T S
M ISSION , OF N AV AL ACADEMYHISTORICAL SKETC HSUPERINTENDENTSB OARD OF V ISITORSACADEMIC CALENDARCALENDAR, 1 924—2 5OFFICERS AND CIV ILIAN INSTRUCTORS ATTACHED T o THE U NITED STA TESN AV AL - 1
ACADE MI C B OARDPRACTICE C RU IS E ,
'
S U M M E R OF 1 924M ERIT R OLLS FOR 1 92 3—24
M IDSHIPMEN OF THE FOURTH CLASS AT THE B EGINNING OF ACADEMICY EAR 1 924—2 5 1 26
N U M E R IC AD S U M BAA RY 1 33APPOINTMENTS; D EATHS, RE SIGN A T IC N S , ETC 1 85
COURSE OF INSTRUCTION ~1 37
ASSIGNMEN T OF T IME, 1 924—25 1 5 1
T AB LE OF C OEFFICIENTS, 1 924—2 5PROGRAM OF -
A
LE OF RECITATIONON S CHEDULE FOR M IDSHIPMEN FOR FIRST T E RM, ACADEMIC
Y EAR 1 924ARRANGEMENT OF: COURSE SINSTRUCTION SCHEDULE FOR SECON D T E RM,ACADEMIC Y EAR 1 923—24SUMME R SCHEDULE, 1 924
OF COURSE OF INSTRUCTIONM EDAL S, E TC ., PRESE NTE D,1 92 3—24
T HE M IS S ION
T o mould the -material received into educated gentlemen,
thoroughly indoctrinated with honor,uprightness and truth,
with practical rather than academic m inds, with thorough
loyalty to country,with a ground-work of educa tional funda
mentals upon which experience aflOat may build the’
finished
naval officer, capable of upholding,'
whene'
ver'
a
may be necessary, the honor of the U nited S tat
giving due consideration'
that healthy minds in h
are necessities for the fulfillment of the individ
of the graduates ; and that fullest efficiency under
can only be attained i f, through just and humane yet
discipline, the graduates carry into the S ervice respect and
admiration for this A cademy .
HEN RY B . WIL S ON ,RearA dmiral,-U . 5 . Navy,
S uperintendent .
THE UN IT ED : STAT ES N AV A L A C ADEM Y"
-iT he U nited States'
N aval'
A cademy was founded in 1 845 by the Hon . GeorgeBancroft, Secretary Of the Navy, in the
zad
'
minist’
ration o f President James K .
Polk . It was formally Jopened !October 1 0'
Of that year under the name of theN aval School,with C ommanderFranklin Buchanan as superintendent . It was
placed at A nnapolis,M d.,on th'
él and occupied -by Fort Severn,which was givenup for the purposeby the War
‘
D epartm'
ent by the Hon . William L . Marcy,‘
then
Secretary Of War . The course wasffixed‘
at of which only the first
year and the last wei'ef‘
spent -at the school, the intervening three years being
passed at sea.
“
This arrangement -was not strictly adhered to, the exigencies ofthe servicemaking itnecessary, in many
' cases, to Shorten the period Of study .
In January, 1 846, four:months after the opening of the school, the students consisted of 36midshipmen Of the date Of 1 840,who were preparing for the examination for promotion; I3
~Of the date ”
Of who were to remain until drafted forservice at sea; and 7 actingmidshipm'
en appointed after September of the previons year . 4 The midshipmen
‘
of the date of 1 840 were the first to be graduated,finishing their limited “course in July, 1 846, and they were followed in order by
the subsequent “dates until the reorganization Of the school in 1 850 .
In September,= 1 849,the’
follOwing board was appointed‘
to revise the plan and
the regiIlationS‘
Of the Naval School
C ommander William ’
B . Shubrick .
C ommander Franklin Buchanan.
C ommander Samuel F . D uPOnt .
C ommander George P . U pshur .
Surg . W . S . W . Ruschenberger.
Prof . William C hauvenet .
C apt . Henry Brewerton, U nited States A rmy .
The plan reported by the board was approved and went into operation July 1 ,1 850. The new organization provided for a course of seven years,the first two andthe last two at the school and the three intermediate years at sea The schoolwas
placed U nder the supervision of the Bureau Of Ordnance and Hydrograph‘
y and its
name was '
changed to the U nited States Naval A cademy . The corps of professors
was enlarged, the coursewas extended, and the system of separate departmentswith executive heads was fully adopted . Itwas provided that a Board Of Visitorsshouldmake an annual inspection Of the academy and report upon its condition tothe Secretary of the Navy .
‘
A suitable vessel was attached to the academy as a
practice'
ship and the annual practice cruises were begun .
A fter the system had been in operation a year new changes were proposed andthe recommendations of the academic board on the subject were referred to theboard of
“
examiners for theyear 1 85 1 , composed of the following-named O fficers :C ommodoreD avid '
C onner.
C apt . Samuel L . Breese .
C ommander C . K . Stribling.
C ommander A . Bigelow .
C ommander Franklin Buchanan .
Lieut . Thomas T . C raven -2
The change recommended bytheboard of examiners and adopted by the department consisted mainly in leaving out the requirement of three years of sea service
HISTORICAL SKETCH
in themiddle of the course,thusmaking the four years of studypractice cruise supplied the place of the omitted sea service andtunities for training . The change went into operation intogetherwith other improvements recommended by theboard .
this class completed the course in threethe remainder of the class followed in 1
“InMay, 1 861 ,on the outbreak Of the
R . I . The three upper classes were det
ingacting midshipman were quartered in the“
A tlantic H
friga'
tes “ C onstitution and S antee. In the summer of 1brought back to A nnapolis,where it has Since remained.
.When the Bureau of Navigation was established,July 5,
placed under its Supervision; March 1 , 1 867, it was place
cial . management still being conducted through the bureau .
M arch, 1 869,this ofl‘icial Connection with the bureau ceased,but
the general order of the Navy Department issued June 2 5, 1 889 .
The term Of the academic course was changed by law,March 3,
to six years . The change took effect with the class that enteredsummer.In 1 866 a class of acting third assistant engineers was Crdered to
instruction Th
chemistry,mechanics, and practical exercisesmachine shop . This class was graduated m Jengineerswho had entered the academy in 1 86in October, 1 871 ,a new class Of cadet engineers
a two years’ course,somewhat more extended than thatwas graduated in 1 873 . In 1 872 and 1 873 new classes w
which left the academy in 1 874 and the second in 1 875 .
approved February 24, 1 874,,
the course of instruction“
made four .years instead Of two; the new -provision was first applied to the class
entering the academy in the year 1 874 . This class was graduated in J une, 1 878 .
A n act of C ongress approved June 2 3, 1 874,provides as follows : A l: a
B e it enacted by the S enate and House of Representatives of the U nited S tatesleiAmerica in. Congress assembled,That In all cases when it Shall come to theaknowledge of the Superintendent of the,
Naval A cademy,at Annapolisgthat any cadetmidshipman.Or cadet engineer has been guilty of the Offense commonly M Wn as
hazing; it shall be «the duty of said superintendent to, order a coaramartial,composed Of not less than three commissioned officers, who shall minutelyexamine into all the facts and circumstances of the case and make a i ndtngathereon; and any cadet midshipman or cadet engineer found guilty Of said Ofiense bySaid court shall, upon recommendation of said court, be dismissed, and suchfinding,when approved by said superintendent, shall be final; and the cadet so
dismissed from said Naval A cademy shall be foreVer i neligible to reappointmentto said Naval A cademy .
By an act Of C ongress approved A ugust it was provided that from thatdate “ there shall be no appointments Of cadet midshipmen or cadet engineers atthe Naval A cademy,but in lieu thereof naval cadets Shall be appointed from eachcongressional district and at large,as now provided by law for cadet midshipmen,and ,all theAundergraduates at the N aval A cademys hall hereafter be designatedand called 1
‘naval cadets,’and from those who successfully c
'
omplete the six years ’
course appointments shall hereafter be made as it is necessary to fill vacancies in
HISTORICAL SKETCH
the lower grades of the Line and Engineer C orps of the Navy and of .the -Marine
C orps : A nd provided further,That 1 1 0' greater number
’
Of appointments into thesegrades shall r be made each year than shall equal the number Of vacancies which
has occurred in the same grades during the preceding year; such appointments tobemade from the graduates of the year,at the conclusion of their six years
’ course,in order Of merit,
'
as determined by the academic board of . the Naval A cademy;the assignment of the various corps to «be made by the Secretary of the -Navy,upon the recommendation of the academic board . But nothing herein contained
shall reduce the number of appointments from such graduates Abelow ten in each
year, nor deprive of such appointment any graduate who may complete the six
years’ course during the year eighteen hundred and eighty-two. And if there be
a surplus of graduates, those who do not receive such appointment shall begiven a
‘
certificate of graduation,an honorable discharge,and one year’s sea pay,
as now provided by law for cadet midshipmen ; and so much Of section fifteen
hundred and twenty-one of the Revised Statutes as is inconsistent herewith is
hereby repealed .
“That any cadet whose position in his class entitles him to be retained in theservice may, upon his own application, be honorably discharged at the end offour years’ course at the Naval A cademy,with a proper certificate of graduation .
”
In 1 886 a special course of instruction“ in physiologyand hygiene was estab
lished, in accordance wi th an act of C ongress approved May 20 of that year .
The act of C ongress approved March 2, 1 889, provides that“ the academic
board Of the Naval A cademy shall on'
or before the thirtieth day of Septemberin each year separate the first class of naval cadets thencommencing their fourthyear into two divisions
;as they may have Shown special aptitude for the duties
of the respective corps,in the proportion which the aggregate number Of vacanciesoccurring in the preceding fiscal year ending on the thirtieth day Of J une in the
lowest grade of commissioned officers of the Line of the Navy and Marine C orpsof the Navy shall bear to the number of vacancies to be supplied fromthe academyoccurring during the same period in the lowest grade of commissioned Officersof the Engineer C orps of the Navy ; and the cadets so assigned to
'
the Line and
Marine C orps division Of'
the first class shall thereafter pursue acorirse of study
arranged to fit them for service in the Lineof the Navy,and the cadets so assignedto the E ngineer C orps division Of the first class Shall thereafter pursue a separate
course ‘Of study arranged to fit them for service in the Engineer C orps of theNavy,and the cadets Shall thereafter,and until final graduation at the end of their sixyears
’ course, take rank by merit with those in-the same division according tothe merit marks ; and from the final graduates of the Line and Marine C orpsdivision, at the end of their six years
’ course,appointments shall be made hereafter as it shall be necessary to fill vacancies in the lowest grades of commissionedoffi cers of the Line Of the Navy and Marine C orps; and the vacancies in the
lowest grades of the commissioned officers of the Engineer C orps of theNavy Shallbe filled inlike manner by appointments fromthe final graduates of the
'
engineer
division at the end Of their six years’ course : Provided,That no greaternumber ofappointments into the said lowest grades Of commissioned Ofii cers shall be madeeach year than shall equal . the number of vacancies which shall have occurredin the same grades during the fiscal year then current; such appointments to bemade from the final graduates of the year, in the order Of merit as determinedby the academic board of the Naval A cademy, the
’
assignment to bemade bythe Secretary of the Navy upon the recommendation of the academic board
‘
at the conclusion Of the fiscal year then current; bl’
i t nothing contained herein
or in the naval appropriation act of A ugust fifth,eighteen hundred and eighty-two,shall reduce the number of appointments of final graduates at the end of theirsix years’ course -below twelve in Aeach year to the Lineof the Navy and not less
4 : HISTORICAL SKETCH
than -two shall be appointed‘
annually to the Engineer C orps of the Navy,nor l essthan one annuallyt otheh-Marine C orps ;and if the number of vacancies in the”
lowest grades aforesaid occurring-in any year shall be
_
greater than“
the numberof final graduates Of thaty ear the surplus vacancies shall be filled from the finalgraduates of the following years as they
‘
shall“
become~
available.
“ That after the ' fourth day of March, eighteen hundred and . eighty-nine,the
minim’
um'
age of admission of cadets'
to the academy Shall be fifteen years and ‘ themaximum age twenty years;In October, 1 897,a postgraduate course in naval architecture for the education
of ofii Cers for the C onstruction C orps of the N avyiwas establi shed; and a class
was formed from the’
naval cadets that had finished the four years’ course in that
year.
By an act of C ongress approved March 3, 1 899, the ofii cers constituting the
Engineer C orps of the Navy ”were transferred to the Line of the Navy,
” thereby
repealing so much of the act of C ongress approved March 2, 1 889, as relates tothe separation of naval cadets of the first class into line and engineer divisions .This same act having limited the number of constructors in the Navy to 40,the
postgraduate course in naval architecturewas discontinued .
By an act of C ongress approved June 7, 1 900,'
it was provided that
Wheneverany naval cadet shall have .finished four years of his undergraduate
course of six years the succeeding appointment may bemade from his congressional district or at large in accordance with -the existing law .
”
By an act of C ongress (approved July 1 , 1 902 , it was provided thatThe title ‘naval cadet ’ is hereby changed to imidshipman.
’
That until the year nineteen hundred and fourteen, in addition to the naval
cadets now authorized by law (the title having been changed by this act to midshipmen) , the President shall appoint five midshipmen, and there shall be appointed from the States at large, upon the recommendation of Senators, twomidshipmen for each State .
By an act of C ongress approved March 3, 1 903,it was provided that
There shall be allowed at the Naval A cademy two midshipmen for each Senator,R epresentative, and Delegate in C ongress,,
two for the District of C olumbia,and five each year at large : Provided,That the additional congressional appoint
ments authorized by this act shall be made at such time as may be determinedby the Secretary of the Navy,who shall equitably distribute the increaseamongthe several States, districts,
” and Territories, so ~that ultimately, if practicable,each Senator, R epresentative, and Delegate may recommend for appointmentduring each C ongress one midshipman : Provided further, That Members of theFifty-seventh C ongress
'
iwho will not be Members of the Fifty-eighth C ongress,and in whose districts or States appointments have not been made or vacanciesfilled in the Fifty-seventh C ongress,may immediately upon the passage of thi S
actmake the additional appointments herein provided for .The Secretary of the Navy shall,as soon as practicable after the fifth day Of
March in each year,notify in writing each’
Senator,R epresentative,and Delegatein C ongress of any vacancy which may be regarded as existing in the State,district, or Territory which he represents, and the nomination of a candidate tofill such vacancy shall be made upofi the recommendation of the Senator,Representative, or Delegate . Such recommendations shall be made by the first day
of June of that year,and if not so made the Secretary of the Navy shall fill thevacancy by the appointment of an actual . resident of the State, district, or ,
Territory in which the vacancy exists,who ‘
shall have been for at . least two yearsimmediately preceding his appointment an actual bona fide resident of the State,district,or Territory in which the vacancy exists and shall have the qualifications otherwise prescribed by law : A nd provided further, That theS uperintend
3 HISTORICAL SKETCH 5
ent of the Naval A cademy Shallmake such rules,to be'
app‘
roved hy'
the Secretary
oi the will effectually prevent -the practice of haz ing;a nd any cadet
found guilty of participating in or encouraging" or countenancing
i such practice
Shall be summarily '
expelled frOm the academy,tand shall not thereafter be reappointed to the C orps of C adets or be eligible for appointment as a commissionedofficer In the A rmy or Navy or Marine C orps until two years after the graduation of the class of which he was a member .
“That the provision of this act for the Increase of appointments ofmidshipmento the Naval A cademy shall continue ih
'
force until the thirtieth day of June,nineteen hundred and thirteen; and thereafter one midshipman,as now providedby law, shall be appointed for each Senator, Representative, and Delegate inC ongress .
“That hereafter there Shall be at the Naval“
A cademy onemidshipman fromPorto R ico,who shall be a native of said island,and whose appointment shall bemade by the President on the recommendation of the Governor of PortoR ico ;
“That after January first, nineteen hundred -and four, all candidates . for
admission to the Naval A cademy at the‘
time of their examination must bebetween the ages of sixteen and twenty years . ’
“A ll candidates for admission into the academy shall be examined according
to such regulations and at such stated times as the Secretary of the Navymayprescribe . C andidates rejected at such examination shall not have the privilegeof another examination for admission to the same class,
"unless recommended by
the board of examiners . (R'
. S .
‘ sec .
“When any candidatewho‘
has been nominated upon the recommendation of aMember Or D elegate of the House of Representatives is found,upon examination,to be physically or 'me
'
ntally disqualified for admi’
ssion, the Member or‘
D elegate
shall be notified to recommend another candidate,who shall be examined according to the provisions of the preceding section .
”(R . see.
An act of C ongress approved A pril 9, 1 906,reads as follows
AN A C T Granting authority to the Secretary of the N avy,in his discretion,to dismissmidshipmenfromthe U nited . S tates N aval Academy and regulating the procedure and punishment in trials forh az ing at the said academy
‘
B e‘
it enacted by the S enate and House of Representatives of“
the U nited S tates ofAmerica in C ongress
'
assembled,That it shall be the duty of theSuperintendent ofthe
‘
U nited States Naval ~ A cademy, whenever he shall believe the continuedpresence of any ' midshipman at the said academy to be contrary to the bestinterests of the service,to report in writing such fact,with a full statement of thefacts uponwhich are based hisreasonsfor Such belief,to theSecretary of theNavy,who,if after dueconsideration of the said report he shall deemthe superintendent
’s
said belief reasonable and well founded,Shall cause a copy of the said report'
to be
served upon the said midshipman and require the sai d midshipman to Show causein writing and within such time as the s
‘
aid ' Secretary shall deem reasonable,whyhe Should not be dismissed from the said academy;and after due Consi deration ofany cause so Shown the said Secretarymay,inhis discretion,but with the writtenapproval of the President,dismiss suchmidshipman from the said academy . And
the truth of any issue of fact so raised,except upon the record of demerit, shallbedetermined by a board of Inquiry convened by the Secretary of the Navy underthe rules and regulations for the government of the Navy .
“SEC. 2 . That so much of the acts approved June twenty-third,
“eighteenhundred and seventy-four, and March third, nineteen hundred v
' and three, asrequires the Superintendent of the U nited StatesN aval A cademy
'
to convene a
court-martial in all cases when it shall come to the kno'
wledge of the said superintendent that any midshipman has been guilty of the offense commonly knownas ‘hazing,
’ and declares . the finding of a court-martial so convened, when
2393—24T — 2
6 HISTORICAL SKE T C H
approved by the said superintendent,final,and.d irects that anymidshipman foundguilty by such courtsma
'
rtial shall be summarily dismissed from the said academy,and also all . other acts or =parts of acts inconsistent with, the present act, are
hereby repealed,aand that ‘ the offense k nown as ‘hazing ’ may hereafter be pro“
ceded against, dealt .with,. and punished as offenses against good order anddiscipline and for violation and breaches of the rules of said academy . But no
midshipman shall be dismissed for a single act of haz ing except under the pro
V isions'
of section three of this act .-“ SE C . 3 . T hat =the l
Superintendent of .the U nited States Naval -A cademy may,in his discretion,and with the approval of the Secretary of the,N avy,cause any
midshipman in the said academy to,be tried by court-martial for the offense ofhazing, as provided by the act approved June twenty-third, eighteen hundred
and seventy-four, and such court-martial,upon conviction,may sentence suchmidshipmanto any punishment authori z ed by the said act or by the act approvedMarch third, nineteen hundred and three,. or authorized for any Violation or
breach of‘
the rules of the said academy by thesaid rules, or in cases of brutalor cruel hazing,may, in
' addition\
?to d ismissal, sentence such midshipmanto imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year : Provided,That such midshipman shall not be confined in a military or naval prison or elsewhere with men
Who have been convicted of crimes or misdemeanors ; and such finding and
sentence «shall be subject to review by ‘ the convening authority"
and by the
Secretary of the Navy,a s in the cases of other courts-martial .“S E C . 4 . That‘ the offense of ‘hazing,
’ as mentioned in this act, shall consistof any unauthorized assumption of authority by One midshipman over anothermidshipman whereby the last-mentioned midshipman shall or may suffer or be
exposed to suffer any cruelty, indignity,humiliation,hardship,or oppression, orthe deprivation or abridgement of any right, privilege, or advantage to. which
he shall be legally entitled .
“ S E C . 5 . That it shall be the duty of every professor, assistant professor,academic officer,or any cadet officer or cadet petty officer, or instructor,as wellas every other offi cer stationed at the U nited States Naval A cademy,to promptlyreport to the superintendent thereof any fact which comes to his attentiontending to indicate any v iolation by a midshipman or midshipmen of any ofthe provisions of this act or any violation of the regulations of the said academy .
Any naval officer attached to the academy who shall. fail to make such report asprovided in this section '
shall be tried by court-martial for neglect of duty,and,if convicted, he
“shall be dismissed from the service . Any ‘ civilian instructor
attached to the academy. who shall fail to make such report as provided in thissection Shall be dismissed by the superintendent of the academy upon the approvalof the Secretary of the N avy .
S E C .
‘
6. That this act shall take eff ect from the date of its approval,but nomidshipman now connected with the;U nited States Naval A cademy shall, byreason of its enactment, be punished -for any offense h eretofore committedotherwise than in pursuance of
.
the sentence of a court-martial (if by existing
law such sentence would be now necessary -for such punishment) or ,punishedmore severely than is now by law allowed, for any offense heretofore committed :Provided, That any midshipman h owin said Naval A cademy may ' waive his
right to trial by court-martial under existingflaw for any offense of hazing heretofore commmitted
,and may accept punishment under. the provi si ons of section
two of this act.
By an act of C ongress June 29, 1 906, it was provided thatHereafter the Secretary of the Navy shall, as soon as possible aftert hefi rst
day of June of each year preceding the graduation of the midshipmen on thesucceeding year notify infwriting each Senator, Representative, and D elegate
HISTORICAL S KE TCH 7
in C ongress of any v acancy that will exist. at the Naval A cademy because Ofsuch graduation;o r t hat may occur for
'
other reasons, and which he shall‘
be
entitled to fill by znomination of a candidate and one or more alternates therefor .“
The nomination of a candidate'
and alternate ' or alternates to fill - said vacancy
shall be made upon the recommendation of . the? Senator, Representative, or
Delegate,if such ' recommendation is made by. the fourth day of March of theyearfollowing that in which said notice .in Writing is given,but if it isnot made bythat time the Secretary of the Navy shall fill the vacancy by appointment of anactual resident of the S tate, congressional district, or ,
Territory, as the case
may be, in which-the vacancy will exist, who shall have been fOr at least two
years immediately preceding the date of his appoi ntment an . aCtual 'and bona
fide resident of the State,congressional district,or Territory in which thevacancywill exist, and of legal qualification under the lawas now _provided . In
‘
cases
where by reasonof a vacancy in the membership “of
”
the Senate or House of
Representatives or by the death or'
declination of a candidate for admission'
to
the academy there occurs or is about to occur at the academy a vacancy'
f romany State, district, or Territory that cannot
‘
be filled by nOmination as hereinprovided,the same may be filled as soon thereafter and before the final entrance
examination for the year as the Secretary of the Navy may determine . The
candidates allowed for the District of C olumbia and all candidates appointedat large, together with alternates therefor, Shall be selected by the President
withi n the period herein prescribed for nomination of other candidates"
: Provided,
That the President mayaselect a candidate for the District of C olumbia for theyear nineteen
.
hundred and eight .N0 person Shall be admitted for instruction at the Naval A cademy at Annap
olis from any foreign country except upon authority “
of law hereafter enacted .
”
By a n act of C ongresS'
approved March 7,1 9 1 2, it was providedThat the course at the Naval A cademy shall be four years, and midshipmen
on graduation shall be commissioned ensigns : Provided, That midshipmen nowperforming two years’ service at sea in accordance “
with existing~
law shall be
commissioned forthwith as ensigns from the date of the passage of this act :A nd provided,That tt e midshipmen of the class which was graduated in nineteen hundred and nine,who haV e completed two years
’ service afloat, and who
are due for promotion,shall be commissioned ensigns to take rank with the othermembers of their classy according to their standing as determined by their finalmultiples, respectively, for the six years
’ course, from the fifth day of June,nineteen hundred and eleven,the date of rank. to which they were entitled prior
to the passage of this act : A nd provided further, T hat no back pay or allowances
shall result by reason ' of the passage of this A ct. .
The class graduating from-the Naval A cademy June, 1 9 1 2,was the first classto be. graduated as ensigns . “
By an act of C ongress approved J uly 9, 1 9 1 3, it was providedT hat after June thirtieth, ni neteen hundred and thirteen, and
'
until June
thirtieth, nineteen hundred and nineteen, there shall be allowed at the NavalA cademy two midshi pmen for each Senator,» Representative, and Delegate
‘
inC ongress,one for Porto
’
R ico,‘ two for the District of C olumbia,and ten appointed
each'
year at-large : Provided,That the midshipmen on graduation shall be commissioned ensigns in the Navy or may be assigned by the S ecretary of the Navyto fill vacancies in the lowest commissioned grades of the Marine C orps or S taffC orps of the Navy .
By an act of C ongress passed June 30, 1 9 1 4, it was provided
.
f“Hereafter, in addition to the appointments of midshipmen" to the U nited
States Naval A cademy as now prescribed by law, the Secretary of the Navy isallowed fifteen appointments annually from the enlisted men of the Navy who
8 HISTORICAL S KE T CH
are citizens of the U nited States and not more than twenty years of age on thedate of entrance to theNaval A cademy,and who Shall have served not less thanone year as enlisted men on
' the'
date of entrance : Provided,That such appoint
ments shall be made in the order of tmerit from candidates who have in competition with each other passed . themental examination now or hereafter requiredby law for entrance to the Naval A cademy,and who passed the physical examination required before entrance
”
under existing : 1aw.
”
A n act of C ongress approved February 1 5, 1 9 1 6, reads as followsB e it enacted by the S enate and House of Representatives of the U nited S tates of
America in C ongress assembled, That hereafter there shall be allowed at theU nited States N aval A cademy three midshipmen for each Senator,Representa
tive,and Delegate in’
C ongress,one for -“
Porto R ico,two for the District of C olumbia, ten appointed each year at large,a nd fifteen : appointed . annually fromenlisted men of the Navy as now authorized by
‘
law.
“ S E C . 2 . T hat all acts or parts of a cts inconsistent with the provisions of this
act are hereby repealed .
”
Public Resolution,No . 7,Sixty-fourth C ongress,approved February 1 5, 1 9 1 6,provides as follows
“Resohved by the S enate and Housel
of Representatives of the U nited S tates ofAmerica in C ongress assembled, That the Secretary of the -Navy be, and he
hereby is, authorized to permit -M r. C arlOs Hevia y Reyes‘
Gavilan, a citizen ofC uba,to, receive instruction at the U nited States Naval A cademy at Annapolis :Provided, T hat ,no expense shall be caused to the U nited States thereby, and
that the said C arlos Hevia y R eyes Gavilan shall agree to comply'
with all regulations for the police and discipline of the academy,to be studious,and to givehis utmost efforts to accomplish the course in the v arious departments ofinstruction,and that-the said C arlos
‘
HeV ia y Reyes Gavilan shallnot be admittedto the academy until he shall have passed the mental and physical examinationsprescribed for candidates from the U nited States, and that he shall be immediately withdrawn if deficient in s tudies, or conduct, and so recommended bythe academic board .
An act of C ongress approved A ugust 29, 1 9 1 6,provides as followsHereafter, in addition to the appointment of midshipmen to ~ the U nited
States Naval A cademy,as now prescribed by law,the President is hereby allowedfifteen appointments annually instead of ten as now prescribed by law, and theSecretary of the Navy is allowed twenty-five appointments annually instead offifteen as now -prescribed by law, the latter to be appointed from the enlistedmen of the Navy who are citi z ens of the U nited States,and netmore than twentyyears of age on the date of entrance to the -Naval A cademy,and who Shall haveserved not less than ' one yeara s enlisted men on the. date
,of entrance : Provided,
That such appointments Shall be made in the order of merit from candidateswho have in competition with . each other passed the mental examination nowor hereafter required by law for entrance to the Naval A cademy,and who passedthe physical eXminations required before entrance under existing laws .
“That hereafter the Secretary of the Navy i s authorized to permit not exceeding four Filipinos, to be designated, one for each class, by the Governor General of the Philippine Islands, to receive instruction at the U nited S tates
'N aval
A cademy at A nnapolis,‘
Maryland : Provided, That the Filipinos undergoinginstruction, as herein authorized, shall receive the same pay,: allowances,andemoluments, to be paid out of the same appropriations,and Shall be-S ubject tothe same rules and regulations governing admission, attendance, discipline,resignation, discharge, dismissal, and graduation as are authorized by law and
HISTORICAL SKE TCH 9
regulation for mi dshipmen appointed from the U nited States, but the Filipinomidshipmen herein authorized shall not be entitled to
‘
appointment 7to'
any
commissioned office in the U nited States Navy by reason of their graduationfrom the Naval A cademy
“Provided further,_ That no midshipman at the U nited States Naval A cademy
or cadet at the U nited States Military A cademy who fails to graduate therefromshall be eligible for appointment as a commi ssioned officer in the Marine C orpsuntil after the graduation of the class of which he was a member .
”
A n act of C ongress approved March provides as follows“Hereafter, in addition to the appointment of mi dshipmen to the U nited
States Naval A cademy,as now prescribed by law, the Secretary of the Navy isallowed one hundred appointments annually instead of twenty-five as now prescribed by law, to be appointed from the enlisted men of the
' Navy who are
citizens of the U nited States,and not more than twenty years of age on the dateof entrance to the Naval A cademy,and who shall have served not less than oneyear as enlisted men on the date of entrance : Provided, That such appointmentsshall be made in the order of merit from candidates who have, in competitionwith each other, passed the mental examination now or hereafter required bylaw for entranc
’
e 'to the Naval A cademy,and who passed the physical exami nation before entrance under existing o laws.
“The President, in hi s discretion,is authorized to reduce the course of instruc
tion at the N aval A cademy from four to three years for a period of two yearsfromthe date of the approval of this act,and may during said two years graduateclasses which '
have completed a three-year course .”
An act of C ongress approved A pril 25, 1 9 1 7,readsas follows
A N A C T T o 1ncrease thenumber ofmidshipmen at the N aval Academy until September first,nineteenhundred and eighteen
B e it enacted by the S enate and House of Representatives of the U nited S tates ofAmerica in C ongress assembled,That, in addition to the number of midshipmennow authorized by law,there shall be appointed during the period from the dateof passage of this act until September first, nineteen
'
hundred and eighteen, one
additional midshipman for each Senator, R epresentative, and Delegate in C ongress . Nominations shall be made for these vacancies by the Senators,Representatives, and Delegates c cerned for any regular or special examination thatmay be ordered before that date .
”
-An act of C ongress approved December 20, 1 9 1 7,reads as follows“B e it enacted,by the S enate and House of Representaivves of the U nited S tates
of America in C ongress assembled,That hereafter there shall be allowed at theU nited States Naval A cademy fivemidshipmen for each Senator, Representative,and Delegate in C ongress,one forPorto R ico,two for the District of C olumbia,fifteen
’
appoint‘
ed each year at large, and one hundred appointed annually
from enslitedmen of the Navy,as now authorized by law.
“ SE C . 2 . That all acts or parts Of acts inconsistent with the provisions of thisact are hereby repealed .
”
An act of C ongress approved A pril 2 , 1 9 1 8,reads as followsB e it enacted by the S enate and House Of Representatives of the U nited S tates of
America in C ongress assembled,That the President be,and he 1 S hereby,authori z ed, until A ugust first, nineteen hundred and twenty one, to reduce, in hisdi scretion, the course of instruction at the U nited States Naval A cademy fromfour to three years and to graduate classes which have completed such reducedcourses Of instruction .
1 0 HISTORICAL SKE T C H
The following classes were graduated in accordance with the act of C ongress ofA pril . 2 , 1 9 1 8, authorizing a reduction in the course :
four years ’ course .
Reserve ForCe on active duty,as now authoriz ed by law.
Thi s act also provides that all mi dshipmen entering the Naval A cademy subse
quent to June 1 , 1 9 1 9,'
shall be allowed mileage, at 5 cents per mile,while proceeding from their homes to the Naval A cademy for examination and appointment as midshipmen, and that the pay of mi dshipmen shall hereafter be $780per annum.
The following clause was contained in the defiCiency act approved June 5,1 920 :“That until otherwise provided by law no midshipman found deficient at the
close of the last and succeeding academic terms,shall be involuntarily discontinued ,
at the Naval A cademy or in the service unl ess he shall fail upon reexaminationin the subjects inWhi ch found deficient at an examination to be held at theheg nning of the next and succeeding academic terms and the Secretary of the NavyS hall provide for the special instruction of such midshipmen in the subjects inwhich found deficient during the period between academic terms . ”
A clause in the naval appropriations bill, act of July providesthat acandidate for midshipman so desiring may receive a credit of $2 50 upon entrancetoward
‘
defraying the entering expenses .An act providing for the readmi ssion of certain deficient midshipmen to the
U nited States Naval A cademy, approved October 2 2, 1 92 1 ,reads as follows“B e it enacted by the S enate and House of Representativescf the U nited S tates of
America in C ongress assembled, That the Secretary of the Navy is authorized,upon application,to admit to and reinstate in the U nited States Naval A cademy,s ubject to examination as to physical qualifications,as provided by law,but waiv
H IS T ORIC A L SKET C H 1 1
ing the provisions of law as to age requirements, all former midshipmen at theUnited States Naval A cademy found deficient at the end of the first term of theacademic year 1 920—2 1 whose resignations were asked for and received by the
superintendent of the Naval A cademy : Provided,That they shall upon admissionbe placed in the class one year behind their former class in each case : Provi ded
further,That said midshipmen affected by thi s act must signify their acceptanceof the benefits thereof by presenting themselves for physical examination withinone month of the date of its approval,and if found qualified will enter the NavalA cademy immediately .
“S E C . 2 . That the clause in the act approved June (Forty-first Statutes,
page entitled ‘An actmaking appropriations to supply. deficiencies l,n appro
priations for the fiscal year ending June and for other purposes,’ which
reads as follows .
‘That until otherwi se provided by law no midshipman founddeficient at the close of the last and succeeding academic terms shall be involuntarily discontinued at the Naval A cademy or
-in the service unless he shall fail
upon reexamination in the subjects in which found deficient at an examinationto be held at the beginning of the next and s ucceeding '
academic terms,and theSecretary of . the Navy shall provide for the special instruction of such
'
midshipmen in the subjects in which found deficient during the period between academicterms ’ be,
“
and the same hereby is, repealed, and section 1 5 1 9 oi ‘ the Revised
Statutes restored to its full force and effect.”
P ublic Resolution, No . 72, Sixty-seventh C ongress, approved September 1 8,1 92 2,provides as follows
“Resolved by the S enate and House of
' Representatives of the U nited S tates ofAmerica in C ongress assembled, That the Secretary of the Navy be, and herebyis,authorized to permit Mr . Willem van D oorn,a subject of the Netherlands,toreceive instruction at the U nited States Naval A cademy at A nnapolis : Provided,That no expense shall be caused to the U nited States thereby,and that the saidWillem van Doorn shall agree to comply with all regulations for the police anddiscipline of the academy, to be studious,and to give hi s utmost efforts to accomplish the course in the various departments of instruction, and that thesaid Will em van Doorn shall not beadmitted to the academy until he shall havepassed themental and physical examinations prescribed for candidates from theU nited States,and that he shall be immediately withdravVn if deficient 1n studiesor conduct and so recommended by the academic board .
”
Anact of C ongress approved January 2 2 , 1 92 3,reads asfoll ows Q
“That nopart of this appropriation shall be available for the pay of any midshipmen whose admission, subsequent to the class entering the Naval A cademynext after the approval of this act, would result in exceeding at any time anallowance of three midshipmen for each Senator,Representative, and Delegatein C ongress; of one midshipman for Porto Rico,a native of the island,appointedon
.
nomination of the governor, and of one midshipman from Porto R ico, appointed on the nomination of the Resident C ommissioner; and of twomidshipmen for the District of C olumbia : Provided further,That nothing herein shall beconstrued to repeal or modify in any way existing laws relative to the appointment ofmidshipmen at large or from the enlisted personnel of the naval service .
An act of C ongress approved May 28, 1 924,reads as follows“That no part of this appropriation shall be available for the pay of any
midshipman whose admission subsequent to February 9, 1 924,would result inexceeding at any time an all owance of three midshipmen for each Senator,Representative, and Delegate in C ongress; of one midshipman from Porto R ico,appointed on nomination of the Resident C ommissioner; and of two midshipmen for the District of C olumbia : Providedfurther,That nothing herein containedshall be construed to repeal or modify in any way existing laws relative to theappointment of midshipmen at large or from the enlisted personnel of the navaluserv 1 ce.
”
SUPERIN TEN DEN TS or . T HE U N ITED ST A T ES
N AV A L A C AD EM Y
C ommander Franklin BuchananC ommander George P . U pshur
C ommander C ornelius K. Stribling . .
C ommander Louis M . Goldsborough
C aptain George S . Blake
Rear A dmiral David D . Porter
C ommodore John L . Worden
Rear A dmiral C hristopher R . P . Rodgers
C ommodore Foxhall A . Parker
R ear A dmiral George B . Balch
Rear A dmiral C hristopher R . P . Rodgers
C aptain Francis M .
’
RamsayC ommander WilliamT . SampsonC aptain Robert L . PhythianC aptain PhilipH.C ooperRear A dmiral Frederick V.
‘
M cN air
C ommander R ichard WainwrightC aptain Willard H.
.Brownson
Rear A dmiral James H . SandsC aptain C harles J. B adger
C aptain John M.Bowyer
C aptain John H . Gibbons
C aptain .William F . FullamC aptain E dward W.
~ Eberle _ _ - _ i
C aptain A rchibald H. Scales
Rear A dmiral Henry B . Wilson
1 2
A C ADEM IC C A L EN D AR 1 924-25
Beginning of first term Friday
Beginning of second termExamination of candidatesExamination of candidatesEnd of academic year 1 924- 2 5
3 Graduation week Wednesday
Graduation day-j
Beginning of summer termEnd of summer termBeginning of academi c year1 92 5—26 Friday
The academi c months for 1 92 4—25 will end as follows
FIRST TERM SECOND T ERM
Oct. 2 5
Nov . 2 2
Dec . 20Jan . 3 1
February
March
A prilMay
D epartmental A ssignments of
Officers and C ivilian Instructors A ttached to the U nited S tates
N aval A cademy,- 1 924—25
Rear A dmiral HENRY“
B fWIL S ON,Superintendent“:C ommander ISAAC C . KIDD,In C hargeof B ui ldings and Grounds.
C ommander GEORGE W KENYON, A id. for A cademic A ctivities and S ecretary to
A cademic B oardL ieut . C ommander MAHLON S . TISDALE,A id.
Mr . PE T ER H . MAGRU DER,S ecretgrg N aval A cademy. in
EX EC U TIVE D EPAR T MENT
C apt . HAROLD E . C OOK, C ommandantof M idshipmen
C ommander DAVID W BAGLEY,
C ommander, C HARLES C . SLAYTON .
C ommander R OBERT C . GIFEE N .
C ommander FRANCIS A . L . VOSSLER ."C ommander SCHUYLER F . HELM .
C ommander C ARY '
,W M A
GRU D E R .
L ieut . C ommander JAMES D . M A
LONEY .
L ieut . C ommander WILLARD E .
C HEADLE .
L ieut C ommander WILLIAM G. GREENMAN .
Lieut.Lieut
ROBERT B . DASHIELL . .
M ARTIN J C ON N OLLY 1 .Lieut . WILLIAM E .G . .E RSK1 N E 1
Lieut
Lieut .Lieut .
Lieut .
RUSSELL M IHRIQ .
FLOYD S . C ROfi
S L EY .“
C HARLES E . C ONEY .
'
C ommander D A L L A s ,B ., WAIN
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
C ommander HERVEY .B R A N s
HOWARD N . H ILL (S.(J. G .) PERCY BRIGGS . (S .
Instructor JOSEPHW.C ROSLEY .
DEPART MEN T. OF SEA M A NSHIP
C ommander HARRY s A BALDRIDGE.
C ommander WILFRE D E . C LARKE:Lieut . C ommander HER BERT A . JONE S.
_Lieut . C ommander PHILIP SEYMOUR .
L .ieut C ommander HARVEY S . HAISLIP .
-Lieut . C ommander R ICHARD S . FIELD .
Lieut . C ommander R ICHARD E . BOOTH.
"
.L ieut . C ommander ANTONSON .
Lieut . C ommander ..HEISTER
lHOOGE
WERFF .
C ommanderWALTER S .
"
A N D E RsoN .
C ommander C HARLES S .
Lieut . C ommander ”SAM UEL A . C LEM
Lieut . C ommander JAMES B . RUTTER.
Lieut . C ommanderHERBERTO ROESCH .
Lieut . Commander E LLIOTT B . NIX ON.
Lieut . HOMER~
L . GROSSKOPF .
Lieut . SEABURY C OOKL ieut . BRONSON P. V OS B U RY .
L ieut . DONA LD W. LOOMIS .
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
l Lieut:Lieut .L ieut .
!
Lieut.
Lieut .
Lieut .
C ommander PHILIPC . RANSOM .
C ommander L E O H T H’
E B A U D
EDWIN
WIL L IA M WEWA RL IEK,ir-VICTOR C . BARRINGER :PETER K . FISCHLER .
L EROY'
AW. BUSBEY,ir.
A LEX ANDER C . KIDD.
ERNEST W . VON HEIMBURG.JAMES J . HUGHES .
t' h
Boatswain THOMAS O. KIRBY1
DEPA RTMENT OF ORDNA NC E A N D GUNNERYLieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .L ieuti
Lieut .Lieut .Lieut .
Lieut .
WILL IAM S . HEATH;HARRY W. N EED.
OLTON R . BEN NEHOFF .
E RNE S T E . HERRMANN .
HENRY R . HERBST .
ELMERR . H ILL .
EVERETT D . KERN .
JOHN J . PATTERSON,3d .
L ieut.
'J A M E S L . HOLLOWAY, ir.
Gunner JOSEPH PRA N IS .
1 8 OFFIC ER S A N D C IV IL IA N IN S T RUC T ORS
DEPA RTMENT OF NA VIGA TION
C ommander WILLIAM J GILESC ommander BENJ AMIN DUTTON,jr.
C ommander LESLIE B .
’
A N DE R S ON .
Lieut . C ommander C HARLES J. MOORE .
Lieut . C ommander BOLIVAR V. MEADE .
Lieut . C ommander HENRY J . SHIELDS .
Lieut . C ommander » PHILIP V. H .
WEEMS .
Lieut . ROBERT H . MAURY .
Lieut . WOODBURY E . MACKAY .
Lieut .
Lieut.Lieut .
Lieut .Lieut .
L ieut .
Lieut .
Lieut
R OBERT B . C ARNEY .
EVAN G. HANSON .
WILLIAM G . L UDLEW, jr.
KENNETH FLOYD-J ONES .
JAMES W . WHITFIELD .
Ross P. WHITEMAR SH .
MALCOLM A . DEANS.RALPH C . A LEX ANDER
Lieut . STEPHEN K . HALL .
DEPARTMENT OF MA RINE . ENGINEERING A N D NA VA LC ONSTRU C TION
C ommander HENRY G . S . WALLAC E .
C ommander RALPH C . NEEDHAM .
Lieut . C ommander LESLIE C . DAVIS.
Lieut . C ommander C HARLES C . DAVIS .
Lieut . C ommander FRANKLIN V A N
V A L KE N B U R GH .
Lieut . C ommander HERBERT W . U N
Lieut .Lieut .Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .
EDWARD F . MCC ARTIN .
STALEY H . GAMBRILL .
JUL IAN D . WILS ON .
GEORGE W. JOHNSONION PURSELL .
WILLIAM'
A . S . MACKLIN .
A LLEN D . BROWN .
DERWOOD .
Lieut .Lieut .Lieut .
C ommander ROY C . SMITH,jr.
C ommander GEORGE B . A SHE .
C ommander KENNETH R . R .
VVA L L A C E .
Lieut .
Lieut .
Lieut .Lieut .
Lieut .Lieut .Lieut .Lieut .
Lieut .
THOMAS N . VINSON .
C ARROLL W. HAMILL .
WALTER W. WEBB .
WILLIAM J. FORRE S T E L .
LEONARD DOUGHTY,ir.
BENJ AMIN O. WELLS .HA ROL D
‘
F. EL Y .
WILLIAM S . B . C LAUDE ._
DANIEL W. TOMLINSON,4th.
DEPARTMENT
C ommander A LLAN J. C HANTRY, j r.
(C .
C ommander HERBERT L . R ICE (Math .)Prof . PAUL C APRON .
Prof . C HARLES L . LEIPER .
A sso . Prof . WILLIAM J. KING.
As so . Prof . JAMES B . E PPES.A sso . Prof . JAMES A . BULLARD .
As so . Prof . JAMES N . GALLOWAY.
A sso . Prof . A LEX ANDER DILLINGHAM .
A sso . Prof . GU Y R . C LEMENTS.
C ommander THEODORE W. JOHNSON
Lieut . C omdr . GEORGE C . MANN ING
(C .
Lieut . JOHN’
I. HALE (C .
L inet . R OBERT N . S . BAKER (C .
L ieut . THEODORE L . SCHUMACHER
(C .
C hief Machini st JAMES M . BERLIN .
C hief Machinist JOHN E . BURGER .
A sso . Prof. C LARENCE P . BOLGIANO .
A sso . Prof . WILLIAM E . FA RRELL.
As st . Prof . GEORGE BENE Z E .
OF MA THEMA TIC S
A sso .
A sst .
A sst .A sst .A sst.A sst.A sst.A sst .A sst .A sst .
Prof.
Prof .
Prof.Prof .Prof .Prof.
Prof.Prof .
Prof .Prof .
HENRY M . R OBERTS,jr.
JOHN TYLER.
M ARION A . E ASON.
LEVI T. WILSON .
WALTER . F. SHENTON.
JAMES B . SCARBOROUGH.
REGINALD C . LAM B .
EUGENE S . MAYER .
LYMAN M . KE LLS .VWIL L IA M A . C ONRAD .
Instructor HAROLD E . JENK S .
OFFIC ERS A’
N D C IV IL IA N IN S T RU C T ORS 1 9
DEPA RTMENT OF E LEC TRIC A L"
ENGINEERING A N D PHY SIC S
C apt . GE ORGE ‘F. NEAL . Lieut . T HEODORE F . C .
'WAL‘
KER ~
C ommander ,GEORGE S . BRYAN . Lieut . A LBERT M .
‘
B L E D S Q E .
C ommander RAYMON D F.
'FRELLSEN Lieut . DAVID E . C U M M INS .
C ommander RALPH B . HORNER. Lieut. WILLIAM H ..HARTT,jr.
Lieut . C ommander WILLIAM C . OWEN . Lieut. RALPH H . HENKL E .
Lieut . C ommander S C HA M Y L C OCHRAN . Lieut. ROBERT L. MITTEN .
Lieut . C ommander FRANK SLINGLUFF"
, Lieut. C HA U N C E Y .
'R . C RUTCHER :Lieut; LISLE HENIFIN .
Lieut . C ommander SCOT T I) . M c Lieut. WILLIAM E . C LAYTON .
C AUGHEY .Lieut; STUA RT S . MURRAY .
Lieut . C ommander . FRED K;E LDER. C ommander . PAUL J . DASHIELLLieut . C ommander B A Y L Is F . POE .
Lieut. C ommander ROY DUDLEY. Lieut . MELVILLE W. POWERS (C . C .)
Lieut.C ommander J OHN L . HILL .
L ieiit'
. JAM ES R . A LLEN (C 0 )
Lieut . LEVE RETT S LEWIS A sso . Prof . GORDON D . R OBINSON .
Lieut MELVILLE C . PARTELLO .A sst Prof . JOHN C GEAR:
Lieu'
t , EDWARD B R OGERS A sst. Prof. DAVID G . HOWARD .
‘Lieut . B EN J Am;N F S T A U D A sst . Prof . EARL W. THOMSON .
Lieut . C HESTER M . HOLTON .
DEPA RTMENT OF ENGLISH
Prof . C ARROLL S . A LDEN . A sst. Prof. RODERICK S . ME RRICK.
/A sst . Prof . WILLIAM A . DARDEN .
Asst . Prof. WILLIAM K . DOTY.
A sso . Prof . HOWA RD MCC ORMICK .
A sso . Prof. HENRY F . STURDY .
A sst. Prof . C HARLES L . LEWIS .A sst . Prof . ROYAL S . PEASE .
A sst . Prof . FRED I . MYERS . J,
Instructor C LYDE B . FORTNA .
Instructor A RNOLD A . MCKAY .
DEPARTMENT OF MODERN LANGU A GE S
C ommander JOHN T. BOWERS .
C ommander WILHELM L . FRID DELL .
Asso . Prof. A RTURO FERNANDE ZA sso . Prof . WILLIAM E . OLIVET .
A sso . Prof. MOLTON A . C OLTON.
A sso PROF. R YME LOSS .A sso . Prof. M IC HELE A . V A C C A RIE L L O
A sst . Prof . LUC IE N L . R . FOU R N ON .
A sst .A sst .A sst.A sst .sst .‘
sst .sst .
sst .
Prof.Prof .Prof
.
Prof .Pro-f .
Prof .Prof.
Prof .
OT Ho W. A LLEN .
JOSEPH M . PURDIE .
C LARENCE V. FOWLER .
HENRY BLUESTONE .
DANIEL JORDON .
PAUL A . LAJ OYE
HOMER B . WINCHELL .
JOHN A . RA Y .
2 0 OFFIC ERS A N D C IV IL IA N IN S T RUC T ORS
DEPA RTMEN T OF PHY SIC A L TRA INING
C ommander BYRON MCC ANDLESS .Lieut.~LEON ARD P. VVE S S E L L
‘
.
Lieut .“
(J . G .) JOHN E . WHELCHEL .
1 '
Lieut . (J. G .) LYMAN S . PERRY.
1
Ensign WARREN S . PA RR .
l
Ensign C LAUDE H . B E N N E T T .l
E nsign~GEORGE W. WELKE R .
1
Ensign STEPHEN G . B A R C HE T .l
Ensign C ARL E . C U L I.E N .
1
Boatswain FREDERICK W. FIL BRY .
C hief Instructor LOUIS H . MANG .
A sst . C hief Instructor GEORGE
A sst . C hief Instructor JOHN S cHU T z .
Instructor FRANK J . SA Z AMA .
Instructor HEN RY OR T L AN D , ir.
Instructor JOHN N. WILSON .
Instructor HAMILTON M. WEBB .
Instructor R ICHARD J . GLENDON .
Instructor JOSEPH W. GRAHAM.
Instructor M . FRANK LYNCH .
Instructor THOMAS G . TAYLOR .
Instructor FRANK L . FOSTER /
Instructor WALTER A A M OL D .
Y A RD MEDIC A L
C apt. WILLIAM H . BELL (M .
Lieut . C omdr. WILLARD J . R IDDICK
(M .
Lieut . C omdr . RICHARD H . MILLER
(M .
Lieut . C omdr . MARION E . HARRISON
(M . o. D . S.)
Lieut . C LARENCE-
J . BROWN (M .
Lieut . A NDREW L . B URLEIGH (M . C .
D .
LIBRARY
A sst . Prof . R ICHARD J. DUVAL .
C U RA TOR
P rof. HERMAN F . KRA PPT.
2
POSTGRA DU A TE scHooL
C ommander ROBERT A ; THEOBALD .
L i e u t . C ommander E D'
.W A R D W .
HANSON .
Prof . MILTON C . STUART.Prof . RALPH E . ROOT.
Prof. EARLE B . Fox .
A sso . Prof . PAUL J . KIEFER .
1 T emporary duty as coaches.
2 Additional duty in D epartment of English .
Asso . Prof . C HARLES C . BRAMBLE .
A sso . Prof . A LBERT F . WAGNER .
A sst ; Prof. RALPH S . WILBUR .
A sst . Prof . EDWARD H . LANGE .
A sst . Prof. GU Y E . GRANTHAM .
A sst . Prof . C HARLES H . RAWLINS .
Asst . Prof. MICHAEL N . ID L E S ON .
Lieut . WILLIAM P . M ULL (M
L ieut . HARRY L . KALEN (M . C . D . S ) .
Lieut . R OBERT H f FL A D E L A N D (M . C .
D .
Lieut . GEORGE E . MOTT (M .
Lieut . JAMES F . TERRELL (M .
Lieut . JOHN T . O’
C ONNELL (M . C .)Lieut . HENRY G . RALPH (M . C . D .
Lieut. WILLIAM D . D A Y (M . C .
'
D .
Pharmacist A RTHUR L . C ROWDER.
OFFIC ERS A N D C IV IL IA N IN ST RUC T ORS
U . S . S . RE IN A MER C EDES” (STA TION SHIP)
C ommander‘
L A U RA N C E N . MCNAIR .
L ieut. : L U DWIG W. GU M z .
Lieut . U D OL PH A . A SHTON '
(S .
C hief Boatswain WILLIAM ! M . C A S
STEVENS .
C hief Gunner MARS W . PALMER .
1
C hi ef Pay C lerk JOHN W. NICHOLS .
Boatswain LEWIS W. A DKINS.Machinist VA LERS G . SAVAGE .
C arpenter GARRETT P . FITZ MAURICE .
Pay C lerk J OHN W. TROY.
SU PPLY OFFIC E
C apt . BARRON P . DUBOIS (S C .)‘ Lieut . LOUIS H . HUEBNER (S . C .)Pay C lerk NOEL
‘
O. BICKHAM .
NAVA L HOSPITA L
C apt. R OBERT M . KENNEDY (M .
C ommander A DDISON
(M .
Lieut . C ommander A LFRED L . C LIFTON (M .
Lieut . C ommander WILLIAM H . M D
C HA E I. (M .
B .
’
C LIFFORD
Lieut . GERALD SELBY (M C ) .
Lieut . JAMES E . FETHERSTON (M .
Lieut . DANIEL P : PLATT (M . C .)C hief Pharmacist JASON H . BARTON .
C hief Pharmacist R OSCOE C . R OWE .
C hi ef Pharmacist LEON H . FRENCH .
Pharmacist FRANK R . BORK .
ENGINEERING EX PERIMENT STA TION
C apt . PAUL B . DUNGAN .
C ommander PHILIP H . HAMMOND .
Lieut . FREDERICK PETRY .
NAVA L RA DIO STA T ION (HIGH POWER )
Lieut . PAUL B . THOM PSON .
C hief Gunner WILLIAM J. VOLKMAN .
NAVY C OMMISSA RY'
STORE
Lieut . WILLIAM T.WILLIAMS (S .
Pay C lerk JAM ES E . SHEA .
1 Additional dEty in E . P . D epartment.
A C AD EM IC B OARD
THE SUPERINTENDENT .
THE C OMM ANDANT OF MIDSHIPMEN .
T HE HEAD OF THE D EPARTMENT OF SEAMANSHIP.
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ORDNANCE AND GUNNERY .
THE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF NAVIGATION .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF MARINE ENGINEER ING AND N A V A LEC ONSTRUCTION .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ELEC TRICAL E NGINEERING A N DSPHY S IC S .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF MODERN LANGUAGES .T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HYGIENE .
T HE HEAD OF THE DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL TRAINING .
PRA C TIC E CRU ISE ! 31 924
9 There was. no . regular ' Naval A cademy practice squadron for the summer
metice cruise,{O fficers and midshipmen detailed for the practice cruise embarked on June 5,1 924,and disembarkedgon
‘
A ugus‘
t 228, 1 924 .
The midshipmen o f the ,first, second, and third classes were assigned to the
following ships of Division Two,B attleships Division,Scouting Fleet : Wyoming(flagship) , N ew Y ork, T exas, and ,
A rkansas.
The itinerary of the midshipmen’
s practice cruise was as follows :
AhnapolisT or RayBrest
Rotterdam (Wyoming, A r
konsas)A ntwerp (N ew Y ork,T exas)
Gibraltar.Ponta DelgadaLynnhaven Bay (targetpractice)
A nnapolis Thursday,Ang. 28
Friday,May 30 “
T hursday,June 5Wednesday,June 1 8 Wednesday,June
'
25.
Thursday,June 26Monday,July 1 4 _ Friday,July,25 .
do Do .
Thursday,July 3 1 M onday,August 4 .
Friday,Aug. 8 Saturday,Aug. 9
Monday,Aug“ 1 8 Wednesday,Aug. 27.
M ERIT s 'ROL L S FOR 1 923—24
Merit roll s,made but annually for each c lass, Show the proficiency of themidshipmen in each branch Of study . The numbers given in the table, showingthe relative weight of the different branches, are used as coefi cients, the final
mark in each branch (on a scale of 4) being mul tiplied by the number assigned tothat T he sum of the .products, after adding the multiple for discipline,is the finalmark of themidshipmen for . the year .In the graduating merit roll the final standing for the course » is determined by
the sum of the yearlymultiples .Midshipmen who attain 85 per cent of the multiple for a year shall be dis
tinguished by a star affixed to their names on the annual merit rolls . (Regutlations,U . S . Naval A cademy, 1 92 3,par .The diplomas of midshipmen whose final multiples on the graduating meri
roll are not less than 85 per cent of the maximum shall read “Passed with distinction”
; those whose final multiples are less than 85 per cent but not lessthan75 per cent of themaximum Shall read “Passed with credi t” ; and those whose
final multiples are‘
less than 75 per cent of the.
maximum shall read “ Passed .
"
(Regulations,U . S . Naval A cademy, 1 923,par .Received 85 per
,cent of multiple .
A C ompleted course; diploma and commission withheld pending action onphysical di sability .
0
a Graduated ; physically di squalified on annual examination; granted reex
amination,but voluntarily resigned in advance of reexamination .
b Resignation accepted upon graduation due to physical disqualification .
6 Turned back into next lower class on_
account of conduct .
d C ontinued with class pending delayed examinations due to illness .dd Died .
e Diploma withheld; sent on practice cruise as disciplinary measure; latergraduated and commissioned .
f Dismi ssed .
g Found physically disqualified upon reexamination; resigned .
h Deficient in studies ; turned back .
73 Deficient in studies ; required to resign .
M C A ss‘
igned to Marine C orps upon graduation .
m Reinstated under act of C ongress, approved October 2 1 , 1 92 1 . Date andage used are date and age upon reinstatement .o Deficient in studies ; retained in next lower class on account of illness .p Turned back into thi s classon account of illness .r R esigned .
3 Voluntary resignation accepted immediately upon graduation .
S C A ssigned to Supply ‘ C orps upon graduation .
t R ecommended for dismissal , but permitted to resign .
u Did not graduate; recommended for dismi ssal,but resignation accepted.
w Turned back into next lower class on“accounto f illness .
3: Deficient for first term; turned back into this class .
y Turned back into this class on account of conduct .
26
M ERIT . ROL L— GRA DUA T IN G C L A S S, J UN E, 1 924 27
M eri t roll for the four years
’course of themidshipmen of the graduating class (clas
‘
ss
of 1 92 525 members, of whom 522 graduated
M axima 300 « 400
M organ, A . M
Hatcher,B . 8 - 1.
Ri chards,W. L”
.
C lexton,E . W
D uke, 1 . T
B edding,T. J
Wood, C ; C _
Waller,G. W. D .,jr
D artsch,F A . LD ockweiler,E .
*V
C ochran,W. Pi;jrKraft,W. E .
‘
S cheibele'
r'
, J . J
Woodyard,E . L
.Ekstrom,C . E
Elliott A .
'
B
Harrison,H. H
Fisher,W. GHayes, J. A
Borgen,K . R _
C unningham,E . A
Rose,R . E .,ir_
Gregor,O.~F
Herring, L'
. R
Wilkins, C . WRook,E . C
C ampbell ,R . L .,jrHogg,J. T
R esse,C . B
M ansfield,.
W. N
Towner,G . C _
H ickey,W. A
Bearce,H . P
Sisson, irAuerbach,
'
E . HWilson,R . E
Nuesse,L . WDyer,T. H
Napier,T. D
Lamberth,H . R
Sawyer,M . A _
Fairbairn,.D . WBachman,L . A
C ole,~W. M
Simmons,W.
‘
F - I
344 46
s 340. 50
g
2 8 i M ERIT ROL L— GRADUA T IN G C L A S S, J UN E, 1 924
.M erit-roll for the feur'
years’course of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class
of 525 members, of whom 52 2 graduated— C ontinued
M axima
Leman,A . L .,
E ckberg,W.T
Tracy,O. V
Fines, C . A
R awlins,'
E . WSmith,J . W _
Y eomans,E . E . _
C rowe,E . F
Waid,R . T
Berthold,E . E _
Michelet,W. G
Grandfield,F .. J
Beakley,W. M
Beatty, C .
‘ EH
Repli
nger,C . F
Hopping,H .
’
L .
B radley,M . M
Moore,W . T
Garvin, J . H
R ice,L . K
Becker,H . P _
Hunt,A . T
B archet, S . G
Tammany,W. P
Kreiser,A . W.,jr
C utler, S . Y
Freels,A . J
Hooper,A . M
Purple,W. C
France,W. C
Lloyd,D . J
A riso’
n,R . E _
Mathews,B . O
M cL ean,E . R .,ir
Penny,R . J‘Bare,R . O
Playter,R .. E
Vieweg,W . V . R
C arlson,R . PP rice, C . HStout,R . FHyman,W. M
C arroll,R . C 2 42 . 55 . . 323. 85
A ustin,B .
"
L 1 30.7322 . 75
323. 65
1 29h 53
1 28-90
1 25L 92
1 26h 83
1 28h 42
2 5 1 -92
2433 53'
. 2432 1 2
c32 6. 03
30 M ERIT R0L L —a—GRA DU A T 1 N G’
C L A S S,J UN E ; 1 924
M erit roll for the four years course of the-midshipmen cf“
the graduating class (class525 members,of whom 52 2 graduated
— C ontinued
N ame'
s
M aximal -59. a ..r
H . a:
-Kennaday,J . MHartman
“
,F ..G.,jr
Boltz,P .
‘
M c‘
C
=Drexler,H . C _ _
Templeton; T .
‘H'
=Wilkinson,E . R
Short,W. B
Bednar,A
1 56 A .
Abdill,E l‘
W
Weaver,R : L . F
C leaves,w. E
Shult‘
z,T. J'
Krook,A . T
Layton,E . T
-A lder'
man, C . L
Y oung,E . W
M cL eod, jr
Phillips,R . DTurner,T .
’
A .,jr _
Sutliff,R u C
.Oswald,A .~H
Furth,F .
‘
R
Baillie,R : VC lau
’
sen,A . J
Roberts,N . .K
Shiebler,P . A _
Newman,G"
5 9. 1 6
Ogle,G . B _
Falge,F. M
Layne,F . C 62 . 92 1 24 . 1 6
“
63 .
61 .
60.
61 .
65.
61 .
. 67
60.
66.
6 1 .
59.
61 .
6 1 .
61 .
63.
‘
61 .
67.
60.
61 .
58.
66.
59 .
62 .
59.
63.
62 .
63 .
59.
.63.
66.
56.
66.
. 69
26 .
56 ‘
64 .
58 .
1 7
58
1 3 5
‘80
797 1
72
1 3
2 3
87
20'
50‘
39
5 1
36
33
39
20
2 5
99
3 1
43
45
36 .
. 48‘
27 .
35‘
1 3
93
66
6 1
47
89 '
2 30.
2 33.
235.
2 29p 58
230J 94
2392 99“
233586
44 ‘
37 ‘
32 1 1 95
‘
3 1 69 64
‘
3 1 65 1 8
3 1 6x90
‘
309p l 4
3 1 95 54
3 1 7J O4l
3 1 2 . 66'
3 1 7285
3 1 7f 3 1
' 32I . 3 1
M ERIT ROLL— GRADUA T IN G C L AS S,,J U N E, 1 924 3]
M erit roll for. the four years’. course
.of the midshipmen,of the graduating class (class .
pf 525 members, of graduateds — C ontinued,
merit
Blough,A .IKE;
Burchett,E .,C _
S tott,;-G . W " :
Huckins,1T . A
Sinclai r G .,A
Harris,D _
D ascomb,E ,BPhelps,W_
Earl,R icketts,J .
Dalton, L . W;
Hayter,H . M ;
Siegrist,P . W
Hangs,Herrington
‘
,L . B .,jr
Marsh, J .
'
A _
Ferguson,J . W .,jr
C alvert,A . : P _
Siegrist,W . WWalsh,A .
: -J
Welsh,D . tE l -z
B laylock,: L eR, B _
‘
Latimer,S. E _
M iller,H . B
Stone,Wt..
-P
Bunker,F. .R :
Devens,W . G ;
Roane, V . R
Speer,J . G _
Bailey,W . B
Randolph," A . P
Daniel,H . : C
Burroughs,S . E .,jr
Shepherd,"C . =E _
Ruffolo,L . J _ ,
Hyde,J . D
C alhoun,A .
Whitehead, _E . W
Tichenor,M ;'J
Mellon,W L
Thew,J . P _
Sanders, jr
.C romwell,J . P
M cC allum,D .
' J
Page,H . G
2 365 7 1 0
2 282 01
2 2 9fi09
2 25u1 3
2 285 64
230z 76
23 1 5 59
22 5-00
307 -77
3 1 9 1 38
3 1 45 6 1
3D7U 1 8
32 M ERIT ROL L — GRA D U A T IN G C L A S S, J U N E, 1 924
M erit roll for the foun years’
course of the midshipmen of the graduating class (classof 525 members, of whom 52 2 graduated
fl —C ontinued
N ames
M axima
C lose,F
Rhamstine, J . R
Holler,W . W "
.
Baldwin,H . \V
Ballinger,H . R
Hull,L . C _
'
Martin,D . J
M acD onald,F . WDugan,H . J
Fike, C . L _
Broda,D . F _ _
Sullivan, J E
Sall,H _
L egg, C . A _
Gates,H . K
Oden, S . F
C arney , A'
. GKirkland,T . J . ,
Teller,M . S
Dantzler,T . T
C raig, M ., jr _
Minter,R . O _ _
A dair, C
Quinn,B . D _
Bedford, S . R _
Evans,G . W .,
Hay es,J . D
Sanford,J . R . , jr
Schreiner, M
Tonkin, C . T ., jr
Shumaker, C . S
Lewis,J . N . , jr
Smith,H . P
Leach,W . D . , jr
M agly , A . V
L ockhart,. R . GPalmer,E . A ., jr
Ragan, T . C _
Mercer, P . V _ _
Goldthwaite,R
Roths,M .
E smond,R . W _
Benton,H . P ., jr
R eith,G ., jr
C abanillas, J . M
M ERIT'
ROL L — GRA D U A T IN G C L A S S ,: J U N E,
s1 1 924
M erit roll for the four years’
course of the midshipmen of the graduating‘
class (classof members, of whom 52 2 graduated
— C ontinued
F 11General
1 ourt aggregateN ames “year for four
M aximal 300 a r: i“4500
C ullen, C ;'
E
Warburto'
n,Ai L
Wilson,H'
K
R iggs,P . H
Rucker,C L. G _ I
' I
Williams,J B L “
Dancy, J .
‘
R
A dams, R . M CC . B -u
C arr;'R . S _
Brereton,W .
'H
Harvey,W . W _
Wight,D .»D 3 ;
Johnson,L . WDemarest,H .
‘
vR
Hook,'
F. M
Hoffman,_
C . E _
Weeden,W‘
. W 1 ; jrBailey, S .
? M 1 _
Parker,Williams,
'
R . . D
Watts,E
Sharp,‘
jrl
B liesener,-‘
A . G
M cPeake,.L . J _
‘
Jones,H .
‘A
A llen,; J . L :
Duvall,W . H
V ’
erge,’
W : -E-f- L‘
L
Day; D . T .,
Harris,J . C
Heine, M C ‘C '
Ramsey,D. JR ichter,H . : E
.Walker,D ? S
Gminder,E . .E
D eam,
‘
F.
‘E
Thompson,“
A'
. IL
Horsch,A . C
309 Bourke, -jrP3 1 0 C reehan,E . .P _ .
3 1 1 C allaway, C . H
3 1 2 Hopkins,H . V
2 23-7 1
2231 93
2 2 1 -92
2 1 51 9 5.
2 1 9L 75
2 24 N 2 1
2 26x42 '
2 1 83 90
2 23u32 .
2 1 735 5
2 233 54
3 1 2 . 52
301 u74
30 1 .
306:
3 1 0.
302 .
‘ 304 .
‘
P303 1
300.~ 2 9 1 .
309.
300.
300.
308.
293;
3 06.
‘ 3053
306.
304 .
295 .
308.
2 96.
299.
305.
300.
303 .
304 .
298.
30 1 .
307.
29 5 .
“
299.
3 1 3;
298 .
300.
307.
2 99.
304 .
304 '
296.
298 .
296.
307.
297.
01
88
93
1 2
1 8
2 1
37
70
05
70
53
04
66
45
1 3
9 1
22
30
6 1
4 2
50
98
02
0 1
93
63
94
2 5
86
35
64
63
99
38
74
3 1
1 0
96
5 1
20
52
63
95»
34 M ERIT ROL L — GRAD U A TIN G C L A SS , J U N E,~ 1 924
M emit roll for the four years’
course of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class
3 1 3
33 1 4
$ 0 3 1 5
3 1 6
3 1 7
3 1 8
3 1 9
e320132 1
3 22
32 3
324
332 5
3326
327
328
329
M G33O
33 1
332
333
a334
g335
336
337
3338
339
340
334 1
342
343‘
344
345
345%346
347
348
349
M C 350
35 1
352
353
M C 354
u355
of‘
52 5 members, of whom 52 2 graduated— Continued
years
Sheldon,H . P _
Pottle, J . H ., ir
N orcross, M . A
Phjlh'
ps, N
Webb,R . G., ir
D ahlgren, J . FM arshall,T . C _
L ajeunesse,R . WGraesser,W . M
L illard, J . S
Barnes,A . D
Norman, 0 . L eG
S ayres, C
Holbrook, J . A
T hompson,W . B
M oss,R . S
Blanchard, TM cC aleb,W. R
M cFadden,A . G . W
Gibbons, J . H .,‘
jr
Hough,C . S
Southworth,H . B
M ontgomery,G . C _
Bullis,W. F
Cameron,T . S
Bellerby,R . JGanahl ,R . G
Oexle,C . WT aylor, E . J ir_ _
Collins, .
D . H
Petersen,W . F
L inholm,A . R
M cD onald,C . C
S teenberg,G . H
Sayre,R . E _
Kh’
ne,A . R
D eutermann,W . V _ _
Willis,D . G
S chenck, C . A .,jr1 C hanged fromL ishnes s.
M ERIT LROL L — GRA DU A TIN G '
C L A S S,J UN E,1 924 5 35
M ertt roll for thefour, years course of themi dshipmen of thegraduattng class (class
M axima
356
M 0 382
Heisser,A ;Hawkinson,L .
“
H
Robinson,H . R i
D avies, J . T
N eale;-:E ; T '
;
Folger,N unn,I . H-i,-L.:Ostertag,
'
W. Run
“
Roedel, L
Seayp‘
E . A ;
Fowler,J .
'WHyatt,J . KM orrill, J .
:H -‘
J. L'
.
Evans,C . M cA : _
M cIntOSh ‘
, J . H
M cKee, I . C'
_ -"i ‘L
Sylvester,H . M acT
Spahn'
,_ J . E _f
Bellinger,G; H;,jr-s- ZCarroll, EY oung, R . C .
Gwinn,L . H
Witmer,E . .L
Hogle,~J . B -fl
Rooney, J ..B
Bell,F J - r '
Hunter,E . N .
’ WBall,F. H
Evans,W in 1.
B'
r‘
ydon,G : ir.
Fletcher,F . M
M cD onald, C . E u n i
S imonton,R .
'
~M
Hays,W. S _
‘
Heddens,F M -J.
S tormes,M . - l <
‘
J ohnson,R . Fitz-J .,ir.;
_ 4 .58.
k 55.
52 .
57.
'56.
56.
57.
56.
56.
r55.
‘
58.
63.
;52 .
5 5.
of 525 members, of whom 52 2 graduated— Continued
General
years
36 M ERIT ROL L '—'
GRA D U A T IN G C L A S S ,J U N E ; 1 924
M erit roll for thefour of the midshipmen; of the graduating class (classof -525 = 7itembers, of whom 52 2 : graduated—4 C ontinued
GeneralF
aith 3
9 253.years
400
Anderson,-R . A 60. 5 1 : 1 1 2 . 96 678 . 39
J aiudon, L z'B 54 . 00 54
B Q'
, jr 6 1 . 06 1 1 6. 46
Harmon, A . B _ 53 . 99 ' 1 1 3. 72
Francis, L _ 57. 92‘
1 1 4 . 84
Holt z claw,‘ J . S 5 3 . 78
“
1 06. 44
5 5. 92 51 1 2 . 1 7 676 . 52
Goodall,H . W _ _ 57. 06 1 1 5. 92
Buxton, J .OW 58 . 9 1 5 1 1 5. 52
M errow, S CH - L 53 . 67 1 1 4 . 90
Edwards, L . B l 56. 08 1 1 6. 73
Floed,H . o 1 1 0. 2 1
Keliher, R . H 54 . 1 4 1 05. 02
Hartwig,G . R 59 . 22 -1 1 2 . 37
Ferriter, C .tA "59 . 04 1 1 5. 63
T emple,7
58 . 26 .
'
1 1 3 . 96 .
R itchie, T f C -f 55. 72 1 1 3 . 63
Erdmann, 50. 6 1 ' 79
L a z ell,~ J . D _
757. 04 . 1 1 2 . 92
N esser, C .
_
J 57. 95'
1 1 2 . 49 .
L ankenau,W : E 3 ‘
5 1 . 49 ' 1 1 1 . 73
Dunn, P . H . H ; 59 . 42 1 1 8 . 8 1
Sweeney, J . M _ _
‘
55 . 39 -1 1 1 . 98
Waldron, J . C 58 . 09 1 1 3. 59
S immonds '.
' B 55 . 46 -1 1 4 . 39
Ilsem'
ann,F. J ‘54 . 60 ‘ 1 09. 70.
T ownsend,’
A . 57. 69‘
1 1 2 . 1 4
T opper, J . R'
58 . 50
Waller,R . R *58 . 64 1 1 1 2 . 32
Cresswell,C. F 58 . 51.
71 1 0. 1 9
Griese,‘
-A . A 59 . 03 ' 1 1 3. 06
Frank, L . P1 " 59 . 1 8 56
Peterson,G . Edmund 5 5. 67 1 1 6. 57
A xtell ,A . W 60. 85
Baron, R . S 55 . 7 1.
1 41 1 . 66
Winslow, C : M eR .,jr_ 1 1 2 . 01
Irish,E . W _ 5 5. 96 1 09 . 2 2
Doggett,B .
’
L 1 56. 55 '‘
1 1 6. 2 7
Herlihy, J IJ L"
6OT‘
58'
1 1 2. 68
M cD aniel,f.R . T 55. 65 1 07. 2 4
E ricsson,H . M L 56. 90 1 07. 38
Hake, G . E 53 . 8 1“
1 1 4 . 7 1
Hall,H .
‘
3
59 . 1 4 1 1 3 . 2 3
S tuart,W .
’ J 54 . 79 ?'
1 1 1 . 56
Walbridge,’ V 52 . 95 1
"
1 1 3. 30
97'
53 !
6 1
2 1 8.
2 1 6.
2 1 3 .
2 1 2 .
2 1 7.
2 20.
2 1 8 .
2 1 2 .
2 1 0.
2 1 2 .
2 1 4 .
207.
2 1 4 .
2 1 3 .
2 06.
-206.
2 1 1 .
2 20.
2 1 3;
2 1 5.
2 1 5 .
2 1 3.
2 1 0.
2 1 2 .
.209 .
2 1 0.
2 1 5 .
2 1 3 .
2 1 4 .
2 1 2 .
208.
209 .
2 1 2 .
209.-2 1 5.
'
38
2 2
59 .
1 5'
77
1 7
42
1 4
‘
86
00
4 7
04
46
26‘
0 1
98
07 1
60
98
87
90“
37
2 5
84
3 1
07
53
2895 09
'
2 905 4 2
. 285579
‘
2862 44 4
38 M ERIT .ROL L— GRA D U A TIN G C L A SS , J U N E,1 924
M emit roll for the four years’course of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class
of 525 members,of whom 52 2 graduated— C ontinued
General
N amw
M axima
Cooke, J . F
L andstreet, J . C
Gallagher, E . FWorthington, J . M
B aldwin,R . V
Granbery,G . M cR
B ush,S . E _
Hubbard,C .
.
N
D ickie,A . E .
King,SC olburn,R . CC lark,R . WRutt,B . L
L ee,C . LHorne,D . F
J ohnson,R . H . G _
Peterson,G . EdwardM cL aughl in,A . E
Flynn,J . M
M eints,C . GSessions, F . E . J r
A brahams,N . WLarson,R . W_
Southerland,T . C
Kanakanui,W. A
Engernan, J . T .,jr
Wood,A . C
M cD onough, J . FM urphy,E . M
M ills,R. EC ampbell,L . F
4 0 BIB B IT ROL L — GRADUA T IN G C L A S S
M erit roll of the midshipmen of the graduating class (class of
N ames
A bdill,E verett WoolmanA brahams
,N obleWayneA dair,C rutchfield
A dams,Joseph Wade,jr
A dams,R eed M ccolloch BairdA ddoms,John FillmoreA lderman,C lifford L indseyA llen,John L ouisA nderson,Raymond A lgotA rison,
‘
Rae EmmettA rmor,HowellA uerbach,E dwinHarveyA ustin,Bernard L igeA xtell ,A lanWylieBachman,L eo A dolphBailey, Samuel M organBailey,WilliamByronBaillie,Roland VincentBaldwin,HansonWeightmanBaldwin,John A rnoldBaldwin,Ralph VaughnBall,Frank HaywoodBal l,T homas James,irBall inger,Herbert R eedB archet,S tephen GeorgeBare,Robert OsborneBarnes,A rthur D aytonBaron,R ichard SwanBass,A rthur WentworthBeakley,Wallace M orris
Bearce,Herbert PotterBeatty, C harles E dwardB ecker,Herbert Peter
Bedford,S tephen RayBednar,A dolphBell ,Fred JacksonBellerby,Russell JohnB ellinger,GeorgeHarcourt,irBennett,D onal d ByronBenton,Herbert Peyton,irBerliner,SylvanBerthold,E lmer E dward
Bertschy,Robert SylvesterBlanchard,T heodoreBlaylock,L eRoi BerrettB limener,A rthur GeorgeBlough,A rthur KoontzBock,Brainerd N ortonBolton,A lfred JohnsonBoltz,Philip M cC aulley
B orgen,Kenneth RoyalBourke,R ichard Joseph,irBradl ey,M aurice M iles
Brady,JohnWilbur
S tate fromwhichappointed
—u
M ERIT ‘R.O'L L 44 GRAD U A T 1 N G C L A S S
1 9 24) -525 members—for the last year of their'
.acaaemtc coarse r
M aximum
1 5. 40
4 4
0 1 63
M ERIT ROL L— GRAD UA T IN G C L A S S
lVIerit roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class Of 1 920
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed ac
lliiiigsgin
Brand,JohnWilliam C hew June 1 2,1 920
Brereton,WilkieH ill June 1 1 ,1 920
Broda,D onald .Frank June 9,1 920
B rown,-WilliamD rane A ug. 1 7,1 9 20
Browning, L aurance L eWright Kentucky June 1 6,1 920
Bryant,Paul Kenneth June 1 1 ,1 920
Brydon,George M acL aren,ir Virginia June . 1 5,1 920
Bullis,Will iamFrancis June 28,1 920Bunker,Forrest Robinson N orth D akota" Sept .Burchett,Eugene C arroll Pennsylvania July
C olorado Jul y 29,1 920
B urroughs,Sherman E verett,ir N ewHampshire June 1 2,1 920
Bush,S tone E lkin Georgia June 9,1 920
Buxton,JohnWilson Virginia July 2,1 920
C abanillas,Jose M anuel Porto R ico June 1 6,1 920
C alhoun,A llston D uPre, ir South C arolina June 1 0,1 920
C allaghan,Joseph A nthony M aryland Sept . 4 , 1 920
C allaway, C harles Howard Georgia June 1 1 ,1 920
C alvert,A llen Phillip M ichigan Sept . 1 8,1 920C ameron,D onald A yres Indiana June 2, 1 920
C ameron,T homas S tevenson Wyoming June 1 6,1 920
C ampbell,L ee Fulkerson Kentucky June 1 1 ,1 920
C ampbell,Robert L ord,ir M ichigan June 1 2,1 920
C aples,John Richard N ewYork July 23,1 920
C arleson,Richard Pierce A t large June 1 6,1 920
C arney,A rthur Gerald N ewYork June 1 , 1 920
C arr,Robert Sherman Rhode Island Oct. 1 1 ,1 920
C arroll, C hester E dward Washington June 1 5,1 920
C arroll,Ralph C lement M assachusetts-n June -1 1 ,1 920
C lark,Robley Westland D istrict of C o. do
lumhia.
C lausen,A lbert Jul ius C alifornia “ July 1 2, 1 920
C leaves,Willis Everett " M aine June 1 0,1 920
C lexton,Edward W illiam N ewYork June 1 4,1 920
C lose. Forrest Georgia July 3 1 , 1 920
C ochran,William Peal-sol,j r Pennsylvania June 1 5,1 920
C olburn,R ichard C astle M assachusetts July 1 2,1 920
C ole,W illiam M archant Pennsylvania JuneC oley,L ewis E lliot Oklahoma June 28,1 9 1 9C ollins,D ewey Heisner Indi ana A ug. 4,1 920
C ollins,Howard L yman M assachusetts July 29,1 920
C olt, Stockton Beekman,ir N ew Jersey Sept . 1 1 ,1 920C ooke,John Francis Pennsylvania June 1 5, 1 920
C raig,M alin,ir M issouri June 1 0,1 920
C reehan,E dward Patrick PennsylvaniaC resswell, C harles Frederick Wisconsin M ay 128,1 920
C romwell,John Philip Illinois June ' 1 1 ,1 920
C ross, C harles Betta,ir Oklahoma June 1 5,1 920
C rowe,‘E dward Francis M assachusetts _ June
C ul len,C arl E dward D istrict of C o A ug.
' 4, 1 920
lumbia.
C unningham, E dmund A nthony M assachusetts June 1 1 ,1 920
C utler,ShirleyYoungs Utah JuneD ahlgren,Joseph Francis N ew Jersey June
M ERIT‘
Ronné neannuume omss
525 7memberse v for the last 211 6w their“
academic ‘
course—é C ontinued
38. 38 ,
35. 50 45. 60 .
43
4 4 M ER IT fROL L — ‘
rGRAD U Afl N G C L AS S
lM erit roll of the/midshipmen. of thegraduating class ( class . of 1 924 )
N ames S tate fromwhlchappointed
D al ton, L awrenceWhitehead M assachusetts _ June_9, 1 920
D ancy J ames Russell Oklahoma. JuneD aniel,Henry C hesley- " A I. Pennsylvania June 1 4, 1 920
D ani el,John -do Jul y 2, 1 9 1 9
D antz ler, T illman T rotter “ M ississippL S ept .D arlington, J ot oseph Virginia A ug. 7,4920
B artsch,Frederick A lbertL eslie Illinois Jul y ?D ascon
'
l b,E dmund B rooks-i T exas JuneD avies, J oe T aylor A labama do
D avis,F rank R eynolds, Pennsylvania June 1 8,11 9 1 9
D avi s,Will iam’Virginias,jr Georgia A ug. 5,1 920
D ay,D ouglas T urner,ir Virginia -l June 2, 1 920
D ay, L eonard N ewJersey _ JulyD eam,Frank English _ Kansas June -1 2, 1 920
D emarest,Harold R aymdnd C ali fornia S ept . 1 ,1 920
D eutermann,WilliamVincent N ew York June 1 6, 1 920
D evens,Will iam Georges -u JuneD eWol fe,M auri ce M ortimer. M ichigan do
D ey,Walter C hester DU EL Oregon June 1 4, 1 920
D ickie,A rthur Idaho JuneD oan,Henry carpenter- H " ; Pennsylvania June 1 5,1 920
D ockweiler,Edward Vincent C al ifornia S ept .D ogget‘t,BurtonL ee Oklahoma-L A ug.
D omer,William S amuel Pennsylvania June'
D resler,Henry C lay- " n u. D elaware M ay -29,1 920
D ugan,Hammond James Oklahoma June 1 9,1 920D uke,Irving T errill Virgin-la JuneD unn,Peter Henry Hill _ C olorado- A L “ ; Jline:D uval l,Will iamHoward Virgini a_ JuneD yer,T homas Harold _ -1 ; M issouri _ June’
1 2,1 920
E arl,Kenneth Pennsylvani a June 9, 1 920
E ckberg,Walter T heodore N ewYork June“
1 0, 1 920
E dgar,Harold Brown_ do Sept.
E dwards, L ouis Benjamin June‘
24, 1 920
Ekstrom, C larence Eugene W'
isconsin June '
Elliott,A rthur B everly" West Virginia-EL; JuneE ll is,E zra M atthews M assachusetts’
. July 28,1 920
E llis,N orman Wyatt M issouri A ug.
Engeman,John T homas,ir N ew S ept . 1 6,1 920E rdmann,Will iam L awrence; Indiana June 9, 1 920
E ricsso'
n,Hampton M aturin ‘
N ew York June'
1 7, 1 920
E s'
mond,R obert W ell ington' June 11 920
E vans,C hesley M cA llister June 1 4,1 9 1 9
E vans,GeorgeWashington,ir June'
-1 6,1 920
Evans,William A shby,ir Florida June‘
: 9,1 920
Fairbairn,D onald William July 2, 1 920
Falge,Francis M arion Wisconsin_ June 1 5, 1 920
Farrell,Joseph A loysius, ir C olorado S ept . 2, 1 920
Ferguson, James Will iam,jr.. N orth C arolina S ept; 25, 1 920
Ferriter,C harles A rthur JuneFike,C harles L aird do
Fines,C lifiord A shton -L 2 June 1 5,1 920
Fish,Howell C hurch JuneFisher,William Gooding do June 1 4,.1 920
M ERIT ROL L — “ GRA DUA T ‘
IN G C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 92 4)
N ames
Fletcher,Floyd M ason
Floed,Hi ckory C arterFlynn,James M artinFolger,C lintonHayward FranusFowler,Joseph WilliamFrance,William C ookFrancis,D ennis L arkin
Fraser,T homas E dwardFreels,A rchieJamesFrench,Forest James
French,WalterHunttFurth,Frederick RaymondG
'
allagher,E dward Francis
Garnet,Wayne N eal
Ganahl,Richard GregoryGarcia,Henry FrederickGardner,FrancisHarttGarvin,Joseph HawleyGates,Herbert KennethGibbons,Joseph Howard,irGlass,BenjaminWeaver
Gminder,E dward E vans
Goldthwaite,RobertGoodall,HenryWill iamGore,T om,ir
Gouin,M arcel Emile A lcanGraesser,Walter M ax
Granbery,George M cR ee
Grandfield,Francis JosephGregor,Orville Francis
Griese,A rthurA dolphGrifli th, T homas R ichards,irGwinn,L ouisHunter-" J
Hake,George EdwardHall,HarrellWilloughby
Hangs,JamesFrederickHarmon,A lvin Bassett
Harris,John C loughHarrison,HenryHartwell _
Hartman, Frederick C harles,ir
Hartwig,Glenn R oyHarvey,WarrenWallace
Hatch er,R obert S tetinius
Hawkinson, L eslie HermanHayes,J ohn A loysiusHayes, John D anielHays,Will iam S laughterHayter,Hubert M ontgomeryHeddens,Francis .
M arion f
S tate from‘
whichappointed
- Q
M ay 27, 1 920
June 9, 1 920
A ug. 1 3,1 920
M aine S ept . 1 6, 1 920N ew York June 1 5,1 920
Oklahoma S ept .C olorado June 29,1 920Virginia June 1 0,1 920
M assachusetts S ept . 3, 1 920
Ill inois S ept . 1 8, 1 920M ay 29, 1 920
June 1 5,1 920
S ept. 23,1 920A ug.
A ug. 1 6, 1 920
S ept ._1 4, 1 920
S ept . 1 1 , 1 920June 1 5, 1 920
do
June 9,1 920
A labama do
Pennsylvania June 1 5, 1 920
Alabama A ug. 3, 1 920
Kansas S ept . 1 , 1 920
Ohio June 1 , 1 920
M assachusetts June 9,1 920C onnecticut S ept. 1 6, 1 920
Indiana June 1 1 , 1 920
N orth C arolina June. 1 6, 1 920
C onnecticut A ug. 5, 1 9 1 9
A rkansas S ept 1 4, 1 920A ug. 4, 1 920
C alifornia June 9, 1 920
T exas June 1 7, 1 920
Pennsylvania A ug. 4,1 9 20
do June 1 6, 1 920
T exas do
Ohio June 1 5, 1 920
M innesota J une
Pennsylvania June 1 5,1 920M ichigan June 1 6, 1 920
D istrict of C o June 1 7,1 920
lumbia.
_C onnecticutM ichiganIndiana
T exasIll inois
N ew Yorkdo
A labamaVirginiaIndiana
M ERIT‘
ROL L é— GRAD U A T IN G C L A S S
5 25 members— for the last year of their academic course— Continued 4
M aximum
4 7
M ERIT ROM GM U A T TN G C L A SS
M'
erit, roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 9 24)
S tate fromwhichappointed
B edding,T ruman J ohnson _
Heine,M inor C harles
Heisser,A rthur R ogerHerlihy,Joseph LeeHerring, L ee RutledgeHerrington,L ewis Butler, irH ickey,WilliamA ugust "
,
H ill, S tuart WilliamHoffman,C harles M onroe E lmerHogg,John T homasHogle,James BernhardtHolbrook,John AmesHoller,WalkerWesleyHoltzclaw,John SmithHook,Francis M oore 1
Hooper,A rthur M ann
Hopkins,Howard-V animan
Hopping,Hallsted L ubeckHorne,D onald Francis
Horsch,A lfred C arlHough, C harles S amuelHoward,Henry Peyton,irHowland,George FelixHubbard, C richton N ewellHuck ins,T homas A verillHudnall,James Henry N attHull,L eon C linton_
Hunt,A lan T horntonHunter,E dward N icholsWilcoxHurst,A drian M elvin
Hyatt John Kenneth _
Hyde,Jere D avid
Hyman,Willford M iltonIlsemann,Frederick Joseph NewYorkIrish,E lijahWarriner
Jaudon, L eonard BatesJohnson,Joseph FrederickJohnson,L eonWymanJohnson,R ichard Fitz-J ames,irJohnson,Robert Henry GlassJones,Howell A rvonKanakanui ,Will iamA thertonKearns,M ichael IgnatiusKeliher,R obert Hul lKelly,Samuel GuernseyKennaday,John M artinKent,Harry GordonKerrick,A lfred HallKeyer,Robert A rthur,irKing,George C arleton
Kirkland, T homas Jefierson,irKissam,Gordon D enslow
K line, A rnold R alph
N ew M exico
Ohio,
do _
M assachusettsOklahoma_
Kentucky
N ew JerseyC olorado
N ew YorkN ewHampshireIllinois
A rkansas
M arylandIllinois
T ennessee
M issouri
N ew M exicoRhodeIsland
M assachusettsVirginiaOhio
N ew YorkC ali fornia
M issouri
M ississippiA labamaN orth C arolinaVirginiaIllinois
South D akotaA t largeM assachusettsA ri z ona
N ewJerseyN ewYorkPennsylvaniaM ississippiA rizonaM innesotaSouth C arolinaNew YorkOhio
S ept .JuneA ug.
JuneJuneJuneJuneJulyJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJune
1 0,1 920
1 5,1 920
2 3,1 920
1 0, 1 920
Junedo
JulyJune 1 1 ,1 920
June 1 9,1 920
June 2 8, 1 920June 1 1 , 1 920
do_
JuneJuneJuneJulyJuneSept.S ept.JuneSept;JuneJuneSept.A ug.
JuneJuneM ay
JulyJuneM ay
JulyJuneJulyJuneJuneJulyJuneJulyS ept .June
.l 5,l 92o
3, 1 920
t
2,1 920
1 6,1 920
25, 1 920
1 2,1 920
1 6,1 920
1 5,1 920
June 1 9, 1 920
M ERIT RonL+GRA D U A T rN G 1 CL A S S 49
5 25 membersé —for thelast gearof theiracademic courses —Continued
M aximum
.58 3 1
2 1 0
1 64
84 1 6
1 96
470
1 55
898
3290
259
330
51 4
8 1 26
327
1 51
74
1 77
3203
1 80
e408
523 1
396
3 1 22
M O44S
397
379
452
5 1 7
438
328
406
346
507
96 .
62
M ERIT RO L L —. GRAD UA T IN G C L A S S
M 'erit roll of the
‘ midshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 924)
N ames
Kreiser, A lexanderWalter,ir
L aidlaw, James ScottL ajeunesse,Roy Warren
L amberth,Hugh RodmanL andstreet,James C ollins
L arson,Robert Warren
L atimer, Samuel E dwin
L ayton,E dwin T homasL az ell, James D raperL each,Walter D ennison,irL ee,C harles L oomis
L eman,Ar thur L ouis,ir
L everett,A rthur Bentley,L ewis,Joseph N ewton,ir
L inholm,Albert RussellL inthicum,T heodoric C layL loyd,D avid JamesL ockhart,R obert Green
L ovejoy,James D onovanM acD onald,Frank WadsworthM acL ean, Sumner KinsmanM agly,A ustenVolkerM allory,Francis,-ir
M ansfield,WilliamN oel
M arshall,T ed C onger
M artin,D aniel JeromeM artin,
'
Hugh JackM athews ,B ob OrrM atteucci,George AmadeeM cA fee,Ralph D onaldM ccaleb,WilliamR eed
M ccallum,D aniel JohnstonM cD aniel,Ralph T homasM cD onald, C harles C larkeM cD onald, C harles E dgarM cD onough,James FrancisM cD owell,N evill eL ivingstonM cFadden,A rchibald GeorgeWmM cIntosh,JamesHiramM cKee,Ira C harles
M cL aughlin,A lonz oE arl
M cLean,D onald FitzroyM cL ean,E phraimRankin,ir
1 C hanged from “L ishness.
S tate fromwhichappointed
M imics ota
T ennessee
1 8
D istrict of C c July 1 8
lumbia.
West Virginia
- ‘ fi
PennsylvaniaIdaho
A labama
M assachusetts
M assachusetts-do
C al iforniaM assachusettsG eorgiaC olorado
N ew Jersey
N ebraskaSouth C arolina
M assachusetts'
S outh C arolinaM innesotaC aliforniaPennsylvaniaN ew YorkWashington
'
M i'
ssissippi
June 1 7,1 920A ug. 3,1 920
June 1 2,1 920do
July 29,1 920
July 27,1 920
June 1 6,1 920A ug. 20, 1 920
June 20,1 9 1 9July 1 6,1 920
June 1 2,1 920do
July 30,1 920
Sept . 2,1 920
June 1 0,1 920June 27,1 9 1 9July 1 3, 1 920
June 1 6,1 920June
.
9,1 920
A ug. 1 3,1 920
July .22,1 920
June 28,1 920July 23,1 920
June 1 7,1 920
June 1 0, 1 920
June 30, 1 920June 1 2,1 920
S ept . 27, 1 920June 28,1 9 1 9June 9,1 920
July 1 3,1 920
Sept . 1 4,1 920do
June 27,1 91 9July 29, 1 920
Oct. 4,1 920
June 9, 1 920
JulyJune 1 7,1 920
Sept . 2,1 920
July 1 3,1 920
June 1 1 ,1 920
M ERIT ROL L— GRAD UA T I N G . C L A SS
5 25members— for the last year of their academic course—Continued
M aximum
5 1
' M ERIT RTOL L — GRAD UA T IN G C L A S S
M erit roll of the midshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 924)
S tate fromwhich D ate ofappointed admission
M cL ean,Hugh BuchananM cL eod,Robert D ouglas,irM cPeake,L awrence JohnM eints, C harles GriffithM ellon,Wilbur L amont -sl iM ercer,Preston V irginius;M ichelet,William Giers
M iller,Harold BlaineM ills,R alph E rskine - L
M inter. R obert‘OctaviusM itchell ,William James _ _
M ontg omery,George C annonM oore,E lliott M cFarlan
M oore,Will iam T homasM organ,A rmand M alcolmM o
‘
rrill ,JohnHenry -2
M orrow, S amuel Howard _
M oss,R ichard S tanl eyM urphy,E lbert M ason
N apier, T homas D ouglasN eale,E dgar T ilghmanN asser; C lyde JuliusN ewman,GlennN ichol, B romfield BradfordN orcross,M alcolmAmbroseN orman,Oliver L eGrandN uesse,L ouisWerner
N ann,‘
IraHudson
Oden, Solomon Frederick‘
Oexle,C harles WilliamOgle,Gerald BarkerOpie, John N ewton, 3dOstertag,Will iamR ogers 1
Oswald,A dolph HenryPage,Herrmann GarretsonPahl,James R obertPalmer,E lbert A lonz o,irParker,E lton C ouncilPatten,William L yman
Patterson,GeorgeWarren,ir
Penny,R ichard JosephPerkins,A lbert N oblePerry,R oger E disonPetersen,Wallis FrederickPeterson,George E dmundPeterson,George E dwardPhelps,Woodward
Phill ips,N eill
Phillips,Rogfir D exterPlayter,R ichard E lstonPottle,James H enry,irPrice, C laiborne HenryPurple,William C harles
Quale,A rthur M aurice
54 M ERIT ROL L — G RA DUA T IN G C L A S S
flIerit roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 924)
S tate fromwhich D ate ofN ames
appointed admission
275 Quinn,Bertrand D ominic M assachusetts264 Ragan,T homas C ameron1 89 R amsey,D onald James455 Randolph,A ndrew Kennedy "
T exas8 0 263 Randolph,A lfred Pace
”
8484 Rasbach,Joris Bliss N ew YorkRawlins,E dward Wh ite
A t largeRees e,C laudeB urton
Reith,George,irReplinger,C harles Francis
Rharnstine,John RufusRhea,Fitzhugh L eeR ice,L ester KimmeRichards,William L ester M arylandR ichter. Henry E dwardR icketts,James Brewerton,ir N ebraskaR iggs,Paul HughesR itchie,T homas C alvinRoane,V irginius R andolph
Robillard,George N elson
Robinson,Hunter R ichey Pennsylvania.
Rode,Herman C arl,irWashington.
R ook,Eugene C larkRooney, John BartholomewRose,Rufus Edwards,j r
Roths,M il tonHolmesRucker, C olby GuequierreRufi olo, L ouis JosephRuhsenberger,John Roger i
S all,Herman Ii
S anders,S amuel,irSanford,John R ichard,irSawyer,M erleAlexanderS ayre,Robert Eugene“ ;
S cheibeler,J ohn J acob
Schenck,C harlesA lexander,J rS chreiner,M ax
Scott,Winfield WayneS eaward,Eugene T refethenS eay,E rskine A ustinSessions,Frank E dward,irShanklin,Elliott West
S hannon,John T ravisS harp,L ouis D ent,irS heldon,Herbert ParryShepherd, C harles E dwardS hiebler,Prentice A lbionShively,Joshua C oleman 1
Short,Wallace BroughtonS hultz,T heodore Joseph
M ERIT RO'L L —Le-GRAnU A T iN G brie-S S
5 25 members—a far the last year of thei r academic change— Continued
M aximum
55
56
s335
242
269
3424
86
u475
M ERIT ROL L — GRA DUA T IN G C L A S S
iWerit roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class Cclass of 1 924)
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
S hurnaker, C resswell Sutton PennsylvaniaS iegrist,Paul Werner
S iegrist,WalterW'
ill iamS immonds,N orman BlakesleyS immons,W'
illiam FranklinS imonton,R ichard M etcalfS inclair,George.A ngus
S inger,S amuel JacobS isson,
’
T homas Upton,irSmith
,
Harold PageSmith,James WalterSmith,Perry KennethSoutherland, T homas C hapman_
S outhworth,Harrison BelknapS pahn,John E dwardS peer, Joseph Gordon_
S teenberg,Gerald HuntingtonS tephens,Emory WyseS tevens,Henry Putnam,jr
S toddard,Gordon M illard
S tone,Will iam PercyS tormes,M ax C lifiord
S tott,GeorgeWi nfield
S tout,R ichard FarnamS trohecker,Franklin A ugustusS tuart,C harlesJosephStuart,Wal ter JamesSullivan,James EugeneSutlifi,Robert C alvin_
Swart,Robert L ee,'
r
Sweeney,John M alcolm_
Sylvester,Harold M acT avishT ammany,WilliamPenuelT aylor,Edwin James
‘
,ir
T aylor,Joseph Irwin,irT eller,M yron S teadmanT emple,HarryBrighamT empleton,T homas HarryT hew,J oseph PhillipT homas,L loyd HowdenT hompson,A rthur L eeT hompson,
'W illiamBristolT ichenor,M urray JonesT iemroth,Harold HermanT onkin,C harles
~
T rythall, irT opper,James Russell
T owner,George C rosbyT ownsend,A rthur M arion
T racy,Osgood VoseT urner,T homas A lexander irVerge,WilliamE rnestVieweg,WalterVictor RudolphV os,Robert A drian
Ohio
N ew‘
YorkIndiana
Hawaii
D istrict of C c
lumbia.
N ew. JerseyM ississippiA labama- “
r;
C onnecticutN ew YorkSouth D akotaN ew YorkPennsylvaniaOklahoma
WisconsinFlorida
S outh D akotaWisconsinKentuckyN ewYorkOfegon
N ew JerseyOregon
VirginiaN ewJ erseyN ewHampshireWisconsinPennsylvamaN ewYorkL ouisiana
D elaware
N orth D akotaPennsylvaniaN ewYorkIllinois
PennsylvaniaM ichiganVermont
A rkansasN ew
‘
JerseyC alij ornia
A rizonaVirginiaM ontanaM ichiganN ewYorkM ississippiM assachusettsN ew YorkM ichigan
.
K- Q —x '
S ept .
June 1 1 ,1 920
JuneJune 1 9, 1 920
JuneA ug. 1 2, 1 920
June
JuneJuly 2,
‘
1 920
June 29,1 920
do
Jul yA ug.
JulyJune . l ,
'
ig2o
A ug.
JuneJuneJuneJuly 30,l92oA ug.
JuneA ug.
JuneA ug. 20,1 920
June 1 6, 1 920
JulyJuneJune 1 0, 1 920
JuneJuneJuneJulyOct.
JuneJuneJuneJulyJune 1 2, 1 920
June 1 6, 1 920
June 1 5, 1 920
do
do
JuneJulyJuneA ug
JulyJune 25, 1 920June 1 2,1 920
J une .1 1 , 1 920
JuneJune 1 2, 1 920
M ERIT ROLL —efi-GnAD U A T IN G C L A S S
525 ,members -for the last year of their academic course —Continued
M aximum
7
M ERIT ROL L— GRAD UA T IN G C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the graduating class (class of 1 9 2 4)
N ames “a
sses“
V osseller, A urelius Bartlett Illinois June 1 2,1 920Waid, Robert T eese C alifornia June
.
1 1 ,1 920
Walbridge,Vern Pennsylvania Sept. 20,1 920Waldron,John C harles South D akota June 1 6, 1 920Walker,D onald Seymour N ew Jersey do
Waller, George Wa sh in gto 1 1 M aryland A ug 1 7, 1 920
D eane,i r.
Waller,Raymond RandolphWalsh,A lbert J osephWarburton,A udley L yne smWarren John T hompsonWatts,E thelbertWeaver,Paul L eicester FordWebb, Richard C hristopher, irWeeden,WilliamWager,ir
Weir,A lan
Welsh,D . EmmettWheeler,Homer Booz erWhitehead,E dmundWinstonWight,D avid D ean
Wilkin,Warren D udleyWilkins, C harles Warren
Wilkinson,E dwin R ichardWilliams,A rtie L eon,jrWill iams,Jack BankheadWilliams,Roy D ean- “ L
Williams,S tanley A rthurWill is,D onald GossWilson,Hal Kay
Wilson,Ralph EnsignW inecofi
'
, C larence L indsayWinslow, C ameron M cRae,jr
Witmer,E dgar L ewisWolowsky,Joseph E dwardWood,A rthur C rosbyWood,C h ester C larkWoodward,Joseph JanvierWoodyard,Edward L enderWorthington, Joseph M use
Wright Joseph M artin PickettWymond,John E llsworthYeomans,E lmer EugeneYoung,E dward WatsonYoung,Rufus C alhoun,irZelenka,Bernard T homas
n ‘ 0
- o
o
T ennessee
M assachusettsWisconsinT ennessee
PennsylvaniaVirginiaC onnecticutRhode Island
D elaware
M ichiganS outh C arolinaVirginia
N ew JerseyFlorida
T exasdo
M innesotaC onnecticutVermontIl linois
OregonN orth C arolinaA t largeN ew York
‘
JulyJune 1 1 ,1 920Oct 1 ,1 920
June 1 6, 1 920
June 1 5, 1 920June 1 1 , 1 920
do
June.
July -9, 1 920
June 9,1 920
June 1 0, 1 920June 9, 1 920
do
June 1 5,1 920
do
June 1 1 , 1 920
A ug. 3,1 920
June ’
1 8,1 920
A ug. 4,1 920
Jul y 29, 1 920
July 23, 1 920
June 1 0, 1 920
A ug. 5, 1 920
June 1 5,1 920
M ay 27,1 920
June 1 0, 1 920
C olorado
GeorgiaM aryland
JuneSept .June
9,1 920
8, 1 920
9, 1 920
A t largeT exasM arylandA t largeIndiana
do
Rhode Island
O regon1 L ouisiana
June 1 6, 1 920July 1 4, 1 920
June 9,1 920
S ept . 1 1 , 1 920A ug. 6, 1 920
June 9,1 920
do
A ug. 23,1 920
June 1 0, 1 920
, M ERIT ROL L ’ T GRAD U A T IN G C L A S S
525 membersé for the last‘
year of their academic courseT —Continued
M aximum
59
IVIERIT ROL L OF'
T H E PRE S E N T FIRS T C L A S S
lM erit'
roll of the midshipmen of the present first class (class of 1 925)
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
A bercrombie, lVIilo Bolling,ir July 1 1 ,1 92 1
A dams,R obert L ee June 25,1 92 1
A gnew,WilliamWalter,jr June 22, 1 92 1
A hlgren,G ilbert Otto Ill inois do
A llen,R obert N eil Kentucky July 8,1 92 1
A llen,Rufus Forrest Georgia 3 June 22, 1 92 1
A llgood,D wight M aurice N orth C arolina June 28,1 92 1
A nderson,C harles Harper, T exas June 24,1 92 1
A ustin, C lanton E arl C onnecticut July 1 4, 1 92 1
Bacon,Barton E lijah,jr T ennessee June 24, 1 92 1
Badger,A shby Jenk ins Utah do
Bailey,M ax Harrison Pennsylvania June 28, 1 92 1Bains,GeorgeWashington A labama do
Banks,James Oliver,ir A t large N ov . 7,1 92 1
Barnhart,Fred C arl Ind iana June 22, 1 92 1
Bataga. EmilioM olina P . I A ug
Beard,D onald C harles M ichigan JuneBeck ,E dward L ouis N ew York June 28, 1 92 1
Beecher,William Gordon,ir M aryland June 22, 1 92 1
Beers,Will iamHenry, ir Hawaii do
Behan,A ustin C arty Rhode Island June 24, 1 92 1
Bell,Harman Brown,jr Pennsylvani a do
B enson,WilliamHoward West Virginia do
Benson,William L ewis N ew York July 9, 1 92 1
Benz,A lfred Jacob Kansas June 22, 1 92 1
B iggs,George Prettyman M issouri June 1 92 1
B ill ing,Fred C hes ter_ _ N ew York June 23,1 92 1B lackwell,C ecil L lewellyn Virginia June 25,1 92 1
Blakeslee,HoraceWilliam A t large Oct. 3 1 , 1 92 1
Blanchard,John D ean Wisconsin June 28, 1 92 1
Blanche, John Goodman,ir L ouisiana A ug. 20,1 920
Blue,John S tuart South C arolina_ _ June 9, 1 920
Bond, C harles A lonzo Pennsylvania June 30, 1 92 1
Brant,E dwin V an -do June 1 4, 1 920
Brash,Frederick C harles C linton _ _ M ississippi JulyBrennan,JohnWeston M issouri June 24, 1 92 1
Brian,Henry T homas A t large do
Briggs,C ameronBrink ,Francis M ontana A ug. 5,1 92 1
Broadbent,John Howard Pennsylvania June 25, 1 92 1
Broadley, C harles Vincent M assachusetts -do
Brown,John Brewer M aryland Sept . 2,1 92 1
Brown,John Geral d M innesota June 25, 1 92 1
Brown,T homas M arkham ~Ohio June 28,1 92 1
Buerkle,E lmer C harles C alifornia June 22,1 92 1
Burhans, C harles Hobart M innesota June 23, 1 92 1
B urkhead,L ingurn Hinde N ew M exico June 27, 1 92 1
Burling,D onald Oscar Illinois July 29,1 920
Burrowes,T homas,ir N ew York June 25, 1 92 1
Burton, John D av id,ir Georgia July 8, 1 92 1
Bush,D onal d A ubrey -do A ug. 1 6, 1 92 1
C aldwell,Rex Smith 3M issouri JuneC arrington,James Herbert S outh C arolin do
C arson,Joseph M alcolm Virginia June
Pennsylvania June 23, 1 92 1
A ge
at date ofadmission
Sea servicein practice
ships
62
1 70
274
385
426
3 1 9
1 39
1 58
262
3642353
4 30
1 29
1 87
446
398
251
(M 79
1 40
0432
424
50
89$ 26
261
43
61
4 1 7
M ERIT'
ROL L OF TH E PRE S E N T FIRS T C L A S S
M erit roll fof the midshipmen of the present first class (class of for the
Sea serviee
S tate fromwhichN ames
appomted
Years
M MI
Days
C ash,James Braxton VirginiaC hamplin,Jackson Selover OklahomaC harles,R oland Wilbur M issouri
C harlson,JohnA dolph,ir C aliforniaC hillingworth,C harles Frederick,ir M ichi ganC hitwood,John S tephen M issouri - n
C hristensen,Weldeman N ichlous Indiana
N ebraskaC lark,Perley M esser Iowa
C lark,Robert S tewartC leland,John Belton,ir a
C lyde,Paul M oore
C olborn,Will iamBrewster PennsylvaniaC oleman,Robert Irvine do
C ollins,C lifford J oseph
C ompton,Philip D owC opping,Bennett SmithC owie,T errence Ritchie a
C ox,Glenn M cC oy
C reasor,Ph ilip Swanton
Griddle, C lement Robert
C ronin,Robert EmmetC rosley,Paul C unninghamC rowley,E dward D upuis
C ulver,Ira Guy _
D ahlke,Homer OscarD aniel,T illett SharpeD avidson,Walter BunnD avis,E rnest JudsonD avis,R ichard,ir
D awson,Kenneth VernonD ay,D e Vere L esterD ay,John SanfordD earth,Harold Fletcher usin
D elaney,John Francis,irde S haz o,Jack PerryD illavou,C laude A rthurD owden,James PageD reier,
‘
D avid C ollin
D rury,M artin JosephD ufek,George JohnD uncan,Robert JamesD unlop,M alcolmGlaisterD urham,R itchey L eeD urnell,Frank L enox -l
D yer,Robert L awton Washington.
Eaton,WilliamA damsEdmundson,Edward HaroldE ggers,Freemont B aldwinE ller,Ernest M cN eil l
E lliott,R ichard EnglishFarrell,Arthur D onovan Joseph
South C arolina
N ew JerseyOklahomaN orth D akotaM issouri
WashingtonWisconsinAl abamaIllinois
do
N ebraskaT ennessee
Iowa
KansasN ewYorkN orth C arolina
M arylandM ichiganM ontana
A ug.
JuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneA ug.
JuneJuneA ug.
JulyJuneSept .JuneJulySept .JuneJuneJuly
9,1 920
1 1 , 1 92 1
1 2,1 92 1
WisconsinM assachusettsA labamaIowa
VirginiaWisconsinRhode Island
IllinoisC olorado
‘
M innesotaA rkansas “ ?
-do
June 28, 1 92 1June 25,1 92 1June 23,1 92 1JulyJul y 26,1 92 1
M ay 27,1 92 1
Jm e 1 0,1 920
A ug. 1 6,1 92 1
July 1 3,1 92 1
JuneJuneAug. 1 2,1 920
June 28,1 92 1July 2 1 ,1 92 1
A ug.
June 23,1 92 1
do
JulyJuly
M ERIT‘
ROL L on THE PRE SEN T FIRS T C L A S S 63
third year of their academic course—470 members— J une,'
1 924— Continued
. 1 6‘
43. 92
26. 01
36. 78
34. 80
34. 56
36. 00 .
32 . 28
35. 1 6
.34 44
37. 92
. 35. 64
34. 68‘
33. 60
3 1 . 32
. 33. 00
43. 50
60
3 1 . 74
35. 88
42 . 54
37. 26
4 1 . 64
39. 1 2
33. 00
3 1 . 98
30. 54
3 1 . 44 .
37. 08
33. 60
32 1 6
32. 22
34. 68
. 34. 68
3 1 . 62
33. 54
30. 78’
35. 1 6
37. 1 4
3 1 . 20
31 . 38
37. 86
36. 36
29. 58
31 . 92
39. 54 1
3 3a 60
.393 00
32 . 46.
l
‘
24 . 04
20
_23. 24 .36. 72
.25. 36
1 27356“ T in 34. 68
1
. 1
i" £44: 1 6
27. 92 1 5 . i
1 1'
1 540u44
64 “
M ERIT 1 1 30 1 1 1 . OF .
“T'
H E f PRE S E N T .FIRS T {OER-S S
M eritirollflof theimidShi pmen-of thepresentfirst class (class of
’
1 925) for the
S eaServiceA ge.
at date of in practiceadmission ships
Order'
S tate fromwhichN ames
appOlnted
Fee;GeorgeEdward -;I
Fennel,fFrank .Wesley,in. i s;
Ferguson,HarryL ee,irField,BrentonHolbrookFitzGerald,PhillipHenry-“
t ;
Florance,John Edwards;Foose;RobertfPaul
Ford,Walter C hilcott N ewYork -l . n
Fowler,GeorgeBinghamFowler,T hompson.Fletcher-R " ;
French,JohnFitZ éHughGaines,R ichard Kenna
Gallery,WilliamOnahanGardner,Robert N ealGellhorn,
“
George,inGibbs,
~RobertHenryGibson,PersiforFraser,irGill,
“
C ecil'B
'
atchelder -u i
Gill,Graham C haflin
Gingras,Richard HermusG0etz,: C harles M oran
Goldenson,David 4 :
Goodwin,Ernest S idney L ewis
Goodwin,John‘
FrohockGordinier,Virgil .FrancisGoudeau
‘
,L ionel C laudius
Goulett,W i fred Bradley,Graham“
,William: .Walter,irGraubart,A rthur ’
Harrison -4
Greenlee,D avid l ass,in -f
Gregerson,C larenceEdward-g Wisconsin
S‘
outh C arolina-1
Grimes,C liftonGarvin-" r;
Grove,Robert L eeGuthrie,R ichard AllenHamilton,Rayburn M athewHammock,John C owlingHammond,S tephenA lexander,ir
Harcourt,S tantonHindeHarlow,James Bradford
Harris,Harold D ouglasHart,John N eely
Haugen,C larence E dwardHaviland,JamesWilliam,33d N ewYorkHeadden,WilliamRamon‘
T ennessean
Hede.A dolph-LHenderson,Harry Havelock s
Hickey,T homas Joseph M issouri-" J
A rkansasM assachusetts
M assachusetts
South C arolina
Pennsylvania
M assachusetts
June 27,1 92 1
June 23,1 92 1M ay 27,1 92 1
Aug. 1 7,1 92 1
June' 24,1 92 1JuneJuly 1 9,1 92 1
JulyJuneM ay 27,1 92 1
June 22,1 92 1JuneJuly ’
1 3,1 92 1
JuneJune 25, 1 92 1JuneJune 22, 1 92 1June 24, 1 921June 23, 1 92 1July 8, 1 92 1
June 23, 1 92 1June 25, 1 92 1JulySept . 1 , 1 92 1July 1 92 1
Ju‘
ne
'M ERIT ROIlL'
DE . ITH E PRE S EN T FIRS T ‘ C L'
A S S
third year -of their'
academic course— 470.
members = —J une,'
1 9 24— Continued
M aximum
29. 94
65
66 .M ERIT . ROL L on. THE“
PRE S EN T, FIRS T C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the present first class (class of 1 925 ) for the
N ames
Hirst,George C haloner,irHoag,L eslie FarmerHobbs,Ira E arlHofiner, C arleton C rosbyHogaboom,Robert E dwardHord,Paul WhitefieldHourihan,John JosephHouse,John C arletonHoward,WilliamBaker,irHoward,William S tamps,irHoweth,L inwood S ylvesterHowlett,Kirby Smith,i rHubbard,Harry EnsorHughes,John Gress,irHull,D avid RyersonHurd,Kenneth C harlesHurt,D avid A lbertIvey,John C ourtneyJackson,A lexander,irJarrell,A lbert E dmondsonJensen,C lyde M arcus
Johns,John GrahamJohnson,Reginald C larenceJohnson,T heodoreWoolsey,ir
Johnson,Victor Emmanuel
Johnson,WarrenWhitneyJordan, J ul ian BethuneKarns,Franklin D .,it
Kelley,Bruce D raperKershner,George Francis
Kimes,T homas JosephKimzey,Ralph Ph llbrookKing,George JosephKing, ShaneHastingsKirten,William,ir
Kivette,Frederick N ormanKnowles,James PatrickKramer,Alwin D altonKrieg,WilliamBenjaminL afia
‘
n,John JamesL ambrecht,John OsgoodL anders,Wilbur N elsonL ankford,C reighton KirbyL enston,A ubrey GilpinL arkin,R ichard AlexanderL arson,Harold Oscar
L atrobe,William C lai borneL awrence,John RobertsonL eahey,George A loysius,irL ee,Eugene S toneL eggett,A ubrey BartramL eicht,Joseph
S tate fromwhichappointed
-Q
Q
e S ea serviceat dal e of in practiceadmission ships
N eW YorkN orth C arolina
‘
do
M arylandT ennessee
PennsylvaniaM assachusettsM ichiganVirginiaGeorgiaA labama
A rkansasOklahomaM arylandM issouri
A rkansasOregonPennsylvaniaM assachusettsPennsylvaniaN ewYork
M assachusettsM issouri
Illinois
M ichi ganA t largeOklahomaM assachusettsM issouri
Indiana
M innesota
June 28, 1 92 1June 25, 1 92 1July 1 9, 1 92 1M ay 27, 1 92 1
A ug.
June 23, 1 921July 27, 1 92 1June 23, 1 92 1July 6, 1 92 1
June 28, 1 92 1June 1 4, 1 920June 25, 1 92 1June . 28, 1 92 1
June 22, 1 92 1June
‘
30, 1 920
June 28, 1 92 1do
June 24, 1 92 1June 28, 1 921June 27, 1 921June 22, 1 92 1S ept 22, 1 92 1June 23, 1 92 1M ay 26, 1 92 1
July 27, 1 92 1Aug. 1 8, 1 92 1
J une 25, 1 92 1
June 29, 1 92 1June 1 2, 1 920June 28, 1 92 1
do
July 8, 1 92 1
June 1 0, 1 920M ay 27, 1 92 1
June 23, 1 92 1June 25,1 92 1
June 23,1 92 1
June 23,1 92 1S ept .June 23,1 92 1A ug. 1 6, 1 92 1
June 23,1 92 1
June 25,1 92 1
S ept .do
June 22,1 92 1
JuneA ug. 1 6, 1 92 1
June 24,1 92 1
June 1 5, 1 920
June 1 2,1 920
June 28,1 92 1
JulyJune 25,1 92 1
M ERI T'
ROL L OF T HE s na T FIR S T C L A S S
third year of their academic course— 470 memhers— J u’
ne, 1 924- Continued
M aximum
67:
68 M ERIT ROL L OF T H E PRES E N T FIRS T C L AS S
M erit'
roll’
of the midshipmen of the present first class (class of for the
N ames
L ent,Willis A shfordL ester,T helmanL ewis,JohnHampdenL ind,WilliamGeorge HerculesL ion,Paul M iller,irL ocke,Preston GrantL ong,JohnHarveyL ong,V ictclr D ismukesL oomis,Byron BenjaminL oomis,Frederick KentL oos,Wallace M ead
L ove,Henry HamiltonL owrey,Searcy JamesL
‘
udewig,Joseph William
L uke,Raymond HenryL yon,Harry N elson
L yon, Percy HaverlyL yons,Raymond R ichardM acIntyre,A lexanderM acKinnon,B anald M acNicolM adsen,Harold V ester B roe
M ahoney,George FrancisM alone,C lyde Francis -s
M ann,E verett E dwardM arkham,L ewis M errill,ir
M arshall,Harvey N ixonM arshall,William J efferson
M ason,Redfield
M atson,RosserHollowayM ay,Benjamin,2dM ayer,Walter Scott,jrM cA dam,Sherry T homas,.jr
M cAulifie,C lifford L eoM cC all,Francis BayardM cD aniel,C harlesD eM otte
M cFal],Edward -A lspaugh ..
M cFarlane,Robert N ortonM cGeoy,T homas JamesM cGirr,William PhilipM cGown, M onroeYoung,jrM eGraw,T homas M arion
M cKinney,C harles SchumanM cM urtrey, T homas B radford
M cN ally,James A nthonyM cN ulta,Herbert,irM cshane,Julian JohnsM elgaard,JohnL eslieM elintz ,Paul R ichardM ensing,Robert Julius KlausM essmer,
'WilliamL eRoy
M iller,C harles FrankM iller,Harry FankerM iller,James M ason
r
Age Sea serviceat date of in practiceadmission ships
S tate fromwhichappointed
r
M ERIT ROL L OF TH E PRE S EN T FIR S T C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the present first class (class of 1 9 25) for the
N ames
M iller,John M endelssohn
M iller,L ermond HortonM itchell,HamptonM oeller,Walter Fred
M oore,A lbert S idneyM oore,C arltonHerbert
M oore,John GilmanM orr i son, C arl HawkinsmithBarnes
M orrison,JulianKnox,jrM oseley,S tanley PageM owatt,Warren PotterM umma,M orton C laire,irM unroe,Frank A sbury,jrM urphy,J ohnWilliams,j r
M uth,E dward GeorgeN aquin,Oliver FrancisN ellis,Richard EugeneN evins,Joseph Henry,jrN ew,WilliamA dolphN ewton,Everett Phelps,jrN ewton,Wallace Sheridan
N ickerson,Roger BrownN onweiler,Karl HermanN orman,Robert GentryO
’B rien,WilliamJohn
O’Hara,James Burtle
O’Keefe,GeorgeFellowsO
’N eil,C harlesHenry
Orville,Howard T homasOverstreet,George JacksonOwers,Frank D onovanPage,WaldoA ugustusPalmer,Robert C ameronParke,D onald D ean
Parker,E dward N elson
Parker,T homas C arrollParks,L ewis Smi thParo,Eugene E dwardPaul,A lan C oylePadey,A lfred ReedPeterson,D onal d Al exanderPeterson,M artin RowlandPetross,L ynn C hismPhelan,George R ichardsonPhill ips,George L incolnPickens,Harold HenryPickton,Wil lis HenryPoore,John BayardPorter,Warren Frana
Pound,Harold C layPowell,M organ A llenPrintup,C arter Al stonPurmort,George L awrence
Sea service
S tate fromwhichappointed
M ississippi
Wisconsin
T ennessee
N ewYork
A ug. 8, 1 92 1
A ug. 2,1 92 1
Aug. 3,1 92 1
July 8,1 92 1
July 1 3,1 92 1
July 9,1 92 1
M ay 27,1 92 1
JulyJune 23, 1 92 1
June 30, 1 92 1Aug. 1 2, 1 92 1
June 22, 1 92 1June 23, 1 92 1June 25,1 92 1M ay
July 3 1 ,1 920
June 29,1 92 1June 23,1 92 1July 1 920
M assachusetts July 23,1 92 1
June 28,1 92 1Georgia July 26,1 92 1
C alifornia JuneN ewYork July 1 4,1 92 1
C olorado A ug. 1 0,1 92 1
N ewYork June 1 92 1
Kentucky Sept . 1 ,1 92 1
N orth C arolina June 29,1 92 1D elaware A ug. 1 7,1 92 1
Kentucky June 25,1 92 1Washington June 23,1 92 1M issouri do
M innesota JulyA ug. 1 6,1 92 1
June 24,1 92 1June 28,1 92 1June 2 1 ,1 920
June 25,1 92 1June 23,1 92 1June ‘
28,1 92 1
M ay 27,1 92 1
June 28,1 92 1do
June 22,1 92 1A ug. 5; 1 92 1
M ERIT ROL L DE . H RS-ii”
-QL A SS;
third year of their academic course—420 members—. f-J un
'
eggJ QQA-fiQontinued
m3o5368
*1 2
M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRE SEN T FIRS T C L A SS
M erit'
roll of the midshipmen of the present first class (class of 1 925) for the
at date of in practice
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
Putnam,WilliamHowardPyne, S chuyler N eilson
Query,James Victor,jrQuinn,A rthur RemmelR ahiser,M artin S tuartRainer,Gordon BenbowR ansom,Roy RalphR ay, C larence C
Reamy,T homas GordonReeves,Isaac S tockton Keith,jrReith,E dward VanderlipReither,Richard WilliamR eppy,John D avid
Reynolds, C arroll D ayneRhodes,WilliamKennedyRice,Herbert PaulR ichardson,Ewart C oridanRoberts,D avid Gillies
Roberts,L ewWallace
Robertson,John Berry,jrRobinson,J ames M arshall
R orschach,A nthony L awlessRosenberg,M illardRoss,D elbert Amos
Ryan, C harles M aurice
Sampson,WarrenBellS chell,Russell Henry E dwardS chicke,Herman E dwardSchleif,E dward L lewellynS chonland,Herbert EmeryS chreier,C larence JohnS chultz,William C hristian-A .
S cott;John M urphyScruggs,Joseph M arion
S eabury,C laire C lifiordS ears,N ormanWalkerS entman,Ralph A tkinsShahan,WilliamHenry Li
Shelton,A ctonA rtelle LS howell, C harles T ripler n
‘
S ides,J ohn Harold
S igel,C lintonHenryS ibler,William;S ilsbee, C harles SylvesterS ima,Frederick Frank
M aryland'
3 A ug 4,1 92 1
S impson,Samuel D ouglas ‘
A t large N ov 1 4, 1 92 1
S ims,Gelzer L oy'
all South C arolina July 1 5,1 92 1
S inger,Watson T witty M assachusetts June 22,1 92 1S laven,FranklinWilber West Virginia July 1 9, 1 92 1
S ledge, A lexander Al abama June 24,1 92 1Smith,C ecil L orane West Virginia June 29, 1 92 1
Smi th,C hester C arl S ept 1 , 1 92 1
Smi th,D ouglas E lwin N ewYork-x; A ug 1 3,-1 92 1
Idaho
N ew JerseyN orth C arolina
M arylandPennsylvani aA labama
M issoumT exasIndi ana
M assachusettsWest VirginiaM ichi ganM issouri
T exasVirginiaA t largeC aliforniaN ew JerseyN ewHampshireRhode Island
N orth D akotaSouth D akota
JuneM ay
JuneJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneA ug.
JuneJuneSept .JuneJuneLhfly
June.Aug.
JuneJuneJulyJuneJuneihfly
JuneJuneJune
. 22, 1 92 1
do
do
M ERIT ROL L .OF'
T HE PRE S EN T FIRS T C L A S S
third year of their academic course-
470 members— J une, 1 9 24— Continued
36. 08
73
74 M ERIT ~ ROL L OF‘
T HE PRESEN T FIRS T C L AS S
M eri t roll of the midshipmen'
of the present first class (class of 1 925) for the
at date of
S tate fromwhich D ate ofN ames
appomted admission
Smith,
Smith,James Stuart, jr - i " N ewHampshire June 23,1 92 1Smi th,L eicester R ichard July 1 3,1 92 1
July 1 9, 1 92 1
June 24, 1 92 1Smi th,Russell S imonds Oct 4,1 92 1
S teele,JohnWilliamS tephens,James M arion
S tickney,Fred Russell
S tolz,Francis Roland
S traub,William Glendon
S trong,WalterHartridgeS tryker,J oeWarren
Sturcken,WilliamAugustSugnet,L ee Farrand
Sullivan,C ornelius M artin
Sullivan,Eugene D ennis
Rhode Island
T arbox,George E dward,ir
T erry,WinthropEugeneT homas,Francis JamosT homas,T homas C arson_
T hompson,A rthur BoughtonT hompson,WilliamKennethT homson,Hugh Pollard
T hornton,R euben T homas,ir S outh C arolina
T imberlake,Frank SommerT odd,George L loydT olman,C harles Edward,irT onseth,T homas Henry
T ruesdell,WilliamHia1T rumble, Edward J ohnT ruxall, C harlesWib le
T ucker,D undas Preble N ew York"
.
T ullsen,Waldo
M ay 27,1 92 1
T uao,Paul Benjamin,ir
M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRE SE N T i FIRS T C L A S S
third year of their academic course— 470 members— J une, 1 924— 0 0ntinued
75
M ERIT -ROL L OF T HE PRE S E N T FIRS T . C L A S S
M erit roll of ‘ themidshipmen of the present first class (class of 1 9 25) for the
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
T yree,D avid M errill
Vanasse,Roland BenjaminV anM etre,M erle
vanN agell,John RensselaerVarian,D onald C ordVeeder,William SchuetzeVoge,Richard Georgevon Kleeck,Ernest S t. C lair,ir
-‘ C
Walker,E dward KeithWallace,L ewis
Wanglin,Byron C hase,jrWarder,Frederick BurdettWaterman,Hawley C hapelWaters,Hubert T empleWeeks, C harles S til lmanWellings,Joseph Harold
Weston, L ee‘
T ruax
Wheelock,A ustinWadsworthWhite,PhilipWickizer,Vernon D aleWilliams,Frederick Paul
Williamson,S idney RooseveltWillingham,Joseph Harris,irWilson,GeorgeAlexander,3dWilson,Joseph E dgar
Wogan,Rene S tevensWolcott,T heodore
Wright,BennettWoodWright,Fremont B ruce
Wright,George C harlesWright,WilliamL eslieZitzewitz,E lmerKurz
Sea service
M ERIT ROL L OF T H E PRES E N T SE C ON D C L AS S78
M erit~roll of the midshipmen of the present second class (class of 1 92 6)'
for
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
M onths
A bele,M annert L incoln M assachusetts
A dams, C harles BairdA dams,M alcolm S idney A labamaA ddison,E dward SpencerA gnew,D wight M erle
A itkens,L loyd John S idneyA lba,Bienveni do M oboA lbertson,D onal d GrieveA lexander,D onald Will iamA llen,WilliamGleason
A nderson,Willi am L ovettAnderson,William Wallace,j r
Armentrout,E rasmus Wilson,irA rmstrong,Justus M orris BrownRogersA rmstrong,Robert GordonA shton,E arl JohnA sserson,William C hristian,irA ylward, T heodore C harles,jrBaker,Geral d D aveyBaker,Robert de C ourseyBallman,Howard E dward
Barker,N athaniel C harles
Benner,Kenneth WachterBergeron,Haz e JosephBernet,A lbert E dward,irBernstein,Henry EmilBidwell,E dmund FrederickBiederman,Karl JosephB ierer,Bion Barnett,irB ird,Joseph L enoir
B irtwell,D aniel T homas,irBlack,Francis L ondonBlack,Hugh D avid.
Black,John Ferguson.
Blinn,Welford C harlesBoaz ,R ichard M cFall
N orth C arolina
D istrict of C o
West Virginia
Oklahoma
Boileau,Almerian RobinsonB olh
'
ng,T heodore D ixon.
B oorse,Henry A brahamBoughton E dward James,3dBoyle, C harles L eo M assachusettsBrady,Upton S linglufr',jr South D akota-IBrenneman,L eonardBrewer,James T heodoreB riner,C harles Emil.Broussard, C larenceB rown, B ert Franklin Utah
M ississippiBrown,Robert E dwin,ir
L ouisiana
Phil ippineIslands.
T ennessee
N ew Hampshire
JuneJuneSept .A ug.
JulyJuneJune
2 1 ,1 922
1 6,1 922
2,1 922
3, 1 922
1 8,1 922
23, 1 92 1
1 6,1 922
A ug. 2 1 , 1 922
JuneJuneJulyJuneJuneJune
do
JuneJuneJulyJuneJuneJuneJuneJuneS ept .JuneJune
‘ JuneJuly
2,1 922
1 4, 1 922
1 6,1 922
do
June 1 4,1 922
JuneJune
do
"
M ERIT ROL L -OF T H E PRE S EN T S E C ON D C L A S S 79
thesecond year of their academic course— 5 1 8'
members— J une,-1 924 —Continued
Sea service.
in practiceships
M aximumD ays
23. 80
80 .M ERIT ROL L .OF TH E PRESEN T SE C ON D C L A S S
M erit roll of .the midshipmen of the present~ se00nd class (class of 1 926) for
395*26
82
1 36
33
1 44
99
S tate fromwhich D ate ofN ames
appointed admission
Years M onths
Brownfield,John,Herbert
B ruton,Henry C hester
Buchanan,C harles A llenBurchett,Vincent BaldwinBurnside,John L ockwood, jrBurr
_
R ichard SouthwickB usck,VilhelmKlein
Busey,Francis L ee_
Bushnell,WilfredButler,A rthur HowardButler,C harles C haunceyButler,Frank T hrasherByrne,James Francis-n ;
.C aldwell,E arl S tevensC al laghan,Wil liam C arey " 1
C allahan,Joseph Wil liamC ampbell,D onald GilletteC ampbell,GeorgeWilliamC ampbell,Gordon A t largeC ampbell,N eil RobertC
_aplinger,Roger T homasC arlson, Spencer A ugust OregonC armody,Francis X avier,jr
C arpenter, C harles L orainC arpenter,Wil liamHubbardC arroll,C harles R ichardC arter,Joseph Wil liamsC avenagh,Robert Will iamC ease,L ysleWillardC ecil,A lexander BrabsonC hapel, C harles E dwardC hrismon,John A ubreyC laiborne,Henri de B alathier
C lark,M urray WhitneyC larke,R alph SperryC lay,M ark WellingtonC lement C hester L ee
C ochran, J oe BriceC OIYQI
'
,L eigh,jlj ‘.
Combs,Birney C edricC onley,T homas Francis,jrC ooper,Jacob E lliottC ooper,WilliamGoodwin
C orbin, C lifiord T homasC ornell,Kenneth HallC ox,Gideon A dolph
Crane,John JarvisC rawford,M ortimer Shepard N ewYorkC rider,L loyd AustinC rissman,George Godfrey
South C arolina
M ERIT ROL L OF TH E -PRES EN T“
S EC ON D C L A S S 8 1"
thesecond'
year of their academiccourse— 5 1 8 members— J une, 1 924— Continued’
Sea servicempracticesh1 ps
M onths
82 M ERIT sBQ L L -AJ R TH E , PRE SEN T S E ‘CON D GL AS S
M erit ‘
roll of ithe. midshipmen,- ref the . present ; second class (classfof for
N ames
C rosser,Benjamin RobinC rowley,AmbroseFrancis
D avis,E arle SutherlandD avisson,Frederick AugustusD ay, C harles N ewtonD ensmore,Samuel WinslowD eWolfe,Robert RathbunD ickey,Ward E lliottD ietrich,Henry T horntonD odson,E dward N ey,ir
D onahue,Francis JamesD orrell,C arter VictorD ow,L eonard JamesD uckett,OdenBowie,jrD udley,Paul L ee
D uke,J ohn M artindaleD unlap, S tanton BaldwinD unn, C harles C arroll
D yer,Walter L eoD yer,(
William L ansdale
D yson,Howell JesseE akens,John C allahanEaton,Samuel Williams
Edwards,Heywood L aneE lh
'
ott,E ddy WilburE lliott,T hompson Phelps
E ricson,Ramond C alvertE skilson,E skil T heodoreE step,George M oore
E venson,M arvin PehodieEves,Edward T homas
Farrow,HenryFisher,EdgarD erryFitzsimmons,John PatrickFleming,M orton Klyne,jrFlippin,Royce N orwoodFloyd,William Orrln
Foltz,George Wallace
Fooks, A rmwell L ongFores t,Francis X avier
Forsberg, C arl JohnFoster,John Golden,jrFoster,Joshua Hill,irFountain,Frank FremontFox,D ouglas Harold
Fox,James Beatty
D ate ofS tate fromwhichadmissionappointed
N ew York
PennsylvaniaGeorgia
N ew York
C olorado
N orth C arolinaM assachusetts
M ERIT ROL L C L A S S, 83
the second year of their academic coursea—e-51 8members— J une, 1 924—a C ontinued _
Sea semce in practiceshi ps
M onths D ays
84 M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRES EN T S E C ON D C L AS S
M erit roll of the midshipmen of the present second class (class Of 1 926) for
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
M onths
Fradd,John E rnest N ew Hampshire A ug. 1 9,1 922
Fratzke,Walter E dwin M innes ota Sept . 2,19 22
Fravel,_Harold A lbert
Frederick, T heodore R idenour
French,L ouis E aton,
Frost,L aurenceHughFryer,L orenHansbroughFuller,WallaceWattFullinwider,Ranson
Gallaher,John FrancisGannon,T homas ReginaldGano,Roy A lexander M innesotaGerth,WilliamA nthonyGiese,Al bert AugustusGilmore,Howard Wal terGladding,D ouglas VictorGladding,Warren EvartsGlick,John A lbertGoldman,Robert B oggsGotjen,JohnHerman,jrGraf,Frederic AugustGrafi , J ohn ScottGraham, C hester BairdGrant,E theridgeGreenacre,Alvord JohnGreene,Harry Will iamGreenslade,John FrancisGreenwald, J ames A ndrew,j rGrenfell,E ltonWattersGreytak,John JosephGriggs,Gale EmersonGrofi ,Rowland HaverstickGrover,Paul M errittGsell,Henry HarrisonGulick,Roy M oyer PennsylvaniaGul lett,WilliamM ayo_ Il linois
Gunther,L ouis EverettGurney; M arshal l BartonHabel,N orman JosephHaddad,E lias Francis
Haerlin,Fred L ouis,ir
Hains,HamiltonHalloran,T homas FrancisHaman, C laude 'Will iamHamberger,D ewi tt C linton E llisHamrick,Roy N obleHarrell,Joseph WilliamHart, C harles B roderickHaskin,Joseph Robert,jrHavard,Valery,irHayes,WilliamM yersHeavilin,John S eegarHelfrich'
,N orman Al exanderHelmi ck,Guy BentonHenderson,L oftonRussell
- Q
86 M ERIT ROL L OF T IIE PRE S E N T S E C ON D C L A S S
M erit roll of the midshipmen of the present second class (class of 1 926) for
A ge at date of
S tate fromwhich D ate ofN ames
appointed
M onths
Hilliard,L ymanHal l GeorgiaHodgskin,Henry T itus,irHoleman,N eville Goodloe
Hollenbeck,Robert HopeHollingsworth,WilliamR ightHolt,N orman L loydHonaker,Wal terWellingtonHorne,C harles Frederick,M .
Houck,JohnHoward,jrHouston,T homas A ugustusHowe,Hamil tonWilcoxHowell ,Irving HaleHubert-J ones,A shton L eeHufty,M alcolmA lexanderHughes,Roscoe D urall
Hutch ins,C arlton B armore
Hutchinson,E dward Shillingford
Jackson,E d HughesJoohum,WilliamJohnson,D oir C urtisJohnson,Robert B ufiinJohnston,Harry D arlingtonJones, C arroll BurgessJones,Fielder A llisonJones,WilliamT homasJordahl,Russell N eltonJordan,T homas BranchJoyce,A llen RaymondJoyner,_
A lgernon S idney,irKaiser,Benjamin Franklin,jrKarpe,Eugene S imonKatz,BenjaminKeady,L ouis EmmettKelley,E dward FrederickKemper,A llen M auzyKenny,WilliamT altyKing,L yman M aurice,ir
Klimas,Bernard E dward-gK line,Wendell Fischer
Kobey,T heodoreHertzelKoonce,A llen C larkKunz, C hester A rthurL aForce,A ndrewHudson
L ahn,Jackson A aronL amb,R aymond S tarrL ambert,Robert D avison
L angley,T homas RhodesL arson, C harles Oscar
L ee,Fitz hugh,2d
L ee,Frank C alhounL eeper,James E dward A rkansas
M ERIT ROL L .OF,TH E PRES E N T“
SECON D(
crass 87
the second year of their academic coarse— 5 1 8 members— J une, — Continued
iSea service.
inpracticeships
M aximumM onths D ays
8 8 M ERIT ROL L OF TH E PRES EN T SE C ON D C L AS S
M erit roll of the midshipmen of the“
present second class (class of 1 926) for
N ames
L eHardy,L ouis M arcel
L eigh,T homas KennethL entz,A ugust WilliamL eonard,E dward
L eslie,M axwell FranklinL evensky, S ol E arl
L ewis,Henry S tephen
S tate fromwhichappointed
L ineweaver,Wal ter EllsworthL indsey,Will iam C arl
L insley,James Russell,jrL insley,Ralph HalseyL ittig,John S tansfieldL ivdahl,Orlin L esterL oader,N ormanL ogan,D iggsL ong,A ugustus C alvinL ong, C arlton GrimL ovell ,R oyalL ovett,Benjamin Barnes C omptonL owrey,Barron GrayL yman, C harles Huntington,3d
M abley,L ouis C hristopherM ackle,Frederick,jrM acM illan,D uncan C alvin
M addox, C lifton BogartM allach,Joseph FrancisM artin,L awrenceHenryM ason,Jared A rthurM atthews, L eoni das M etellus _
M ay,Eugene Franklin"
M cC afiree,Burnham C loughM cC lelland,John JamesM cC lure, J es se SamuelM cC lusky, C larenceWade,jr
—0
- o
o
-r
admi ss’
ion
Years M onths
M cC orkle,Francis D ouglasM cD ill ,A lexander S tuartM cGregor,D onal d
M cGuire,GordonGerald
M cKee, Samuel JohnsonM cKillip,John C . S iemerM cL ean,Gordon Al exa nderM cL ean,John BoydM cM il lan,D outhey Gear
M cQuillen,Francis Jennings 2M eade,Robert HeberM etzger, C harles FrederickM etzler, C arl Philip _
M ill er,D aniel ByrdM iller,L awrence OberstM iller, L ewis RobinsonM iller,T homas R aymond
M iller,Wallace JosephM iller,WayneHamptonM iller,William,jr June 1 6,1 922
M ERIT ROL L OF TH E P RE SEN T SEC ON D C L A S S 89
the second year of their.academic course— 51 8memlgers— J une, 1 924— C entinued
Seaservice in practiceships
L a'1
M aximum
M onths
1 8. 00
24 . 80 39. 76
90 . M ERIT‘
ROL L OF T H E PRES EN T SE CON D'
C L A S S
l M erit'
rOll cf the midshipmen of'
the present second class (class of 1 926) for
229
49 1
S tate fromwhichN ames
appointed
M ills,D onald L ewis
M ills,Ernest ParkerM ilton,Homer VirgilM Oneysmi th,Garold A rlingM Ontagrifi,BertramPeterM oore,M ilton EdwardM oore,Robert RouseM organ,Philip S idney,jrM orony,John
'
JosephM errison,James A rthurM oses; C harlesWilliamM oss,J ames A lexanderM Ou
‘
reau,Ralph HenningM umma,A lbert GirardM undorfi,George T heodoreM yers,WilliamGirard
N elson,HerningN ewman,John Francis,jrN ichols,S tanley GilbertN ickum,Philip,jrOakhblt,A lbert S cribnerO
’B eirne,FrankOberholtzer,Wm. E dward,jr
O’
C onnell,John EnnesO
’D aniel,OrvilleKenneth
Ofi'
utt,A nderson
0gden,D aniel M axwell Iowa
Olsen,E arl Kenneth A t largeO
’
Shea,John,J l’Paradise,M orris E lliottParish,Herman OlliffParr,M arvin
'
C oleridge
Parry,N elson M iles
Paschal, J oeBennett
Perdu'
e,William EdwardPerrill,Harlan KnoxPerry,E rnestReidePhares,J esse
"L ewis -J ;‘
Pirie,Robert BurnsPOehlmann,Karl FrederickPohl,
‘Harold J Ohn
Polk,Hubert J ackPottle,Harry Hathawayfjr N ew Y orkPratt,~C leveland Forsyth,
'
j r
Price,George JosephPrifold,Geo
'
rge,irPrime;N athaniel S cudderPrins,WinstonC harles .E arlyPryor,Will iamL ee,irPurvis '
,Robert Selden,irPyz ick,Frank PeterQuinn;C harles Henry -l
R aésaale,E dmund M 01 S6h .
’
M ERIT ROL E OF T H E PRE S E N T S E C ON D GL A S S 9 1
the second year'
of their academic course— 5 1 8 members—J une, 1 924— Contin'
ued
Sea service in practice
M aximumM onths
1 7. 94
1 7. 82
1 7. 94
1 8. 90
1 5. 75
1 8. 99
1 8. 51
1 9. 77
1 8. 36
20. 1 6
1 7. 25
1 6. 98
20. 22
1 9. 32
20. 01
1 9. 86
1 7. 52
1 8. 99
20. 28
1 9. 1 7
1 9. 1 4
1 8. 69
1 7. 25
1 8. 36
1 6. 80
1 7. 88
1 6. 98
1 9. 29
1 9. 4 1
1 8. 66
1 6. 89
1 7. 76
1 8. 33
1 8. 8 1
1 8. 27
1 9. 74
1 9. 92
1 7. 25
2 1 . 09
1 9. 98
20. 31’
1 7.
-76
1 7. 67
1 7. 04
1 7. 55
1 7. 37
20. 97
1 9. 1 4
1 9. 44
1 9. 08
1 8. 60
1 7. 79
20. 73
n
1 5. 1 0
1 2 . 63
1 5. 74
1 7. 51
1 2 . 72
1 6. 39
1 4. 47
1 7. 55
1 4. 28
1 4 . 2 1
1 4. 38
1 3. 39
1 9. 22
1 6. 1 1
1 7. 1 2
1 5. 45
1 7. 56‘
1 4. 76“
1 6. 42
1 6. 76
1 3. 76
1 4. 1 3
1 5. 96
1 4. 34‘
1 3. 1 8
1 6. 58
1 7. 63
1 4 63
1 4; 32- 1 5. 1 8
- 1 4. 81
1 6. 1 6
' 1 3. 93'
1 9. 05
1 6. 34
93
1 8. 80
1 3.
1 3. 03'
1 4 . 62
1 4.
1 8. 23
1 4. 84
1 4 . 64
1 8. 25
92 M ERIT ROL L OF -TH E PRE SEN T S E C ON D C L AS S
M emit roll of the midshipmen of the present second class (class of 1 926) for
year
1 286
1 34
41 2
458
1 60
‘25
R eynolds,L uther Kendrick
R ice,S tephen Ewing, 3d.
R imer,T heodoreWes ley
R itchie,E dward C ecilRoach,E dward L oring D ix,2dRobertson,Frank WrightRodee,Walter Fred
Rodgers,J ames Hunter
R ohweder,C harles Roland.
Rule,A rthur R ichards,jrRussell,Benjamin V an M eterRussell,J ames Sargent
Sarsfield,Eugene SylvesterS chade,GeorgeE dward
Seckendorfi,M aximilian GebhardtSellers,A bbott M annie
Shanahan,Harold M artin
Shepard,Seth A rmstrongShillingford, John T hompson
Shofner,James N ewton
S ingleton, C harles T odd,ir
Smith,S idney b ytonSmoot, c 0 Perry,ir
S tate fromwhi ch D ate of
M onths
-Q
West Virginia
Georgia
N ewYork
N orth C arolina
West Virginia June 28, 1 922
V irginia June 1 5, 1 922
M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRE SEN T S E C ON D C L A S S
M eri t roll of the midshipmen of the present second class (class of 1 926) for
N ames
Spencer,C harles D onaldS prenger,William C onrad
S tanford,A rthur GeorgeS tefanac,Joseph BarnabyS telter,Frederick C arl,irS tewart,C harles RalphS tiegler,Oscar
S till,Everett Hale
S tout,Herald FranklinS train,C harles L ynn
S trange,Hubert E llisS tratton,Roy BiggsS troop,Paul D avid
S trother,John A lmonS tuart,Joseph M arcus
S tuart,L ennox HamiltonSullivan,D ennis Joseph_
Summers,C larence Gibbs,3dSweeney,D aniel JosephSweeney,John D riscollSweetser,Willard M ertonS ylves ter, J ohnT aecker,C arroll HervyT ali -C larence Orvil
T aylor,Ford N ewton,jrT aylor,JohnBarrettT aylor,J ohn
.
M cN ay
T aylor,WilliamC ooperT edder,Fondville L ee
T homas,J ohn B ayard
T homas,Olin Perry,irT obelman,Paul HenryT odd,BeldenWilmerT ompkins,Benjamin FrancisT ruax,WilliamD avid BrownT ucker,Samuel M arion
Vangeli,M arioGiovanmV odila,L ouis L awrence
Voit,E dwinFrancis
Wadbrook,C harlesGurneyWaldron,Eugene M atthew
Ward,J amesHenryWard,Samuel C laumontWarren,D oyle C assiusWatson,Paul WesleyWatson,Will iamA llisonWeaver, George C alvin
Weaver,N orman E llisWebster,Hugh PowellWeimer,E dward L oomis Bradl ey
A ge at date of
S tate fromwhichappointed
PennsylvaniaN ew Y ork
C onnecticut
Pennsylvania
South C arolinaA t large
PennsylvaniaWisconsin
C onnecticut
M ERIT URDLH“
on: T H E ;PRE S EN T S E C ON D"!C L A S S 95
the second year of theirsacademic course— 5 1 8 membersfi -J une,"
1 92 4c— Continued
96
1 69
3 1 76
324'
o500
35
4 88
M ERIT ROL L OF T H E PRE SEN T SEC ON D . C L AS S
N ames
Weis,G eorgeHenryWells,
’
J ohnKatzWestbrook,Ralph EdwardWey,B osquet N eill
Wh'
elan,T homas M urrayWhipple,Walter Jones, 2d
Whiteside,WilliamSmithWhiting,C harles Jonathan-JWhitson,George M artin,irWil fong,John L esterWilliams,Joseph BassettWillingham,Solomon D avidWilson,Beverly E lmerWinfrey,John AllenWise,E dward C rosbyWithers,Hartnell JackmanWolfe,Joseph L eonWolverton,T homas M ichaelWoodbury,John L elandWornham,T homas A ndrewsWright,Wesley Arnold
Wyckofi,Peter A lbertYoung,John Somerville E aton,irZemlicka,R ayZirkle,E arl BlairZ urmuehlen,Gerald D ale
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the present second class (class .of 1 926) for
S tate fromwhichappointed
9 8 -M ERIT ROL L O'F'
T H E, ,PRESEN T -T HIRD C L A S S .
M erit roll of themidshipmen of thepresent third class (class.of 1 92 7)
N ames
0750 A bernethy, John RobertA dams,Howard C _
hipmanA fong, A bramHenry,irA gens,Frederic
A lbach,Walter Henry
A lderman,Robert BarberA llan,Halle C harles,in
A llen,E than Warren
A llen,Robert A ddisonAmsler,Jack BennardAnders,A rthur Ferdinant-jA nderson,George Whelan,j rA nderson,OddleWilburA ndrews,John,ir -l- 1A rmstrong,Henry Jacques,irA rmstrong,WadeHerbertA sher,B en D yer,
A shford,WilliamHenry,jrA shley,Gordon ShawA tkeson,John C onnerA tkins,Francis EmeryA verill,James Kent
.
j 280
Bailey,L eonard WilliamBaker,Glenwood FloydB alfrey,WilliamE dwardBarbot,L eon JosephBarnes,Robert M cC umberBarnette,S tuart M ofiett
‘
A ge at dateofadmission
D ate of admission
S tatefromwhichappointed
M onths
n
-p
Baskin,A rthur C rawford Walker South C arolina
Batterton,Boeker C harles Ill inois
Bauer,Harry FrederickBayler,Walter L ewi s JohnB ays, J ohn WilliamBeasley,C harles BlackBelden,R ichard N athanielBell,L yman
'
Herrick
Bengston,Wayne EmoryBennett,Rawson,2dBenson,James FrancisBergeson,A ndrewHaroldBergin,C harles KnieseB ernet,J ohn C hristian
Berry,FredericA royse,irB iddle,S tratford B rad ish,j r
Black,L ex L eroyBlackwell,JesseB lake,ErnestBlanchard,JamesWilliamBorn. A rthur S tephenBoss, C arlos RansomBottom, George A lbertBoulware, J oe Wood
Bowden, William KendrickBowling, Jack Frank,ir
M ERIT ROL L OE T H E . PRE S E N T T H IRD C L A S S
"
or thefirst year of their academic “
course—76 1 members—; J une,'
1 924 ~
Sea service in practiceships
M aximumM onths D ays
1 6. 30
$ 99
1 00 M ERIT ROL E OE TH E PRE S EN T T H IRD C L A S S
M eritroll of themidshipmen Of the present third class (class of 1 927) for the
A ge at date ofadmission
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed mission
Y ears M onths
B owling,S elman S tewartBoyd,C larenceE vansBoyd,Raymond GordonBoyer,Randolph B urtenBraddy,Robert E dgar,irBradshaw,James L arkinBradshaw,Joseph D aniel VirginiaBradshaw,Joseph T homasBranson,John JosephBrett,JamesHenry,jrBriggs,Harold M elvin
Brinley,Paul VercoB ristor,WilliamBeverlyBrixner,Robert C ecilBroach,John C ozine_
Brockman,WilliamHerman,irBrodie,Robert,ir KentuckyBrown,John T hompson,ir South C arolinaBrown,Robert KennethBruen,C uthbert JosephB runet,A rthur Grifli thBruner,FrankBryson,William C ampbellBuckley,A rgyll E dwinBurch,WilliamOscar,ir
Burke,John E dwardBurlingame,C reed C ardwellBurns,Oakley WillardBurt,D onald GeorgeButtrey,A ndrew BrooksButz,Jesse Samuel C ooperByrd,M arion M oore
C ain,Harold Francis
C alderhead,Renwick S ilasC aldwell,Henry HowardC amp,Floyd C harlesC ard,Paul WentworthC arey,JosephC armichael,D elos D orringtonC arpenter,L esterWilsonC arter,A lbert S amuelC aruthers,WilliamRowell
C assady,A rnold HenryC aswell,Gordon L eonard
C atterton,M ax L ee Illinois
C hamberlin,L eonard C orneliusC happell,Guy D eWittC happell,L ucius Henry,ir GeorgiaC h ilton,Wi lliam P ierce
C hittenden,JohnWilliam 1 Indiana
C lark,John E dwardC lark,T hurston BoothC lendening,C yrus T urner N ewYorkC lutts, C harles E dward
1 02 .M ERIT ROL L OF T HE :PRE SE _N T THIRD C L AS S
M erit roll -of the.midshipmen of the present third class (class of for the
N ames
C oale,George BuchananC offin, C larenceEmmet,jrC ohn,James E dwardC oleman,A l fred JamesC oleman,D avid BuncombeC oleman,J ames S amuel,j rC oll,John Owen ReillyC ollins,R ichard C harles
C olli s,John L eonC ombs, C harles A ndersonC ondra,E dward M adison,ir
C onn,L annie
C onrad,Robert D exterC ook,Jesse S trother,jrC ooper, C lifford S teeleC ooper,E lmer GlennC ooper,HysellC ooper,JoshuaWinfredC orbin,Frank T empleC ornelius,E lwood KaseC ornell,Bloomfield M illerC ortner,C larence E dwardC orwin,J ohn T homasC orwin,Joseph Al bertC rane,A lbert BruceC reighton,L ilesWalker
C ressy,M orton S tarr,jrC rittenden,S amuel Hallett,j rC romwell,Francis EugeneC ross,J . A lan
C ross,JohnHenryC urry,Frank C harles,irC urtis,Howard FranklinC uz ner,
.WilliamHerbertD ahl,T heodoreOscar
D aisley,Roger M eriden
D aix,John RonaldD al ton,C arl M alcolmD alton,D onald HenryD anhoff,Joseph B artholemaeD aspit,L awrence RandallD avey,T homas L eo
D avies,WilliamN ormanD avis,Eugene E dwardD awson,M arion L indsay,irD ay,Harry E dwardD ayton,M ilton T heodoreD eem,WilliamA ndersonD ean,John L ittleD eKay, C harles Gordon
D e L a Barre,Reamor EvansD ensford,Robert L utesD enty,Harry M arsden
D epew,Paul S tuartD e T ar,John L eslie
A ge at dateofion
S tate fromwhich D ate of adappointed miss1 0n
Years M onths
July 6,1 923
Pennsylvania
a
M assachusettsN ebraska
South C arolinaT ennessee
PennsylvaniaN ew JerseyN ewYorkSouth C arolina 3
Ill inois
C olorado
VirginiaIllinois
N ewYork
PennsylvaniaN ewHampshire
A ug.
JulyS ept .JulyJuneJuneJul y
4,1 923
5,1 923
2,1 923
9,1 923
30,1 923
4,1 923
1 1 1 923
6,1 923
1 0,1 923
do
S eptJuly
2,1 923
5, 1 923
9,1 923
M innesota do
adoN ew YorkPennsylvaniaArkansasIllinois
M ichigan
JuneA ug.
JulyJul yJulyJulyJulyJulyJulyA ug.
JulySept .JuneJulySept .July
7,1 923
5,1 923
' M ERIT'CROL I) OR T HE P RE SE N T T H IRD C L A S S 1 03
“first year Of their academic course— 761 members— J ane, 1 924—eC Ontinu‘
ed
Sea service in practice
D ays
il o4 M ERIT ROL L OF T HE «PRE SE N T T H IRD C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the present third class (class of 1 92 7) for the
A ge at date ofadmission
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed mission
M onths
D etwiler,Joseph Snyder PennsylvaniaD eutermann,Harold T homas N ew YorkD evany,A lbert JosephD evlin,Jerome Orvin,ir S outh C arolinaD ickey,George D eane
D imon,John T aftD ixon,Robert E llingtonD odson,Oscar HenryD onaho,D oyle GeorgeD onaho,Glynn RobertD onohue,T imothy Francis
D owner,D ick R inaldoD ownes,Robert N obleD ozier,Henry RobertD rew,E dward JohnD rew,M elvin EugeneD reyspring
'
,JefferscnGoodwynD rouilhet,Paul R aymondD uborg, C hristian Harold N evada
D udley,C layton RodesD uffill,M onroeBarrows A t largeD uke,C larenEm'mettD ukeshire,T heodore SkolfieldD unning,A llan L ombardD urski,M alen
D ykers,T homas M ichaelD yson,Gerald RolandE arnshaw,Joseph WayneE ckberg,Herbert FredericE ckelmeyer,E dward Herman,ir. PennsylvaniaE ddy,D aniel T homas N ew Y orkEdsall,Warner R yerson
E dwards,JohnA llenEhle,A rthur KendrickE ldridge,John,irEngeman,GeorgeHydeEngland,Harry RudolphE rvin,Frank JacksonE stes,Homer TE thridge,HarrisonEvans,M yron T homasE verett,Gordon S tafford C olorado
Ewing,J ohn L awrence,j r M assachusettsFaigle,John EmilFairlamb,L ouis ParkerFaulkner, C harles C arlFauntz ,T heodore C larksonFeldman,A llan L eeFenton,Richard E lkinsFerrell,WilliamE dwardFitzgerald,D elanoJ acksonFitzGerald,GeorgeWilliam,ir
Fitzgibbon,John E dmondsonFitzwilliam,A lbert E isner Illinois
1 06
year
1 68
£567
M ERIT ROL L OF T H E PRES E N T . T H IRD C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of the present third class (class of 1 92 7) for the
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed mission'
Flemming,Russell E dwardFlasher, C arl William-4
Flynn,Joseph AmbroseFlynn,T homas JosephFoley,Robert JosephFord,Robert S tephensFord,WilliamGrimshaw Idaho
Foster,Paul EugeneFraser,GeorgeKi ttrellFravel,Robert Ira FranklinFreeman, C harles L awrence
Funke,Frederick,ir -f
Garcia,E dmund E rnest A t largeGates,Bernard M onroe
Gattis,Hobson Ivan N orth C arolinaGa z z e,S ylvius PennsylvaniaGeiger,L ester JosephGerwig,R ogerWesleyGiambattista,Frank D aniel N ew JerseyGilbertson,GeorgeBernardG ilday,J ohn FrankGleim,Fritz,jr_
Gordon,D onald S tuartGordon,Howard Wright,irGorski,Henry FrederickGoudge,M aurice E llison
Goyette,Emmanuel T homasGraf,Warren Frederick
Graybill ,M yronWillardGreen,T homas C handlerGreene,T homas L awrenceGreer,Jul ian D avid
Gregg,Otis C ockerillGriese,L ester C harlesGriffin,C harles D onald
Griffin,L awrence M iltonGriffin,S amuel Hunter,jrGriffith,Philip S idneyGrifl oul,R ichard GeppertGriswold,T heophilusGross,Paul D avid
Gwinn,Byron C harlesHabecker,Frederic ShromHagan,E dward PaulHager,JamesWalk er
Haines,R ichard A lexanderHale,Harry D onal dHaley,James A loysius,ir M assachusettsHall,R obert S amuel,jr M ississippiHamil ton,T homas JamesHaml ey,J oseph RonaldHammi tt,Frank M onroe A ug. 1 3,1 923
Hammond,Wellington A nthony M issouri July 3,1 923
M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRES EN T T H IRD C L ASS
first year of their academic"
course— 76 1 .members—‘
J une, 1 9247—Continued
Sea service.
in practiceships
'
M onthsM aximum
1 07
1 08 MERI T ROL L OF T HE PRE S E N T T H IRD C L AS S
M cri t roll of the'mi dshipmen of .the present thirdc lass (class of
' 1 92 7) for the
S tate fromwhich D ateOf adN ames
appointed mission
Hands,E dgar Beach,irHanscom,HowardWesleyHa
'
nsen,George L ouis f
Hansen,Harold D aleHardesty,C harles Jenkins,jrHardison,C hesley M arshall;
Hardwick,Harry JudsonHarnley,Harold Shepard “
Harrell,Raymond L eeHarris,Wil liamS tephenHarrison,C harles E dward
Harrison,S amuel HendersonHasbrouck,PrestonHaz enJ oseph T rumanHeald,Wilton S tewartHeath,George L uciusHeberton,C harles M ullerHeckey,A lbert RossvilleHegeman,B ruce
Heinlein,Rex Ivar,Hellauer,Joseph FrancisHenkel,John FisherHenry,Harold A loysiousHenry,Patrick,jrHerron,EdwinWarren
Hesser,FredericWilliamHetter,Frederick L aurenceHewett,L indell HarrisHewins,C harles KnowltonHickox,Ralph
Hicks,A llen S turdivantHicks,Harry L ynnwoodHigh,Paul L averneHill,A doniramJudsonHill,C harles Phillips,jrHilton,D onald BarkerHinds,Walton BeardsleeHines,JohnFore,jrHinners,Robert Arthur
Hodges,Willard A tleeHoerner,Herbert L isle 1
Hogg,J amesHenryHoloway,James Gray,jrHolmberg,HelmerHerbertHoltvvick,J ack,j r Z
Honsinger,L eroy Vernon N ewYorkHookway,John C harlesHooper,Selden Gain -1
Horney,Harry RayHottel,M artin Perry s.
Hubbard,M iles HunterHubert-J ones,Francis Reynolds
1 1 0
demic
M ERI T ROL L OF TH E PRE S E N T T H IRD C L A S S
M erit roll cf themidshipmen of the present third class (class of | 1 92 7) for the
A ge at date ofsion
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed m1 ssion
Huck,Wallace M ason
Hudgins,C harles HarleyHull,Robert VanceHumes,Wil liamYoung C onn,ir UtahHummer,Harry Reid,ir South D akotaHunte,L ouis HenryHunter,Arch ibald D an iel
Ignatius,Will iamRussell
Imhof,James R athlotIngram,A rthur GirardInscoe,Garland M edians
Irvin,Wil liam D avis
J ack,Samuel S loanJackson,William C rawford OklahomaJacobs,T yrrell DwightJarrell,Henry T hompson GeorgiaJarrett,Othel L awrence West VirginiaJcanes,Perry KennethJ elley, J oseph Frank lin,j r PennsylvaniaJennings,William C roft South C arolinaJensen,L awrence M aynardJohnson,C arroll Flint .Johnson,D onal d HiltonJohnson,E dward RidgwayJohnson,Frank HaroldJohnson,Howard Ravenscroft "Johnson,Robert A rchieJohnson,Seymour A ndersonJohnston,A ndrewWill iam,jr
Johnston,Paul FisherJones,George L orraine,jr
Judson,S tanley EverettJuhan,Jack PhillipJune,Frank M atthewKaitner,William EugeneKearns,John JosephKeepers,Kenneth Irving C arterKeiran,Hugh A ugustine R obertKeith,R obert T aylor ScottKellerman,Ross RollandKennedy,M arvin Granville
Kennedy,WilliamD ewi tt " ;
Kent,JohnKern,Joseph Will iamKern,Willis FrederickKeyes,Willard D unsterKeys,L ee FarisKielty,Patrick Francis,jrKillen, C harles Henry"
King,T om C obbKirk,Francis S hallusKirk,L owell M odrall
Kitchin,Bethuel M eade
Klakring,T homas Burton
M ERIT ROL L . OF‘
T HE”
PRE S E N T T H IRD C L A S S 1 1 1 ;
first“year of their. academic courses—761 members— J une,i1 924—7C 0ntinue<ig
Seaservice inpractice1
'
sdfips
M aximumD ays
1 1 2R M ERIT ROL L OF THE PRE S EN T T H IRD C L A S S
M erit rol lof themidshipmen of the presentthird class (class of 1 927) for the
S tate fromwhichA
D ate of adN ames
appomted mIS Sion
Kluegel,John V an Rensselaer C aliforniaKnickerbocker,WilliamL ane
Knight,L evi James,irKnowles,Kenneth AlwardKnuepfer,GeorgeKoonce,Henry T hompsonKowal z yk, A lex i .L add,Gregory A lbeeL air,Rodney BickhamLamons!,ErnestWashington
L ampman,L eland RalphL ange,George A damL atimore,D aniel WebsterL awrence,M artinJ ayL eahy,WilliamHarringtonL eatherman,Fred JamesL egwen,GlennWalker,jrL evin. R ichard BenjaminL ewis,Francis PorcherL ewis,George A lexanderL ewis,Jack HaydenL ichty,M aurice Geral d
L indell,Edward D empsterL indsey; Eugene ElbertL inton,L aurence JosephL itty,Frederick L ucas,j rL oberg'
,Harry JohnL ockhart,WilliamBrothertonL oeser,A rthur Edward N ewYorkL ofberg,Gus B rynoli,jrL ongmeyer,Francis
'
J oseph
L oos,Robert Bruce PennsylvaniaL oud,WayneRoweL oughead,Karl N eely PennsylvaniaL oveland,WilliamL owrie,N obleWayneL ucas,JamesWalter,jr M ississippiL ucier,J ames A loysius M assachusetts-sL ugibihl,Eugene L ee.
L uongo,Henry N ewYorkM acPherson,Hamilton C arrollM adison,John M eek
M ah er,Edward J ohnM aher,Joseph BenedictM allett,WilliamE dgar,jrM alley,JohnWallace
M alone,L ouis T heodore
M aloney,T homas JamesM anees,E dward Oslin
M anthey,E rnst HaroldM anville,Francis C rane
M arggrafi,Frederick C harles,jrM arks,A rthur D uncanM arshall,Henry M orris
1 1 4
demic
525
$ 475
626
-M ERI T * ROL L OF T HE PRE SE N T TH IB D ‘ C L A S S
M erit roll of themidshipmen of . the present third class (class of 1 92 7) for the
M artin,E dward Joseph
M artin,Henry L uther,ir
M artin,Wiss M urrayM assie,T homas HedgesM atthews,M itchell D udleyM ayer,E ldon C unninghamM ayfield,A lbert Buford,ir
M cA lister,Francis M arion
M cB ride,Herman PopeM ccann,FrancisWyllieM cC laughry,John Glenn
M ccormick,James RhorerM cC oy,M elvyn HarveyM cC une,Francis Greith BrewerM cD aniel,Eugene FieldM cGarry,William T homas
M cGinness,Robert Joseph,irM cllhenny,Harry HaywoodM cKechnie,A rnold Wil fredM cKinney,Eugene BM cKinney,Joseph D wightM cKinstry,James JosephM cRoberts,James JohnstonM ead ,George GordonM echling,Wallace BristolM elson, C harles L eroyM ewhinney,L eonard S parksM dtlyng, C arl RobertM il burn,John Al exanderM iles,Paul D ombeyM iller,Kenneth R oss
M itchell,R ay A ndesM i tchell ,S amuel GavidM onahan,Idris BurkeM onroe, J ack PendletonM ontgomery,A lan R obertM oore;B enjamin Eugene,irM oore,E verett L loydM oore,Granville A lexanderM oore,Raymond JohnM organ,R obert Burks,jr
M ortenson,GeorgeWilliamM ul holland,GeorgeA nthonyM unn, John C alvinM urphy,Joseph N athaniel
S tate fromwhich D ate of admission
M assachusetts
Pennsylvnaia
N orth C arolina
M assachusetts
Q
Pennsylvania
N orth C arolina
Oregon
T ennessee
T exas
Washington
Pennsylvania
O
C -fi
N ew York Sept . 4,1 923
M ERIT ROL L OE .T H E PRE S E N T T H IRD : CL A S S 1 1 5
first year of their academic course— 461 7hembers= —J une, 1 924—Continued
Seaservice in practiceships
M aximumM onths
1 11 6 M ERIT ROL L OF T HE PRE SE N T TH IRD 0 1 4m
1M crit rolll'
of themidshipmen‘ bf the present third class (class of 1 92 7) for the
N ames
M yers,C urtis'
A rthurWilliam“ ;
M yers,R ichard E dwinN apier,E dmund T ressilian,irN ation,M iltonA dolphusN ation,
'
WilliamM illageN eblett,T homas BarbeeN euhaus,Herbert M ilton
N euhauser,N ewlin
N eville,Forrest L ynneN ewbegin,Robert Goodchild,3dN ewhart,Harold GuthrieN ewton,C harles M cC all
N ewton,M iles S tanleyN ickelson,William'
R ichardson D avid,
ir. .
N ilou,L eoWilliamOberrender,T homas OlinOlin,Philip C arlOlmsted, Fredrick L ockwood
Olson,Robert A lexanderO
’N eil,A rchie E dward
O’N eill,D avid Ferguson
Orf,Harold George"
Organ,William Hugh
Osborn,Wendell Gullefer
Otis, M aurice L'
owell
Outerbridge,Will iamWoodward
Overfelt,Ferol D avis
Overfield,D avid BashamOwen. HiliOrt C raftPaige,Henry ReidPalmer,Robie E llisPancoast,L eonidas WalthallPardee, C larke M ensch
Parker, C harlesWilliam
Parsons,William SeaveyPate,OscarWillis,irPatrick,M arion Gardner
Patterson,A lexander M cL eod
Patterson,E arl BarnardPellegrino,Pete A ugustPepper,Will iam M ullin,j r
Perkins,Fordyce ByronPerrine,Pierre C lydePeterson,James ShadlePfingstag, C arl JessePfingstag,Herb ert J ohn
Phillips,Joseph HerbertPhillips,R ichard Helsden
Pickens,M adison D allas
Pierce,Robert Archer
A ge at date ofadmission
D ate of adS tate fromwhichmissionappomted
OklahomaN ewYorkOhio
South C arolinaVermontA rkansas
N ewYork
n n n n n n n
- U
1 1 8 M ERIT Ro'
L L OF THE PRE S E N T "T H e C L A S S
.
M erit roll of themidshi‘
pmen’
of the present third class (class‘
of 1 92 7) for the
A ge at date ofadmission
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed mi ssion
Years M onths
576 Piper,Earl Sanford4 1 0 Pond,Reed Kimball2 1 5
'
1 51 Potter,GeorgeHubbard3 1 5 Potts,Will iamHutton465 Powell,Elmer C alvin1 69 Price,Kenton E dson*75 Price,Walter Harold
Prichard,James Al exanderPryce,Roland FremontPryor,Francis D enni sPurdy,Howard E dwardPyne,C harles C rosbyQuackenbush,Robert S tewart,jrQuast,Harry C arleton,irQuattlebaum,Winston IrwinRadom,M atthewR amsay,James A lstonRamsey,Paul HubertRandig,Wesley HerbertR andolph,B ennahR athbun,R oss FayReinders,R aymond JohnRenard,Jack C laytonR ice,James M itchellR ice,Robert HenryR ichards,Harold PeterR ichardson,Gil l M acD onald
Richardson,HarryWallace
R ickabaugh,Robert S tultzR ickertts,Roland Wendell
R ider,James C onklinR igby, J ames Verne C ali forniaRiker,M onroM arvin N ew JerseyR iley,Herbert D ouglassRoberts,
‘
J ames M cN eill
Roberts,N athaniel T aylorRobinson,A lvinRobinson,E dwin BurtonRogers,R ichard BooneRomi z er,WilliamT aylorRose,Gardner Keyes GroutR oss,Phil ip Harold
Ross,Richard Potts,ir_ 2
Rounds, C linton S tilwellRowley,Welton D ana
Royall,Wil liamFreemanRubins,Joseph Russell _
Rudolph,L ouis JosephRussillo
'
,M ichael PeterRutledge,Raymond PostonS abater,JaimeS abol,E rnest JohnS ag
'
al,-Ivan A ndrew
M ERIT R OL L 6n TH E;P RE SEN T ; T H IRD lC L ASS 1 1 9
M aximum'D ays
1 5. 73 1 4. 58
“
24
72. 93
1 20 M ERIT ROL L OE LTHE PRE SENT ‘ THIR D OIlA SS
(
M erit roll of themidshipmenof the present thi rd class (class of 1 92 7) »far the
S alz er,Karl Roberts
S amsot,Robert D espositoSands,WilliamRobert,irSauer,L loyd RaymondSaunders,Willard A rthur,Sayers,L ewisWetzel,irS cheer,GeorgeHenry,j r
S chirmeyer,T heodore GeorgeSchmidt,JohnWilliamSchumacher,Jules Frederick
S chwab,J acob C liflord
Schwarz,A lden D elbertS coles,A lbert B uddy
Scott,JohnHarveyScott,Roger FrederickScott,Roy
'
S eabring,C ornelius SamueLSealy,Havert S tanly,irShafer,D avid WilliamShanahan,E dward KimShands,C ourtneyS hank,James L eoShapley,A lanSharp,Ulysses S . Grant,irShaw,George Joseph,irShaw,Herbert Weller
S hea,WilliamWolcottS heafi
’
er,L ewis JohmS heehan,Harold RobertShepperd,Will iamM arshal l
Shipley,Roland C urryShipman,Frederick WilliamShook,L oring OswaldS impson,JimmieRupertS ipe,Harold FrederickSkade,
’
A lfred M athewSkelly,C harles JosephS layden,J ohn Walter
S loss,’
M arion BernardSmiley,WilliamHorace,irSmi th,A llenSmith,George M ichael BrunoSmi th,M arshall L awrence
Smi th,Randolph M onroe
Smith,Richard WilderSmi th,Robert SeguineSmi th,T hurmon
’
d A ugustusSmyth,John BordenSnyder,Ph ilipWolcott
Southerland,L eonard BradshawSouthwick,Edward PageSparklin,James D onaldSpecht,WilliamC arl
Speck,Robert Hursey
S tate fromwhichappointed
South D akota
A ge at dateofadmission
D ate of admiss’
ion
1 2 2
656
l 472'
538
’
491$ 23
p577
v234
339
i737.
236
1 50
3240
p561
71 8
*58
651
268
1 38'
88
1 33
r620
31 2
11 660$ 1 7
707
'z 596
1 08
440
71 7
436' 654
OF THE
N ames
S talling‘
s,George Bennett HayWood
S tansbury,T heodoreRooseveltStarkus,C harles Joseph
S terling,‘ D onald :M elvin -;r
S tevens,Ralph L loydS tewart,WilliamHenry,irStewart,WilliamHolden,ir -l
S tillman,C arl FredericS tinson,aPeery L amarStofl et,
“
J ereHoward
S tokes,Phillip'
Gaines
S tone,M artinRobertS trange? Robert Orris
“
S tryker,:M anfioe'
C lihe
S tukey;{Wayne T homsenSugg,
’
T bmT hompsonSullivan
‘
,Emmett?John -.s
Sullivan“
,George D avidSullivan!,Kenneth T homasSutherland,A lanBerkeley,irSutherland,William-A lexander;irSwearingen,E arl KendallSymesQRobert T homas,T aber,.-WilliamFarringtonT agu‘
e,Philip A loysius,irT allman,Harold L amont
T ankard,Philip BarraudT al r,A rthurfHowardT aylor,HowardWilliamT aylor, J oelT eall,Edward N elson,ir i ;
T ha'
ch,’
lJ ohn Smith
T homas,William'
D owT horpe,Harlan M artinT imberlake,C asperHillT ingle;A sher PrestonT inter,John Franki-l.T odd;D avidWebster,irT olson
‘
,D avid‘Watkins
T om'b,JamesHarvey,irT ooke,
‘
C harles M erriamT ortorich,Herbert T heodoreT racy,JohnS teuertT rafton,nSpalding
‘
,-ir
T ral'
l a,HaroldFrancis
T ruslow,A lfred Russell,irT ug’gle,‘
.George BushnellT urner;Frank “
.fi.
Underwood,Joh '
n A l’
exandervan D oorn,Willem -
l-f
V an'
ZM ater,BlinnV an Orden,George Owen.
PRESE N T . T H IRD' )C IaA S S
S tate fromwhich
-o o'fi
'
h u h
l ‘
-i -O
L
n n n n n n n n n
s l
M ERIT -R OL L OF T H E PRE SE N T T H IRD C L A S S 1 2 3
first year of thei r a cademic course— 76 1 members— J une,.
1 924— ( 1 0ntinued
M aximumM onths
OF T H E'
P RESEN I T H IRD C L A SS
fM march of ftheM i dshipmen‘
e
of the present thi rd _class' (class
'
of 1 92 7) forthe
S tate fromwhich D ate of adN ames
appointed mission
Y ears M onths
van‘
S ickle,EdwinRutherford
z 642 Wak’
eman,C alvin Edson
Walker,’
N orman"Eu'
gene -a-L
327 Walsh,D avid John
Ha'
rleston,ir '
.
'
464 Warrérf,‘Harry L ee
Waterman,John Randolph1551 Way,Julius Frederick
1 03 Weintraub,D aniel Jacob223
White,D avid C harlesWhite,EdwinHermanWhite,Harold RalstonWhite,John T imothyWhite,JohnWilfredWhitman,Paul WWickhorst,Frank HenryWickman,C lifford L orraineWight,Roy RyanWiley,Wallace EugeneWilgus,A ustin S tanleyWilkinson,R ichard Powers,irWillcox,GeorgeWashingtonWilliamson,C harles A lexanderWilliamson,D elbert FredWillis,James S turgisWinn,Wal ter C oulterWinterhaler,Emile ReevesWinters,Robert C halmersWoelfel,John C arlWoods,E lmer C yrilWright,Henry ,
Price,ir
565 Yeager,Howard Austin1 83 Young,D avid BryanZahm,John C rawford
'
340 Zemmer,Harold M aurice-" mZ ern,
'
R ichard D ewey‘
Z itz ewitz ,Herb°
ert C arl
Zollars,A llen M arshal lZ ondorak,C harles Jdseph
h 692 Zook,Hurley M cC une;
*liame
"
~ Shoul d. be i n bol d”
wi th aster i sk pref i xed
M ID SH IPM EN , DE'
T H E,FOURT H C L A S S
M idshipmen of thefourth class (class of —308 members
!L etters in italics used opposite names in the following list referto footnotes fat-bottomof list only ]
N ames A ppointed from D ate of admission
A bernethy,John Robert tbA hroon, T homas A ndrew
A ichel,A lfred M ontague bA lderman,John ClementA llbee,Hugh R ichmondA nderson,Paul Ramseur _
Ambruster, S tephen Henry
A rcher,R obert JohnA rmbrust,Carl RaymondA scherfeld, T heodore FrederickA shcraft,T homas-LBabbitt, N athan Clark N ewYorkB agdanovicbh, M ichael Peter N ew HampshireBall,N orman T owerBallance,Robert GreenBanister,A lan Boyd _
Barnette, S tuart M offett tbBarrier,Paul FranklinBatterton,Boeker Charles bBatterton,R ichard YatesB eall,D rewry Augustus bBeasley, M illerBelanger,Valbert A ndreBell, L yman Herrick tb_
Berkman,Oliver T hurstonB eyerly, Irwin ForestBierer,James Shade1
Biggs,Frank ClayBinney, Ar thur FremontBlack, L ex L eroy bBlackburn,B en FrankBlackford,Chester M ilesBlakely,Joseph WilliamB ogvilo, VictorBole, J ohn A rchibald, jrBooth,Charles EdwinBooyo,CharlesBoss,Carlos Ransom tb_ _
Bowden,Will iam Kendrick tb_ _
Bowers,John T readwell, jrBowley,Clarence M athesonBoyd, J ohn M oore b
Brennan,William Cyril
Brett, J ames Henry,jr. tb
Broadbent, C harles
M ississippiM aryland
N ew HampshireOregon
VermontN orth CarolinaM issourL
WashingtonA rkansas
N ew Jersey
PennsylvaniaOhio
A t large
OklahomaM ichigan
Pennsylvania
Kentucky _
West V irginiaM assachusettsVermontN ew JerseyT exasN ew JerseyPennsylvaniaIllinois;
M aryland
M assachusettsAlabamatWisconsin _
Georgia
N ew York
Q
M ID SH IPM E N .
‘
OF T H E FOURT H GRA S S
I
“
M idshipmen of thefourth class ‘
(class of 1 92 8)— 308 members-v— C ontiniied
N ames A ppointed from D ate of admission
Broka '
w,Wilford Harold,jr _t
f B rOWn, C hesford;B rown,William
'
L ee L yons
Bruen,’
C uthbert Joseph tb -f
Burke, James J ustin;Burke,T homas D eL ancey
Burrows,A lbert Collins bBurton,Eugene Paul r
Burz ynski,RaymondBush,
“ ’
Burl Heber a.
Bush,Harold . HarringtonCain
‘
,Harold F rancis tb_ _
Campbell,Robert SheddenCardwell, L arry
Carlson,D enald EdwardCarpenter,Harlo
’
w JesseCarusi, Eugene C assiu
Charlton,'
.A llan West _
Chew,Charles James _
C ockell,William A rthur bClegg,E rhest CalvertCoffman,-
'
C ]oyis ..Clyde
Coker, C armon Pancho
C ole,Cecil BundyC ole;
‘
Reuben D ayid b
C ollins,George Will iamC ollis, John L eon tbC onnaughton,Clyde A ugustineConway,Gordo
'
n‘
V ernon
C obk, C arl.
,C linton_
Cook, T homas SutherlandCorby, A lbert Bruce;Counts,James Palmer
Croft, Frank Cornelius tbC urtin,N eale Roland _
D avis;D eWitt,'
3d _
D enz er,Edward'Earle"
D exter,Edwin BoardmanD odge,Wilson. T homasD onovan, T homas A lton - z
D oss,Raymond OneilD resbach,B urton WilburEaston,William
‘
T flhomas“
Edgington, John R ichard
Florida ‘
A t large
-KentuckyOhio
M innesotaN ewYorkOklahomaM issourl
WisconsinPennsylvaniaM aine
M ontanaGeorgia
D istrict oi Columb ia;
A t large
Indiana
M innesotaPer
’
msylvaniaIowa '
N ew Yo‘
rk
1 2 8 ~~
M ID SH IPM EN 0 1 3; T HE FOURT H : C L A S S
M id‘
shipmen‘ of thefourth class (class of 1 92 8 ) —308 members— Continued
N ames
Ensminger,Raymond Hyson_
Ennis, T homasEnright,George PatrickErickson,Walter L eRoy b
'
E stey,Augustus Ward
E ttlinger,William D eRoy _ _
E versole,Carl Fairbanks bE ves,Edward T homas bFay,
'
Albert James
i Fickling,Evan E dwardsFinnegan, J osephFit z maurice,EugeneWilliam b_
Flaherty, M ichael Francis D on
Flanders, M alcolm BrooksFord,William Grimshaw b
Freiburghouse, L eonard Frederick .
Fritschmann,George _
0
Furber Robert M ontgomery
Futhey, Samuel FloydGallery,Philip D aly _
Gardner, N elson Clemens
Garton,N orman Farquhar tbGerin, M arcel RaymondGleason,Randolph EdwardGoodwin,Paul Harold
Gordon,D onald S tuart tbGray,-Walter~ N ewel
Grimmett,"
Homer D elaine
Hale,CharlesM ansel
Hamilton,Weldon L‘
ee
Hanby, John E stes b_
fHannegan,Edward A llenHardenbergh,Raymond Waite,J I
‘
.
Harker,Henry Gordon
Harrington, M aurice J5 Harris, C laude M elvin
'Hasbrouck,'
Preston'
tb
Hastings,Wilfred JosephHawk,Earle C lifford'
Heil,‘ John Joseph
Herald,A rthur James
A ppointed from D ate of admission
July 7, 1 92 4 1 7
S ept . 2, 1 92 4 1 8
Aug. 1 5, 1 92 4 1 9
1 92 4
Colorado
J VchigamWest VirginiaN ew YorklVIassachusetts
N ewYork
Connecticut
1 30 M TDSH IPM EN or TH E FOURTH . cL Ass
M idshipmen of the fourth class (class of 1 9285— 308 -members— Continued
N ames
n sdon'
,D e Earl M onroe
L ovelace,D onald . A lexander.
L owe,WilliamWallace
L ull ,Edward Earle _
M ads‘
en, E lwood ChristianM anees,
‘ Edward Oslin tb
M archant,William A lexanderM ayfield, James Horace
M cC ormick,Harold A rthurM cC ue,John Kenneth _
M cD onald, D avid L amar
M cKee,E dwin
M cL eod,William Henry , jr
M cM anemin, John CollinM erson, M aurice M artinM ill ican,William JohmM itchell, Charles BruceM ofi
'
ett,George Hall
M omm,A lbert OttoM oore,Frederick EvansM orris; Robert L eeM ullaney,Baron JosephM ullen, John Felix, jr _
N ash, N ic, jr . b
N elson,Hugo A dolphusN elson, John FrederickN ichols,Frank M cD ougal .
N ieman,Hugh Roberts, jrN o
‘
rgaard,Rollo N iel
Orf,Harold George tb_
Otis,M aurice L owell tb_ _
Otterson, Oscar L incolnParmelee,Perry OrmistonPattie,Barton D uvallPeden,Robert CarlPerrine,PierreC lyde tb_
’
Peterson, James Shadle tb
Pettingill,R ichard FlaviusPhillips, Charles FrederickPierce, John
'
Reeves_
Plant,Pollock,Ernest EdwinPope,Earl HallettPopp,CharlesPye,William Satterlee,jr
A ppointed from
r
—A
D ate of admission
date of
A rkansas _
N ew York_ N orth Carolina .
Kansas;Pennsylvania
Georgia
N ew HampshireFloridaN ew JerseyVirginiaConnecticutT exasA t large
Illinois
Pennsy lvania
A t large
M assachusetts _
A labamaOklahomaKansas
- do
T ennessee
WisconsinS outh D akotaPennsylvania _
WisconsinPennsylvania
M ichigan
VirginiaA rkansas
Indiana
South D akotaM aine
Indiana
A t large
WisconsinOhio
A t large
Indiana
A t large
M ID SH IPM EN OF T HE FOURT H C L A SS
M idshipm n of thefourth class
N ames
Quast,'
Harry Carleton, ir. tb
Quilter,Joseph FrancisQuinn, JohnRaborn,William Francis, jr.,b
Radom,
Ramsay,Francis M unroeRansfor
’
d,Howard FranklimRenard,
"J ack Clayton th_ i
Reynolds,Roy Roscoe
Rice, J ames itchell tb_ _
R i’chardson,Harry Wallace tb
R ichardson,Ralph\WilliamR iggs, J . C lark,:j 1
‘
Rittenhouse,Basil N orris,irRoberts, T homas Carroll,irSackett,fEarl L ewisSands, L ester BrutonSavage, L ouis Ar thur bSayers, L ewis Wetz el,
‘
jr. tb
S chaeffer, M ax WilliamSchmitt,HomerC
_
harles
S choech,William A ltonS chuber, James Buchanan, jr_
S cott,John A ddisonSearles,William M arvinSears,Harry Edward
Set z er,Wendell Creager
Shaw, L uther D exterShinkle,Vincent,3dS immonds,T homas HenryS locum,
'
Henry T urner
Smith,Charles.
RussellSmith,D onald Kelley
Spohrer,A nthonyS tanley,Augustus Owsley,jr_
Stewart,WilliamHolden,jr . tb
S tillman,Henry M acD onald
Stovall, J ames Edwin
S trange,Robert Orris b_
S tringer,Guy Warren
T ackney,S tephen N oelT aliaferro,Henry BeckwithT aylor,D onald A lexanderT aylor,Kendrick b
A'
ppointed from
(class of 1 928)—308 members—Continued
D ate of admission
1 82 i M ID SH IPM EN or T H E FOU RT E E-‘
C L A S S'
M idshipmenof thefoarth'
class (class of 1 92 8) members— Continue d
N ames A ppointed from D ate of admission
T aylor,William Al len
T hompson,Frank KlebartT hOmpson,Wells
T immerman,.D ixon Padgett b_
T-odd,D avid Wooster,jr. tb
T orok,zT ibor T heodore
T reanor,Vincent de Paul, 3rT rese,Joseph Condon b_
U nderhill, Jesse Johnson;U rquhart, John Goode_
V anA ntwerp,T ownsend S cudder_
V an M eter,RobertWade,Willard GilbertWagner,D aniel JacobWakefield,FranklinWebster,jr _
Wakeman,Phi lip FiskWalden,A lbert JosephWalden,Arthur St. Clai r
Walker,Hiram S treet,-jrWalsh,WilliamWatts,Charles Robert _
Wear, John .M ontgomery
Weir,Kenneth Herbert "
White, John T imothy tb_
White, L uke EdwardWhitney, D onald GillespieWhittington,Harry BradenWiedemann,Francis Joseph tbWilkinson,Robert HoldenWilliams, John A ltonWine,Chester CecilWinford,Henry Sh rd
Winn,Edwin Knapp -m “
'
Wood,George D onaldWood, M ilton Chubbuck bWood,Robert Winthrop _
Woodward, J ohn ReidWotton,A lbert HarryWyatt, J oe Earle tbYeager,William Cornelius b
Young,Edwin James S tephens "
Z abilsky,JohnZ immerman,Ronald BuxtonZ ook,Hurley M cC une tb
bR eadmitted. rResigned tbT urned back fromclass of 1 927.
West VirginiaM assachusettsOregon
South Carolina
A t large
PennsylvaniaN ew YorkM ichigan
M assachusettsVirginiaN ew YorkOklahoma
Colorado
Illinois
Indiana
N ew YorkCalifornia
AlabamaPennsylvaniaOhio
T exasN ew York
do
ConnecticutN ebraska
Illinois
M assachusettsFloridaConnecticutT exasT ennessee
WisconsinIllinois
M ichigan
A t large
T ennessee
Illinois _
South CarolinaT exasA t large
Rhode Island
M ichigan
M issouri
J uly
JuneSept .S ept .JulyJulyJune 1 6, 1 924Sept .June
JuneJuneA ug;
J uly
JulyJune
do
1 5 1 92 4
- do
do
JulyA ug.
J une
July .
JuneJulyJuneJulyA ug.
July .
JulyAqJuneJulyAug.
A ug.
S ept .
JuneJuneJuneSept .
S ept .JulyJulyJuneJuly
1 8
1 7
1 7
1 1 9
1 8 .
1 8
1 9\
20
1 9
1 8
1 7
1 8
1 9
1 8
1 9
1 9
20
1 8
1 7
1 8
1 9
1 8
1 7
1 8
1 6
1 9
1 9
1 9
1 9
1 9
1 8
1 9
1 9
1 8
1 8
1 9
1 7
1 9
1 8
1 9“
1 7
APPOINTMENTS, D EATHS, R ESIGNATIONS,"ET C .
October 1 , 1 928,to 1 October, 1 92 4
M einbers of theclassof 1 9 24 (graduated J une appointed ensigns
!A rranged in order ofmerit '
for the completed course. Read first column, then second,
-M organ,A . M)
; Rawlins, E . W;
Hatcher, R . S i Smith,J. W.
’
R ichards,W. L . Yeomans, E .
.
E
C lexton, E . W. Crowe, E . F "
D uke, I . T . Waid, R . T .
Hedding. T . J Berthold, E .
“
E .
Wood, C ._C . M ichelt; W . G .
D artsch, F . A . L . Grandfield, F . J .
’
Dockweiler, E . V Beakley,W. M .
Cochran,W. P ., jr. Hopping,H . L .
.
Kraft,W. E . Bradley, M . M .
Scheibeler, J .
,
J .
'
Garvin, J. H .
Woodyard, E . L .
’ R ice, L : K .
‘
Ekstrom,C .
"E B archet, S . G .
E lliott, A -,B
'
T ammany,’W . P .
’
Harrison,H H . Cutler, S . Y.
’
Fisher,W . G . Freels, A . J .
Hayes, J . A .
r
Hooper, A . M .
Cunningham, E A : France,W . C .
Rose,R . E .,J r. A rison, R . E .
. Gregor,O.
’ F .
i
M athews, B . O.
’
Herring, M cL ean,E . R .,jr .
Wilkins,C . W. Penny,R . J .
Rook, E . C . Playter,R . E ;
Campbell,R . L , jr‘
. Vieweg, W . V . R .
"
Hogg,J . T . Carlson,R.
_
P .
Reese, C . B f 1 Price,C . H .
M ansfield,W.
‘
N . S tout,R . F .
T owner, G .
”C . Hyman,W . M
Hickey,’
W.
’
A‘
. Carroll,R . C .
Bearce, H . P . A ustin,B . L .
S isson, T . U ., jr. S trohecker,F .
'A .
lV right, J . M . P .
“
N uesse, L . W. Handly,A .
D yer, T . H . E llis, N . W .
N apier, T : D . Baldwin, J . A .
L amberth, H . R . Shannon, J .
‘
T .
Sawyer,'
M . A . Wolowsky,'
J . E .
W .
’
Pahl,J . R .
Bachman, L . A . Bryant, P . K .
Cole, W . M . Kent, H . G .
S immons,W . F . L ongfellow, W . J .
Eckberg, W . T . Patterson, G . W., jr
T racy,O. V . Bennett,D . B .
Fines, C . A . Callaghan, J . A
1 C ommissionwithheld pending'
recovery from illness.
1 35 .
L ovejoy, J . D .
Collins,H . L .
L aidlaw,J . S .
Hill,S . W.
Hurst, A . M .
Brand, J . W . C .
D avis, W . V .,jr .
Opie, J . N ., 3d .
E llis, E . M .
V osseller, A . B .
M itchell,W . J .
Browning, L . L eW .
'
Ruhsenberger, J . R .
Wheeler, H . B .
A ddoms, J . F .
Keyer,R . A ., jr .
S toddard, G . M .
Howard,H .
‘
P .,jr.
T iemroth, H H
Gouin,'
M ; E . A .
S tephens, E . W .
M cL ean, D . F .
Robillard,
'
G . N .
Fish, H ; C .
Bolton, A . J .
Kennaday, J . M.
Hartman,F."G .,jr .
Bolt z ,P . M cC .
D rexler,T empleton,T . H.
Wilkinson, E . R .
Short,W . B .
Bednar, A .
Perry, R. E .
M acL ean, S . K .
Brown,W . D .
Howland, G . F .
’
Graf, P .
‘
Wilkin, W .
'
D .
Bass,‘
A . W .
"
Cameron, D . A .
Garnet, W . N .
Weir,A .
V os, R . A .
A bdill, E . W .
"
1 36 A PPOIN T M E N T S , D EA T H S , RE S IGN A T ION S,E T C .
Weaver, P . L . F .
‘C leaves, W. E .
Knick,A . T .
L ayton, E . T .
Y oung,E . W .
Phillips, R . D .
T urner, T .
S utlifi'
, R . C .
Oswald, A . H .
Furth, F . R .
Baillie, R . VRoberts, N . K .
Swart,R . L ., jr .
Ogle, G . B .
L ayne, F . C .
B urchett, E . C .
S tott, G . W .
Huckins, T . A .
S inclair, . G . A .
Harris, D .
D ascomb, E . B .
Phelps,W .
E arl, K .
R icketts,J . B .,jr .
Hayter,.H . M . ,
S iegrist, P . W .
Herrington, L . B ., jr.
M arsh, J . A .
Calvert, A . P .
S iegrist,W . WBlaylock, L eR . B .
L atimer, S . E .
M iller,H . B .
S tone, W . P .
Bunker, F . R .
‘
R oane, V . R .
Bailey,W . B .
D aniel, H . C .
Burroughs, S . E ., jr .
Hyde, J . D .
Whi tehead, E . W .
T ichenor, M . J .
M ellon, W . L .
T hew, J . P .
C romwell, J . P
M cC allum, D . J .
Page, H . G .
C lose,F .
Baldwin, H . W .
Ballinger,H . R .
M acD onald, F . W .
D ugan, H . J .
S ullivan, J . E .
Sall, H .
L egg, C . A .
Gates, H . K .
Oden, S . F .
Kirkland, T ; J ., ir.
T eller, M . S .
D ant z ler, T . T .
M inter,R . O
A dair, C .
Quinn,B . D .
Bedford, S . R .
Evans,G;W ., jr .
Hay es, J ..D .
_
Sanford, J . R . , jr .
S chreiner, M .
T onkin, C'
. T . , jr .
Smi th,H . P .
L each,W“
. D ., jr .
M agly, A . V .
L ockhart,R . G.
Palmer,E . A ., jr .
Ragan, T . C .
M ercer,P . V.
Goldthwaite,R .
Roths, M . H .
E smond,R . W .
Reith,G ., jr .
C abanillas,‘
J . M .
Cullen, C .
’
E .
Warburton, A . L .
Rucker, C . G .
Williams, J . B .
D ancy , J . R .
A dams,R . M cC . B .
Carr,R . S ,
Brereton,W . H .
Harvey ,W . W .
Wight, D . D .
Johnson, L . W.
D emarest,H . R.
Hook,F . M .
Hoffman,C . M . E .
Weeden,W . W. , jr.
Bailey, S . M .
Parker,E . C .
Williams,R . D .
Watts,E .
Sharp, L . D ., jr .
M cPeake, L . J .
Jones,H . A .
D uvall,W . H .
Verge,W. E .
A rmor,H .
D ay,D . T ., jr .
1 C ommissionwithheld pend inggrecovery from il lness.
Harris, J . C .
HeineL M . C .
Ramsey , D _
. J.
Ri chter,H . E .
Gminder,E . E .
D eam,F . E .
T hompson,A . L .
1 Horsch,A . C .
Bourke,R . J ., jr.
Creehan,E P .
Callaway , C . H .
Hopkins,H . V .
Sheldon,H . P .
Phillips, N .
Burris,H .
Webb ,R : C ., jr .
D ahl gren, J . F .
M arsha ll, T . C .
L ajeunesse,R . W.
Graesser,W . M .
L illard, J . S .
Barnes, A . D .
Holbrook, J . A
T hompson,W . B .
M oss,R . S .
M cC aleb,W . R .
M cFadden,A G . W.
T aylor, J . I ., jr .
Southworth,H . B .
M ontgomery,G . C .
Johnson, J . F .
Fraser, T . E .
Cameron, T . S .
Bellerby,R . J .
Ganahl ,R . G .
Oexle,C . W .
T aylor,E . J ., jr .
Collins, D . H .
Petersen,W . F.
L inholm,A . R .
M cD onald,C . c.
Sayre,R . E .
Kline,A .
'
R .
D eutermann, W. V .
Gore, T ., jr .
Hawkinson, L . H .
Robinson,H . R .
T homas, L . H .
N eale,E .
’
T .
Folger, C . H . FN unn,I . H .
Ostertag,W . R .
Roedel, L .
Seay,E . A .
1 38 A PPOIN T’M E N T S,: DEA T H S R E SIGN A T Io
-N s, ET C .
A ppointed“
ensigns“
in S upply C orps
B eatty,C . E . D avies,J . T . Wymond, J . E .
Randolph,A . P . Herlihy, J L Patten, .w. E .
N orcross, M . A . Hake,Gf E'
ResignationsN ame and class D ate resigned
A bel, class of 1 926 Feb . 1 6, 1 92 42
A ichel,A lfred M ontague,class of 1 926 bA iken,Hugh Fraser,class oi 1 927A lderman,Clifford L indsey,class of 1 92 4A llen, J ohn L ouis,class of 1 924Amundson, John A rthur,class of 1 925A rmstrong,Wade Herbert, class of 1 927A shton,Robert Kyle,class of 1 926A twood,Horace Bailey,class of 1 927Aubrey,William Gerald,class of 1 92 7
Auerbach,Edwin Harvey,class of 1 924Aulsbury,Charles William Clark,class of 1 927
A xtell,A lan Wylie,class of 1 924Ball, James A ndrew, jr .,class of 1 927Barnard,U lysses Grant,class ofBarry, D ighton, class of 1 92 6Batterton,Boeker Charles,class of 1 927 bBeall,D rewry Augustus,class of 1 927 bBeaty,Raymond Pope, class of _
1 9,
27
Beem,M artin Custer, jr .,class of 1 927
Beiser,ClarenceRalf,class of 1 925Bennett,James R ichard,class of 1 927Bentley,Osceola M arbury,class of 1 927 _
Benton,Herbert Peyton,jr.,class of 1 92 4
Berliner, Sylvan,class of 1 924 ,
Betters Paul Vernon, d ates of 1 927Biggs,Frederick D eM ont, class of 1 92 5
Birmingham,William, classof 1 925Black, L ex L ,eroy class of 1 927b
Black,Raymond A rchie, class of 1 927Blough, A rthur Koont z ,class of 1 92 4Blurton,“Clarence Harry, class of 1 925Boaz ,R ichard M urray, class ofBogert,
'William George, jr., class of 1 927
Bond,Bernard Batson,class of 1 926B orgen,
‘ Kenneth Royal, class of 1 924Bradbury,Wendell M erlin,class of 1 925
Bradford, Carl Jewel,classof'Bradshaw, J
‘
oseph D aniel,classof 1 927 -T
Bradshaw,Joseph T homas, class Of 1 927 _ - h. .
Brady, J ohn .Wilbu,r, class of 1 924 _
'B rady,William M arcy,class, of 1 927
Breslin, James Gordon, class of -1
B rittain, M ilton Claude, class of 1 92 5 _
Broda,D onald Frank, class of 1 924B rodhead,William M cN ulty,class of 1 927
b Readmitted.
APPOIN T M EN T S, DEA TH S, RES IGN A T ION S, E T C. 1 39
N sine and class
Brooks, L ew Wallace, class of 1 926
Brown,Fred Bartholomew, classof 1 926
B rumfield, James S idney,class of 1 927Bullis,WilliamFrancis,class of 1 924Burke, Samuel Francis, classof 1 926 _
Burns,Howard T hompson,class of 1 92 7Burrows,A lbert Collins,class of 1 927 b_
‘
Caldwell,William A shford, class of 1 924Calhoun, Allston D uPre, jr .,class of 1 924
Campbell,William S impson, class of 1 927Caples, John R ichard, class of 1 924Carmichael, D elos D orrington,class of
'
1 927
Carney,A rthur Gerald, class of 1 92 4Carney,Kenneth Bostwick, class of 1 926Carpenter,D avid N ewcomb, class of 1 92 5Cerny, Clyde A ugustine, class of 1 927Clark,William S tewart,class of 1 926Clausen, A lbert Julius, class of 1 924Clem, Clarence Keyer, class of 1 927Cochran,Howard T homas, class of 1 927
Colburn,R ichard Castle, class of 1 924Cole,Reuben D avid, class of 1 927bColeman,Vance Sherwood, class of 1 926Colyer, L eigh, jr., class of 1 926
Connor,Robert L owell, class of 1 92 7Cooke, John Cortelyou, class of 1 926Cooper,Glen Walter, class of 1 927Cornwell,Robert Wendel],class of 1 926
Couch,M alcolm Graham, class of 1 927
Craig,M alin, jr., class of 1 924
Cramer,Wilson Earl,class of 1 924D arlington, John Joseph, class of 1 924D ay, L eonard William,class of 1 924'
D enham, T homas Gayle, class of 1 927D errick,GeorgeWilliam,jr.,class of 1 927
D evens,-William George,classof 1 924D ickinson, Beverly William,class of 1 926
D ouville,Kenneth Boyden, class of 1 927D owns,Harry A lfred,class of 1 923D umire,Ralph Freeman, class of 1 927D unn,James A nthony,class of 1 926-D urham,A lbus,class of 1 927
D urrett, M arcus,class of 1 927
Eck, Samuel Kroninger,class of 1 927
Elliott, Charles Pinckney,in, class of 1 926Elliott,N athaniel Yeomans,class of 1 927
E nnis,Francis Willard, class of 1 927Erickson,.Walter L eRoy, class of 1 927 b
E stes,Homer T , class of 1 927
Evans,Chesley M cA llister,class of 1 924
Eversole,Carl Fairbanks,class of 1 927 bEves,Edward T homas,class of 1 926b
b Readmitted .
APPOIN T M EN TS , DEA THS,R E S IGN A T ION S, E T C .
N ame and class
Evitt, Samuel L ee, class of ~ 1 927
Falge,Francis M arion, class of 1 924
Falk,Henry Amos,class of'
1 927
Farnsworth, J Ohn Gosman, class of 1 926Farrell,
‘
Edwin T homas,class of 1 926
Farrington,Ferris Reeve, class of 1 926Feldman,A llan L ee, class of 1 92 7
Ferguson, James William, jr., class of 1 924
Fit z maurice,Eugene William, class of 1 927 b
Flaherty,Edward Short, class of _ 1 926 _
Fogg,Gilman'
Worcester, class of 1 926
Ford,William Grimshaw,class of 1 927 b'
Foss,Walter Irving, jr .,class of 1 92 5
Fowler,Edward Henry, class of 1 927
French,Forrest James, class of 1 9 24
Furtney,George William,class of 1 927
Galbraith,William Jackson, class of 1 927 _
Garcia,Henry Frederick, class of 1 924Garst, James Franklin, class of 1 927Gebhart, T homas D aniel, class of 1 92 5
George,Robert Kenneth, class of 1 92 7Gerry, L awrence James,class of 1 92 5
Gibbons, Joseph Howard, jr ., class .oi 1 924
Gilchrist, M urvyne D urwood, class of 1 926
Gill,Harold Willard, class of 1 927Gillespie, M arvin,class of 1 927 _
Glass,Benjamin Weaver, class of 1 924Golden, James M ichael, class of 1 926
Goldsmith, Z ebulon B ladesley, class ofGranger, J ames Roscoe, class of 1 926
Grayb‘
ill, Samuel Weslie, class of. 1 927
Greenlee,R ichard, class of 1 927
Griep,E lmer Frederick, class of 1 92 5Grifii th, T homas R ichards, jr ., class of 1 924Grinager,Kenneth Paul, class of 1 926Griswgld, T heophilus, class ofGunders
'
on,George Barnhardt,class of 1 92 7Hackett, T haddeus Edward,jr .,class of 1 926
Haddock,D avid S tanford, class of 1 927Hall,‘ Raymond D orsey,class of 1 927 _
Hanby, John E stes,class of 1 927 bHangs, James Frederick,class of 1 924Hanlon,Paul Joseph, class of 1 926Harper, T hemas Beverley,class of 1 92 5Harrison,Carter Henry, class of 1 926
Heath,Raymond Franklin, class of 1 927Heffner,Reid Russell, class of 1 927 _
Heisser, A rthur Roger, class of 1 92 4H ickox,George
‘
Philip, class of 1 927
Hodges,Willard A tlee, class of 1 927 bHolder,Oren Spencer, class of 1 92 7 b_
Holler,Walker Wesley, class .of 1 924
b Readmitted .
1 4 2 APPOIN T M E N T S, DEA T H S, RE S IGN A T ION S, E T C .
N ame and class
M artin,D aniel J erome,class of 1 924M artin,_John L ucien,class of 1 927M athews,Kenneth Eddy,class of 1 927 _
M athi s,D arden,class of 1 92 5M atteucci,George Amadee,class of 1 924
M axwell, L loyd Jacob,class of 1 92 7 _
M cC askill,Ralph Emmerson,classof 1 927M cC all,Charles C unbifi e,class of 1 927
M cC onnaghy,L awson,class of 1 927
M cGlasson,Grady,class of 1 92 5
M cGovern, J ohn Edward,class of 1 926M cGuire,Gordon Gerald,class of 1 926
M cL eod,Robert D ouglas, jr .,class of'
1 92 4
M cN airy,Ray M ebane,class of 1 92 5
M endenhall,Earl Clifford,class of 1 927M iller,L ewis H iram,class of 1 927
M iller,Russell Briggs,class of 1 92 7M iller, T homas Raymond,class of 1 926M ilson,Joseph Charles,class of 1 927 _
M oore,A lvin Edward,class of 1 92 5M oore,William T homas,class of 1 924M orris, J ames Virgil, class of 1 927M orrow, Samuel Howard, class of 1 924M oses,George William, jr .,class of 1 926
M ounts,Providence, jr.,class of 1 926 _
M urphy,Hubert Beveridge,class of 1 927N aisbitt,M unro Pyper,class of 1 927N aragon,D ale D emarr,class of 1 927
N ash,N ic.,ir.,class of 1 927 b
N auss, M orton Shult z ,class of 1 927N eal, J oseph Walter, jr.,class of 1 927
N ewman,Glenn,class of 1 92 4N orman,Oliver L e Grand, class of 1 924O
’L oughlin, James Edmund, class of 1 927
Orr, John,class of 1 926Ott, J ohn R iley,class of 1 927 _
Overstreet, James Wilkins, jr.,class of 1 925Pinard,Albert Francis,class of 1 927_
Pottle, James Henry, jr.,class of 1 924
Poupeney, D ion Beers,class of 1 92 4 "
Preddy,o J oseph Gipson,class of 1 926 _
Proudfit,Herbert Kerr,class of 1 927
Raborn,Will iam Francis, jr.,class of 1 927 bRadinsky, T heodore Oswald, jr.,class of 1 927
Rasbach, Joris Bliss,class of 1 924Reed,George L atimer, ir ., class of 1 926
R iggs,Paul Hughes, class of 1 924
R itchie,Fred Payne, class of 1 927R itter,Paul Orville,class of 1 925Roberts,D aniel Gordon,class of 1 927Robnett,Vernon Powell,class of 1 926Rode,Herman Carl, jr., class of 1 924
bReadmitted .
APPOIN T M E N T S , DEA T H S , RE S IGN A T ION S , tE T C .
N ame and class
R odriguez ,Vincent L eonard, ir.,class of 1 927
Ross,Harold J erome,class of 1 927Ruffolo,L ouis J oseph,class of 1 924 _ -
f
S amsot,Robert D esposito,class of 1 927Sanders, Samuel,jr.,class of 1 924
Sarrasin,William J oseph,class of 1 925- 1Savage,L ouis A rthur,class of 1 927 bS ayres,Clinton,class of 1 924S chenck,Charles A lexander, jr.,class of 1 924
S chuet z ,Chester Charles,class of 1 925S cott,John Harvey,class of 1 927 _
Scott, L angston Berton,class of 1 927Scott,Winfield Wayne,class of 1 924
Seay,Worrell Austin,class of 1 926Shelton,A cton A rtelle, class of 1 92 5Shepherd,Charles Edward,class of 1 924Shewell,Charles T ripler,class of 1 92 5Shipley,Roland Curry,class of 1 927Shipman,Frederick Will iam,class of 1 927_
Shropshire,Ralph Freeman,class of 1 92 5Shumaker,Cresswell Sutton,class of 1 924S immonds, N orman Blakesley, class of 1 924S imonton,R ichard M etcalf,class of 1 924S impson,E lmer A lan,class of 1 926 _
S inger, Samuel Jacob,class of 1 92 4Skade,A lfred M athew,class of 1 92 7Snider,Ro
’
bert M aurice,class of 1 927
Speer, J oseph Gordon,class of 1 924S tem,Jack Hubert,class of 1 927S tephens,
’
J ames M arion,class of 1 92 5
Stramler,Jefferson Walker,class of 1 927
S trange,Robert Orris,classof 1 92 7 bS tauffer, T ed Clark,class of 1 927 _
S turcken,William August,class of 1 925Sugg, T om T hompson,class of 1 927Sullivan,Kenneth T homas,class of 1 927Sunde,Frederick M ichael,class of 1 927T aylor,Kendrick,class of 1 927 bT errell,Roy L ee,jr .,class of 1 927
T errill,M aurice Wilbur,class of 1 926T erry,Ra lph Bane,class of 1 926T homas,Robert Hampson,class of 1 924T hompson,Joseph Cornelius, class of 1 926T hompson,.Russell Samuel,class
’
of 1 92 5
T imberlake,‘
Casper Hill,class of 1 92 7 _
T immerman,D ixon Padgett,class of 1 927bT rese, J oseph Condon,class of 1 927 bT ruax,William D avid Brown,class of 1 9 26Wagner,Chester (I
‘
heodore,classof 1 9 26
Walbrid'
ge,Vern,class of 1 924Wales,William Wyatt,class of
‘
1 926l
b Readmitted .
4 4 A PPOIN T M EN T S, D EA T H S , RE S IGN A T ION S ,~-E T C .
N ame and class
Walker, D onald Seymour,class of 1 924Walker,
_Haz el M arion,class of 1 92 7 _
Waller,George Washington D oane, jr .,class 1 924
Walling,E lbert S tewart,class of 1 92 72Walsh,A lbert Joseph,class of 1 924Walshe,Frank Seymour, jr.,class of 1 926
Walters,Ralph Edward, class of 1 927
Welsh, D . Emmett, class of 1 92 4Whi te, T heodore Clark, class of 1 925Whitmire, B oyce A ugustus, class of . 1 92 7
Whi tlock,L aurence A lexander, class of 1 927Wiles,Gordon Warren, class of 1 926 _
Wiley,Wallace Eugene, class of'
1 92 7 _
Williams, A rtie L eon, jr ., class of 1 924
Williams, N evi lle A llen, class of 1 92 7 _
Wilson,Hal 'Kay, class of 1 924
Wolfe,L eland Jacob,class of 1 92 7Wood, M ilton Chubbuck, class of 1 92 7 bWoodruf
‘f, Burleigh A lfred, class of 1 92 7Wyly, L ucian B uffington, class of 1 92 5Yeager,William Cornelius, class of 1 92 76
Young, C asanave Howle, class of 1 92 5Z ahm,R ichard Holloway, class of 1 92 7
Z interhofer, L ouis Joseph, class of 1 92 7 _
D roppedN ame and class
Beaird, L ucius Howard, class of 1 92 7 _
Fox,
’
S tewart Bell, class of 1 92 5Holcomb, D elton Smith, class of 1 92 7sS cott,Howard N ewton, class ofSpriggs,Kahl Kenneth, class of 1 92 7
T oucey,Ferris D onald, class of 1 92 7
D eaths
N ame and class
D ot z ler,T heodore Roosevelt, class of 1 92 5D uncan, Robert James, class of 1 92 5
Ogden, S idney N orris, class of 1 92 5
Smith,‘
L eicester R ichard, class of 1 92 5V an D en C orput,Will iam M aximillian, class of 1 927
D ismissals
N ame and class
Gerwig,Roger Wesley, class of 1 92 7_
Sealy,Havert Stanl y, jr ., class of 1 92 7
Steel,,Harold Payne, class of 1 92 6
T riebe,Edward James, class of 1 925
Retained in -next lower class
N ameA bernethy, John Robert, class of 1 92 7 to classlofj l 928A ddison,Edward Spencer, class of 1 926 to class of 1 92 7,
b Readmitted .
1 4 6 E T C .
N ame and class
Rickertts,Roland Wendell,claSs of 1 926 to class of 1 927_
Ross,Harold Jerome,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
S ayers,L ewis Wet z el, jr.,class of 1 927 to class of 1 928
Shapley,Allan,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
Smyth, John Borden,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
S tewart,William Henry, jr.,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
S tewart,William Holden, jr.,class of 1 92 7 to class of 1 92 8
Symes,Robert'
T homas,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
T odd,D avid Wooster,class of 1 927 to class of 1 92 8
T rafton, Spalding,ir .,class of 1 926 to class of 1 927
Wakeman,. C alvin Edson,class of 1 926 to class of 1 92 7
Wey ,Bosquet N eill,class of 1 926 to class Of 1 92 7
White, J ohn T imothy,class oi 1 92 7 to class of 1 928
Wiedemann,Francis J oseph,class of 1 927 to class of 1 928
Wyatt, J oe Earle,class of 1 927 to class of 1 928
Z ook,Hurley M cC une,class of 1 927 to class of 1 928
C OU RSE OF INSTRU C TION,
!Reference books aremarked*]FIR S T Y EAR- FOURT H C L A S S
FIRST TERM
Subjects T extbooks
M A RINE EN GINEERING A N D M echanical.
(1 raw ingNAVA L CONSTRUCTION . and descriptive geome ry .
Solid geometryPlane trigonometry andlogarithms.
M athematical analysis
C omposition and literature (including shortspeeches, official letters, and naval re
ports) . L ectures . byhead of ‘ department.
M ODERN LANGUA GES Spanish(One half of the class studiesSpanish and the other hal fFrench .)
SECOND TERM
M A RINE ENGINEERING AN D, M echanical d rawingNAVA L CONSTRUCTION . and descriptive geom
etry .
M A THEMA TICS _ M athematical analysis
E N GLlSH
M ODERN LANGUA GES(One half of the class studiesS panish and the other halfFrench .)
C ollege algebra
laneanalyticgeometry-(A ll three taken con
currently.)C omposition and literature (including shortspeeches, offi cial . . let
ters, and naval re
ports) . L ectures byhead oi department .
S panish
Bartlett and Johnson’s Engineering
D escriptive Geometry and D rawlng.
Hawkes— L uby— T outon.
Bullard and Kiernan’
s Plane andSpherical T rigonometry .
Griffin’
s Introduction to M athematical A nalysis.
Bowditch ’
s Useful T ables.
‘
Smith’
s What C an L iterature D oFor M e?
S tevens and A lden’s C omposition for
N aval Officers.
Krafft and N orris’
s Sea Power inAmericanH istory .
D ana’
s T wo Years Before the M ast .Houston and Bonnell’
s T ypes of
Great L iterature.
Webster’
s C ollegiate D ictionary .
*
H ills and Ford’
s First, S panish
C ourse.
A ppleton’s N ew Spanish D iction
aryr“
T he N ew Fraser and S quair FrenchGrammar:Uniform International D ictionary,Hinds,Hayden, and E ldredge.
*
Bartlett and Johnson’
5 EngineeringD escriptive Geometry and D raw
Hangdy Book for Enl isted M en of
Engineerlng D epartment .Griffin’
s Introduction toM athematical A nalysis.
M echanical Engineer’s Handbook,
by M arks".
Bowditch’
sUseful T ables.
Reitz and C rathorne’
s C ollege A lgebra.
Palmer and Krathwohl A nalyticGeometry.
S tevens and A lden’
s C omposition forN aval Officers.
Houston and Bonnell ’
s T ypes of
Great L iterature.
Shakespeare’
s T welfth N ight,Hamlet,and Henry IV ,Part 1 .
Hills and Ford’
s First SpanishC ourse.
M arcia] D orado and R ay’
s T rozosM odernos.
T he N ew Fraser and S quair FrenchGrammar.
M eras’L e S econd L ivre.
1 4 8
Departments
M A RIN E ENG INEER ING A N D
NA VAL CONSTRUCTION .
E LECTRICA L ENGINEERING A N DPHYSICS .
E NGLISH
M ODERN LANGUA GES(One half of the class studiesS panish and the other halfFrench.)
M A RINE ENG INE ERIN G A N D
NAVA L CONSTRUCTION .
M A THEMA TICS
E LECTRICA L EN GINEERING A N D
PHYSICS .
E NGLISH "
M ODERN LANGUA GES(One half of the class studiesSpanish and the other halfFrench.
C OURS E OF IN S TRUC T ION
SE C ON D YE A R—T HIRD C L A S S
FIRST TERM
Subjects T extbooks
N aval history-A
Spanish
French
SECOND TERM
M echanical ProcessesB OIIers
Polyphase S lide Rule
Physics
M odern essaysS pani sh
French
Engineering drawing
M athematical A nalysis
Solid analytical geometry . (T akenconcurrentlywith C alculus .)hemistry
Bartlett and Johnson’s D escriptive
Geometry and D rawing .
Griffin’s Introduction toM athemati
cal A nalysis.
T ownsend and Goodenough’
s E ssen~
tlals of C alculus.
Hudson’
s Engineers’M anual .*
Smith Gale.
M cPherson and Henderson’
s E lementary S tudy of C hemistry.
M cPherson and Henderson’s E xer
cises in C hemistry.
Pamphlet . D ashiell’
s Problems inC hemistry.
Krafit and N orris’
s Sea Power inAmerican H istory .
S tevens and Westcott’s H istory of
Sea Power.
C rawford’
s T emas E spafloles.
H ills and Ford’
s First S panishC ourse.
L aguardia’s C uentos Hispanoameri
canos.
M éras’L e S econd L ivre.
Fournon and Broussard’
s PourParler Francais.
T he N ew Fraser and S quair French
D anforth’s M echanical Processes.
L yon and Hinds’M arine and N aval
Boilers.
B ursau of Engineering Boiler M an
na
E lementary M echanics— D epartment of M athematics,U . S . N avalA cademy .
Hudson’
s Engineers’M anua1 .*
Breckenridge.
M ill iken, Gale and Pyle’s Practical
Physics.
Kimball ’s C ollege Physics.
D epartment pamphlet on Gyro,T heory of Flight,T hermodynamics,etc.
Smith’s E ssays on C urrent T hemes.
L aguardi’
a’s C uentos H ispanoameri
canos.
Hills and Ford’s First Spanish
C ourse.
Fournon and Broussard’s Pour
Parler Francais.
T he N ew Fraser and S quair FrenchGrammar.
1 50 C OURS E OF " IN S T RUC T ION
FOURT H YEA R—FIR S T C L A S S
FIRST TERM
D epartments Subjects
S EAMANSHIP S eamanship
-S ignalsE lementary strategyand tactics
ORDNA NCE A N D GUNNERY Ordnance and ballistics
N A VIGA TION T heory and practice of
navigation.
T heory of compass deviations .
M A RINE ENGINEERING A N D T urbinesNA VA L CONSTRUCTION.
E LECTRICA L ENGINEERIN G A N D A lternating current andPHYSICS . alternating current
machinery.
Radio
E NGLISH M odern European History (with lectures) .
A fter-dinner speaking(T uesday and T hursday evenings) .
SECOND TERM
S EAMANSHIP 3 RegulationsM ilitary L awInternational L aw
L eadershipORDNANCE A N D GUNNERY 4 Ballist ics, fire control,
torpedoes, and gunnery .
N A VIGA TION T heory of compass deviations .
Practical navigation
M ARINE ENGINEERING A N D Internal C ombustionEnNA VA L CONSTRUCTION gines.
N aval cons t ruct i on
E LECTRICA L ENGIN EERING A N D Al ternating current andPHYSICS . alternating current
machinery .
R adio S ignal C orps’ “ Principles Underly
ing Radio C ommunication.
”
D epartmental Radio Instruction.
E NGLISH A fter-dinner speaking(T uesday and T hursday evenings) .
Efiects of alcohol andnarcotics.
N aval and mil itary hy Heiner’s Physiology, First A ld and
giene. N aval Hygiene.
First aid to the injured( 1 4 Friday eveningperiods) .
Knight’s Seamanship .
Boat Book,* 1 920.
C yclonic Storms .
Handl ing Ships,N otes BN autical Phraseology .
S ignal Books,U . S . N avy.
Special pamphlets.
N otes on N aval C ommunications.
N aval Ordnance, 1 92 1 .
Gunnery instructions,U . S . N avy .
E xterior Ballistics,A lger.
N otes onFire C ontrol and T orpedoes.
N avi gation, 1 922 .
Bowditch’s T ables.
N autical A lmanac.
‘
A zimuth T ables.
*
C ox L ibbey’
s N aval T urbines .
Bullard’
s“N aval E lectrician’
s T extbook .
” Vols. I and II.
S ignal C orps’ Principles UnderlyingRadio C ommunication.
D epartmental R ad io Instructions.
T urner’
s Europe since 1 789 .
U . S . N avy Regulations.
N aval C ourts and Boards .
International L aw—Soule M c
C auley .
N aval L eadership .
E xterior Ballistics,A lger.
Gunnery Instructions .
Bureauof Ordnance Pamphlets .
N otes on Fire C ontrol,M ines andT orpedoes.
Official Publications.
N avigation, 1 922 .
Bowditch’s T ables.
N autical A lmanac.
‘
A zimuth T ables.
*
L ind’
s Internal C ombustionEngines.
(M anning Schumacher’
s .)N aval A rchitecture and WarshipC onstruction.
Bullard’
s“ N aval E lectrician’
s T extbook,” Vols. I and II.
COURS E : OF ? IN S T RUC T ION 1 51
A ssignmeht of time, 1 924—25
First class “
Second class
D epartments
S EAMANS HIPORDN A NCE '
A N D GUNNERY .
N A VIGA TION :M A RINE ENGINEERING A N D
NA VA L CON STRUCTIONM A THEMA TICSE LECTRICA L ENG INE ERINGA N D PHYSICS
E NGLISHL ANGUA GES
D ecemberand January,three periods.
9 February and_
M arch,one period .
3 D ecember and January,fi‘
V e periods.
4 Februaryand M arch,five periodsFriday night lecture.
C oefiicients, 1 9 24—25
Departments First class Second class T hird class Fourth class
A PTITUDE FOR THE S ERVICE
S EA R A N SHIP
ORDNA NCE A N D GUNNERYN A VIGA TIONM A RIN E ENGINEERING A N D
NA VA L CONSTRUCTIONM A THE ‘
I A T IC S
E LECTRICA L ENGI N E E R IN GA N D PHYSICS
1 52’
C OURS E ‘ OF IN S T RUC T ION
Programof recitatio‘
ns, 1 924—2 5
FIR S T T E RM
Second T hird
M onday
T hursday _
Friday n n
S aturday
I : E . E . P .I
1 D ecember and January.
“
1 56 C OURSE OF IN ST RUC T ION
Instruction'
schedule for first term
25 SE PT E M BE R , 1 924 , T O 1 FE BRUA RY, 1 925
First Second
C lass0 041 a. m. to 3.27 to 4 .30
to a.m. p . m. p . m.
M onday-J .
Wednesday N avigation
L 3 E . E . P .
E . E . P .
M . E . N . C .
4,2 M . E . N . C .
1 ,3 M athematics4,2 Engli sh1 ,3 L anguages
4,2 L anguages
Saturday time schedule toe .m.
Saturday
Recreation
top . In.
S tudy
S tudy
S tudy
S tudy
S tudy
L iberty
M otionPictures,etc.
( 1 ) D uring the odd-numbered academicmonths the first and fourth battalions reci te thefirst hour of aperiod . D uring the even-numbered academic months the second and third battalions recite the firsthour of a period .
(2 ) For the academic year of 1 924-25 each odd-numbered battalion of the regiment studies Spanish andeach even-numbered battalion studies French . A ssignment to each language on entrance becomes permanent for the entire course.
1 D ecember and January. 1 00 4- 1 20 8 p . m.
S E C ON D T ERM S C H EDUL E 1 923— 1 9241 5 8
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R ESU M E oE C OURSE OF IN ST RU CT ION
EX EC UT IV E
The executive department, under‘
jthe“direction
“ of'
the c ommandant of midshipmen,accomplishes the following functions :Development of officer-like character and qualities in mi dshipmen .
Enf orcement of the regulations for interior discipline.
S ervice of the regiment byits auxiliary departments,includi ng the commissary,midshipmen’
s store, tailor shop, cobbler shOp,,and barber shop .
Administration of Bancroft Hall,Where the'
regiment is quartered .
Accomplishment of executive drills,namely,infantry, setting-up,and bayonetexercises .
Supervision over all midshipmen entertainments and a ctivities other thanacademic work .
S upervision of the N aval Academy Band,the police force,and fire organization;Operation and upkeep of Naval Academy farm and dairy .
It i s the endeavor of this department to instill into the regiment of midshipmenthe highest standard of honor, loyalty, and patriotism . This is accompli shedin the development of mental and physical cleanliness, the proper sense of dutyand responsibility, and ability to command men .
N umber of dri ll weeks per battalion, class, and department during academic year1 924—25
First battalion Second battal ion
D epartmentclass T
Executive
Seamanship
E lectrical engineering
D ancing
T otal
Fourth
I
-9 -0 -O
E lectrical engineering
RESUM E OF COURSE OF IN STRU C TION
N OT E A . A drill week begins M onday and ends Saturday, drills be1 ng helddaily except WednesdayNOT E B —In additionto above scheduled
November, 1 924, and endingwork will be held as followsfirst an
‘
d second battalions, ondays; ;the third class,first andfourth battalions, on Fridays .
N OT E G. ,—Duringwinter drills (from 2 4 November
when first class has ordnance, it will attend ordnanceof ordnance weeks instead of. going
“
to gymnasium.
gJ N Q T E D — Graduation exercise drills will be speciallyprescribedNOT E E — Fire drills .Will be held monthly .
NOT E F— During the. second period on Sat
February,and M arch, the second classWill have earna
the third class will have recitationin E . E. P.
S EAM ANS HIP
The department of seamanship has for itsmission theinstructionOfmidshipmento the end that upon graduation they may.be capable of efficiently performing theduties of a junior officer afloat . as junior officer of the Watch, junior deck divisionofficer, junior forecastle officer,boat officer, assistant communication officer,andrecorder of a summary court-martial ;S eamanship drills commence with the day of the fourth classman’s entrance into
the academy, continue throughout the entire course, and are . supplemented bypractical instruction on the practicecru 1 ses . Commencing with learning how to
pull a service cutter,the drills progress through handling service—type and civiliantype boats under oars, sail, and power, signals— semaphore, M orse visual code,and flag hoist, ground tackle work, knotting and splicing; compass,log,and leadtactics and evolutions ; and communications .In general,members of the fourth class takethe ordinary crew duties,and have
qualifications similar to seaman ; third class, as important crewmembers, withqualifications as petty officer second class,as second incommand,with qualifi
cations as chief petty officer ; and first class, in command,With qualificationsas junior officer .
Recitations are held in seamanship first term of third year, and throughoutboth terms of the fourth year . The instruction covers signals, seamanship ingeneral, nautical phraseology, communications, regulations, military law, elementary strategy and tactics,_
international law,and leadership.
For the firstclass additional instruction 1 n tacticsand m seamanship'
evolutionsiscarried on insubmarine chasers,all of the duties of the deck force being takenover by themidshipmen, “
under the supervision of experienced officer instructors .
ORDNANC E AND '
GUNNERY
The course includes all the theoretical and practical instruction required fOr theperformance of gunnery duties aboard ship as a juniorOfficer 'and in additiongives a thorough basic foundation for future study and development work inordnance and gunnery . It i s divided into two parts, section room and practicalinstruction . The section room instruction covers
‘
subjects whichmust be studiedand can best be learned as a midshipman ; the practical instruction and drillincludeswork With all types Of naval ordnance fromsmall arms to turret guns and
'
methods for control Of all weapons . Drills which can be best' givenaboard shipand preparations fOr target practiceare held during
b
the practice cruise and not
at the Naval Academy .
I
1 64 EES U ME’OE COURSE '
OF 1
T hepractical work begins the Summer of th
firing on the rifle range with rifles and pistol upbroadside guns,and explanation of all ordnan
‘ce
gren Hall . During the fourth,third,and sec'
Ond
tion i s continued with machine guns,broadsidethe
'
dutie’
s
‘
of all personnel connected with ordnance .
tofire control andmethodsof '
usingbroadside and tu'
rordnance,grenades,and gas masks .Instruction 1 n the Section room begins the second t
a study of principles of naval ordnance gundesignas preparation for the duties of the first
first class,performthe duties of officers
velotrOl
and m1nes,aShip .
Textbooks
by experienced officers of the United States;Navy for imidshipmen and junior officers . Besides the S tudy of ton practical ordnance and gunnery is given by officersment and the fleet .
Throughout the course great stress is laid not only upon thefdutieS of a 31 111 1 1 11
511 :
officer ln gunnery ,'
but the relation of each subject to the development of ordnanceand gunnery in the United S tates Navy, the present gunnery methxtds of thefleet and the possible futUre requirements Which must be met by "néifiral officerswho are graduates of the Naval Academy .
NAVIGATION
The time assigned to the department of navigation and the utilizais as outlined below .
The subject of navigation. 1 s first taken up by themidsh1 prnan duclass cruise and is continuous from then Until graduation . Grouterms :S econd class cruise -Elementary navigation to the sailings, 1nclud1ng
tions, instruments, charts .
S econd term, second class year .
-N avigation up to point of
fOllows : Nautical astronomy, definitions, charts, compassand dead reckoning,chronometer,time,Nautical Almanac .
work as follows . T ime,N autical Almanac ; latitude S ights,aof sun ; sidereal time,latitude,azimuth,and S t. Hilaire of hval to noon, day
’S work .
First class cruise.
— One-half of the first class are on deck detail for each half ofthe cruise .and while on this detail do navigation daily . This consists of, inclearWeather, day’s work morning and noon sights, noon p
'
OS itiI
on, and morning orevening star sights . In cloudy weather Other Sui table navigational
“
subjects areassigned .
“4
st. term,first class year T o a greatextentageneral reviewof Second ct :Work,but goingmore fnlly into the S 1ibject, eSpecially so with compa'
SS w'éllz .
S econd term,first class year .
_ Day’s Work with all variations,gyro co'mpaSS,and
Short course on tideS,Sunand moon,rise and Set,and surveying. The aim 9
1thii
department in above courses is to thoroughly ground the m1 dsh1pman in the
principles of navigation so that ongraduation he Will be a valuable assistant tothe navigator of any ship .
66 RS S U M PL. OF . COURS E or INSTRUCTION
plication to existing types of engines . Fuels and l ubricants . D etailed study ofmarine types of g asoline and oil engines,and of aircraft engines,including med
chanical parts,carburetion,lubri cation,cooling and ignition systems,and methodsof reversal . M ost common faults and remedies . 1
N aval construction'
(fourth year,second term) .
i —General -studyz of Shi p’s lines and
definitions pertaining thereto . V arioUs steps inplanning a Ship . Calculations ofareas and volume
‘
s . General prinCipleS '
of'
stability, both static and dynamic :D iSplac
’
ement'
and trim,with curves in relation thereto . E ffects of ' weight 'dis
tribution and of weight shifting . Resistance of ships . Coefficients of speed .
Law of corresponding speeds . Ship nomenclature . Detai ls of ' c'OnStruction ofnaval vessels . Launching and d ocking .
(General arrangement of Ship compart
ments and methods of flooding, draining, and-
ventilating . Details Of Steeringgear . Care and preservation of hull s :
PR A C T IC A L ‘ WORK
First year.
— Pattern shOp : Selection and treatment of different woods for different purposes; elementary work of the carpenter shop, through mortising, j oin
ing,woodworking Lathe, etc ., to finished pattern work .
M achine Shop : Vise bench work Showing the proper use of variousbench toolsM iscellaneous : Examination of and lecture on models of valves, boilers, and
engines .Practicecruise.
—Handling of ship S boilers when 1 1 1 port and at sea,managementof main and auxiliary machinery ; fireroomand engineroom routine; overhaulingmachinery, cleaning boilers, evaporators, etc .
S eco‘
nd year.
— Foundry : Kinds of sand and implements used ;making of moldsmelting and
'
pOuring of iron and brass .
‘
Forge Shop : Equipment and tools used ; forging, welding; tempering, case'
bending and quenching tests of metals, etc .
Boiler Shop : R iveting, ss oft and hard patching; calking,annealing, cutting out
tubes, expanding tubes, etc .
Coppersmi th shop . Soldering; hard'and soft; .
m'
aking copper pipe ; puttingflanges on pipe ;use of oil furnace .and oil heater; sweating patch on a copper pipe :M achine shop : M achine-tool work fromworking drawings incl uding the Setting
of work;machinetools used are lathes,p1aners,vertical and horizontal boringmi lls,Simple and radial drill pressers, shapers,milling machines, slotters, etc .
I
Fuel-oil-burning boiler : L ighting fires and raising steam from a cold boiler;handling boiler under forced draft; control of fires for smokeless or Smoke conditions ;study of various types of burners;safe by precautions to be observed In the handl ingand burning of fuel oil .M iscellaneous : Use of various measuring instruments; gauge calibration ; acety
lene cutting and welding; electricwelding;thermit welding; stength of metals .
Practice cruise.
— EngineroOmand firerOOmroutine in port and at sea,management of boilers m port and at
,sea;management oi main and auxiliary machinery
overhauling machinery, cleaning boilers, evaporators, etc.
T hird year.
— Lining up,bearing adjustment, and valve setting of engines;operation and overhauling of evaporator
'
plant,’
refrigerating plant, air compressors,traps,steering and anchor engines,detailed inspection of pumps,condensers,and distillers ; propeller measurements; operation of steam reciprocating engines ;and determination by indicator of horsepower developed; coal testing ; flue gas
analysis ; boiler inspections . and tests .Practice cruise — Administration of engineer department ;management of boilers
in port and at sea;management .oi maim’and -auxili ary machinery under variousconditions of Steaming;overhauling machinery,cleaning boilers,evaporators,etc. ;
engineroom and fireroom routine in port and at sea .
Fourth year.—Operation of steam turbines and internal-combustion engines ;
determination, by dynamometer, of horsepower developed , torsion meter;detailed inspection of marine turbines, reduction gear, and condensing plant;
IifiS U'
M fi or'
OOUnSE r OF IN S TRUCTION 1 657
detailed inspectionof carburetorsand the adjustment of them;deta1 1ed inspectionOf various types of marine and aircraft gas engines; also Of mo
‘
dels ’of various
ships Showing the details Oi warship C onstruction ; operation oi ' graving and
floating fWater ltesting; fuel-Oil testing .i
‘
:
M ATHEM ATIC S “,
S olid geometry (firSt year, first term) -1-T hle geometry of lines and yplanes in
Space; polyhedrOns,‘ cylinders, cones, spheres ; development and use of formulas
for surfaces and volumes;demonstrations of ipropositions ; solution of problems byconstruction and computation .
" 1
L ogarithms (first year,first term) — D efinitions andproperties;practicaluse incomputation; tables of logarithms of numbers, '
Of logarithms of trigonometric
functions, and tables of natural functions ; haversine tables; special system of
forms for computation .
P lane trigonometry (first year, first term) —M easurement Of arcs and angles ;trigonometric function's; development and use Of fundamental trigonometricrelations and identities ; solution of trigonometric equations ; solution of all casesOf plane triangles, including development of formulas and methods for same;Simple applications . to measuring heights and distances .
1 M athematical analysis (first year,first term) —Func tions and graphs; instantaneous rates, tangents, areas, etc . as limits; diff erentiation ; integration .
M athematical analysis (first year, second term) — T he remainder of this textis completed during the second term and is taken concurrently with collegealgebra and plane analytic geometry— parts Of each of these two subjects being
takenup when needed by the treatment of _the analys is . The remainder Of the"
analysis' covers
— étrigonom‘etricfunctions, logarithmic and exponential functions ;rectangular coordinates; solutions Of equations; polar coordinates; trigonometricanalysis ; definite integrals ; progressions and series, permutations, combinationsand probability; complex number System .
A lgebra (first year, second term) —Short review of 1mportant parts Of elementary algebra; beyond quadratics and advanced algebra, including inequalities,mathematical induction, binomial theorem, variation, progressions
’
,complexnumbers, theory Of
‘ equations, partial fra'
ction'
s, permutations,” combinations,probability,determinants .A nalytic geometry (first year,Second term,and second year,firs
'
t term) -C‘arteSian and polar coordinates, equations of straight lines and Of the cOnic sections ;equations of given loci; loci of given equations,analysis and plotting,parametricequations, transcendental curves; general equation of second degree, discussion
and simplificatiOn; equations ,
of the plane, of the straight line in space,,
and of
special surfaces of second order. .
1
C alculus (second year, first term) —Taken concurrently with solid analytic
geometry ; constants, variables, and functions ; derivatives Of algebraic functions, applications of derivatives ; differential notation, diff erentiation Of transcendental functions ; integrations ; applications of integrations ; successivedifferentiations and integrations ; curves and curve tracing; ; definite integrals;application of integrations to geometry and mechanics ; special methods of integrations; functions of two or more V ariables ; multiple integrals ; infiniteserles.M echanics (Second year,second term) —Theory and use of slide rule ; vectors,
statics of a particle ; forces acting on a rigid body; statics Of a rigid body ; centersof gravity and moments of inertia ; fluid pressure; deformable bodies, beams ;rectilinear motion ;
‘work and energy ; curvilinear motion ; dynamics of a rigidbody .
NOT E -Due to change in arrangement Of course M echanics will be given
also during third year,first term,but in following years Will Occur second year”,second term .
1 68 RESUM E OF COURS E OF INS TRUCTION
-M echani'
cs (third year, first term) —Theory and use Of slide rule; vectors ;statics of a particle ; forces acting on a rigid body ; statics of _
a rigid body ; centers. of gravity and moments Of inertia ; fluid pressure ; deformable bodies,
'
beams;rectilinear motion ; work and energy; curvilinear motion ; dynamics of a rigidbody .
S pherical trigonometry and stereographic proj ections (third year, first term)Solution of all cases of spherical triangles, includi ng development Of formulae;graphi cal solution Of spherical triangles ; great circle courses and distances, both
graphi cal and numerical solutions ; the astronomical triangle and its proj ectionin various primitives ; numerical solutions of astronomical triangle coveringvarious cases—e time sight,meridians, altitude, etc .
NOT E .
—Due to change in arrangement of course no class will have sphericaltrigonometry and stereographic proj ections thi s year, but it will be given atthis point next year .
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND PHY S IC S
The courses Of instruction undertaken by this department cover a wide scopeand include chemistry, physics, direct-current electricity, alternating-currentelectricity,and radio . The time available for each of these subjects is comparatively short, and the courses are, therefore, more or less elementary, special
emphasis being placed on fundamental principles . The following is an outlineof the subj ects studied by each class .
TH IRD C L A SS— FIR ST TE R M
The first term is devoted to the Study of chemistry, the ground covered beinggeneral inorgani c chemistry, with laboratory work . In addi tion, lectures aregiven on the application of chemistry to devices and appliances in the service,viz, water testing, gas analysis, explosives,war gases, and '
include elementary
organic chemistry and qualitative analysis .
Practical work in the chemical laboratory supplements the classroom instruc
tion . S imple experiments are performed illustrating mechanical mi xtures,chemical compounds, the preparation and properties of various gases, the electroly sis Of water, the properties of metal and their compounds, etc .
Whi le the Shortness of the time allowed necessitates only an elementary treatment of most subj ects, it is believed that the course is of sufli cient scope for theneeds of a naval Officer .
SECON D TE RM
The important subj ect of physics is covered during the second term and includesa study of mechanics,heat, light,and sound,and magnetism,and the application
Of the various natural laws and phenomena in these branches Of the subj ect . The
course forms the groundwork for more advanced studies in other departments,and
includes the elements of thermodynamics,problems on the flight Of proj ectiles,andthe theory and practical application of the gyroscope in the torpedo, the gyro
compass, and stabili zers for ships .
Practical work in the physics laboratory comprises experiments illustratingvarious physical laws and phenomena studied in the classroom . A number Of
lectures are also given during the term .
S E C ON D C L A S S f —FIRST A N D SEC ON D T ERM S
The wholeof second class year is devoted tothestudy Of magnetism, electro
statics, and direct-current electricity . During the first term, the fundamentalsof simple electric circui ts are studied with appli cations of Ohm’s and K irchhoff ’s
1 70 RESUM E OF COURSE OF INS TRU CTION
hi story the course consists of a comprehensive textbook, supplemented by lec’
tures, some of them by historians of national reputation and others by igen of
affairs who are authorities on “
the countries studied . The aim is net only tovitalize. the study of history but to give the mi dshipman such a knowledgeofnational ideals and international problems as will fit him to be an intelligent
and tactful representative of Ameri ca and Americanism inevery port heelmayvisit .At the begi nning of every course in English the effort is made to securethe
interest and cooperation of themidshipmanby making clear tohim just howand why the proposed course will be of
.
practical benefit to him in his career as
a naval Officer .
M ODERN . LANGU AGES
1 . The mission Of the departmentOfmodern languages Is to give to midshipmena sufli cient knowledge Of French or Spanish to help or enable them to converse inthe foreign tongue,to express themselves clearly In written communications,and
to read with suffi cient ease French or Spanish of average difli culty . Throughout
the course emphasis is laid on the knowledge of fundamental elementary principlesto the end that, however late in his career he may be called upon to utilize hisknowledge,the Officer will have a solid foundation onwhich to build .
,
2 . On admi ssion to the Naval Academy approximately one half of the ,mid
s’
hipmen are assigned to study French whi le the other half are assigned to‘
study
Spani sh . Thi s assignment depends on the preference Of the individual midshipman and is permanent for the entire course .
. 3 . T he textbooks in use are modern and practical . S ince the number Ofmidshipmen in a section does not exceed 1 5, special attention is given to the indi
vidual .4 . The course in modern languages covers three academic years and consists of
approximately 200 recitations .
HY GIENE
S oon after entrancemidshipmen of the fourth '
class are given a co urse i n per
sonal hygiene and the care of'
the‘
human machine . This includes a series of
lectures to the class as a whole and instructions Of a more detailed character
over a period of several months to Small groups Of the class. The purpose Ofthis course is to prepare the members Of the entering class to make their full estpersonal contribution to the continuance of their health ( individually a nd col
lectively) and thus to their best scholastic possibilities . In other words, it is toground them in the art Of keeping themselves in good health—to acquaint themwith
'
those precautions which '
every man“
can take in his own’ behalf to prevent
di sease"
or minimize its effects and thus maintain himself at all times in-the‘
best
possible physical condition andmentally alert . The course comprises the following subj ects :
(a) Physical education; care Of the human machine .
(6) Personal hygiene, including social hygiene education .
(0) Physical training, the benefits'
Of muscular activity, and the dangers Of
overtraining.
- (d) Preventable diseases and simple rules formaintaining health .
(e) Oral prophylaxis and the care Of the teeth .
(f) M ental health, self-mastery, and characterology .
A competent -‘
representative'
-'
Of the medical department is always present at'
all Ofi cial contests and authorized sports . For graduation . a midshipman is
required to Show,by standard strength and gymnasium tests, that he is 1 00 percent physically efficient : if
RESUM E OF COURS E OF IN S T RUCT ION 1 71
T he fir’
st claSS Iiilrinl
g
'
thé Séc‘
ohd'
termisigivena iccurse;ingexieral. hygiene,physiology, and first aid, using the adopted textbook by Commander R . G .
Heiner, M edical Corps, United S tates N airy . An outline Of the course is as
l I . M ininteranatomy and cell pII GroS s anatomy and physiology
"iIIf Bacteriology.’
IV . Preventative diseases .
V . Venereal diseases .VI . Naval hygiene .
VII . M ilitary hy giene .
VIII . Physical training.
IX . First aid, including that for the effects Of gas warfare .
X . Alcohol and other narcotics, their effects and dangers .
The course is illustrated by charts,manikin, Skeleton, blackboard drawings,and moving-picture reels and includes aspecial lecture on the relation Of theoral cavity to the general nutrition and health Of the body .
Emphasis is placed on the methods of giving first aid, and practical demon
strations are'
given in order'
to prepare these future Officers for the ' instruction
of the men of their divisions, as required by Navy Regulations .
At the end of this course Of 1 4 periods an examination is held covering all Ofthe subj ects contained In the textbook above mentioned .
PHY S IC AL TRAINING
S trength tests are made of each midshipman by the gymnasium medical Ofli cer
and careful records are prepared and kept as a guida to his physical development .Special exeréises
‘
are prescribed to build up weak muscle groups‘
as shown by thestrength tests .Recogniz ing the importance Of posture to health, that Of individual midshipmen on entrance, and such changes in It
”
as may occur during the life at theacademy Will be '
subject tO'
periodic Observation'
and .comparison hwithf th‘
e aid
of photographs,and these wi ll be kept in a permanent record . Variation fromnormal will be demonstrated to the fnidshipman concerned with a V iewto enlisting his cooperation In correctivemeasures,and various exercises Will bee
mployed
to accomplish the required correction .
Careful supervision Of the physical development of all mi dshipmen is maintained throughout their entire time at the Naval Academy .
Comp’
any'
drills in Swedish exercises ; instruction in the use Of apparatus ;special exercises topromote Symmetrical physical development ; eachindividua lcarefully instructed by medical Officer '
in connection with physical training inconjunction with Strength teSt card (covering exercises formuscle developmentand corrective exercises for poor brace) , class work in wrestling, bOxing, swimming, and fencing ( small s
‘
rds; broadswords; canes,and bayOnietS) ; trainingin the art Of giving commands; co
'
mpany instruction in indoor and outdoor
sports (football, baseball, crew, basket ball, lacrosse, soccer, tennis, handball)and In the elementary work Of same; instruction in refereeing,wrestling,boxing,and swimming; instruction on life-saving ;and resuscitation Of the apparentlydrowned . A ll midshipmen are given strength test to test muscle » ability and
physical requirement test to test the use of muscles . The physical requirementtest includes such as running quarter mile, high jump, broad jump, chinning onhorizontal bar,dips onparallel barS ,rope climbing, etc .
PRIZ ES AWARD ED D U RIN G T HE A C AD EM IC Y EAR ,
1 923 24
PRESEN T ED B Y T HE U N IT ED ST A T ES N AV A L A C AD EWFOR GEN ERAL EX C EL L EN C E IN T ARGET PRACT ICEGSldmedal, Small arms, M idshipman M . C . M umma, jr., IclasSOf 1 925 ; silver
medal, small arms, M idshipman G . M . Cox, class of 1 92 5 ; bronze medal,i SI
mallarms, M idshipman A . D . Kramer, class of 1 92 5 .
M idshipmen who qualified as expert rifiemen :
SE C ON D C EA S S
Goodwin, J . F .
Hoffner, C .
‘
C .
M ay,R ., 2d .
"
M umma, M . C . . jr
T H IRD C L A S S
F'
ullinwi-dier,R .
' Lindsey,W.
“ CChrismon, J . A .
C L AS S OF 1 897 SWORD AND C U P
A .Sword is awarded annually’
by theclass of 1 897 to.
that midshipman '
Who
has contributed most by his O fficerlike qualities and positive character to thedevelopment
I
of military spirit and loyalty within the regiment . The name ofthe midshipman to-whom the sword is awarded is inscribed on the class of -1 897cup, cup is retained at the Naval A cademy.
.I
. M idshipman John T homasHogg,,class of Was awarded the sword and his name was inscribed on the,cup
C L A S S OF 1 871 SWORD
of ~ 1 87 1 provides fund s each year ' to be'
given t‘
o thatimidslripman Ofthe graduating class who is most proficient inpractical and theoretical ordnanceand gunnery, with the understanding that the recipient will purchase a f N a
'
vy
dress sword.withthese funds . Therea re further requirements as to how the Swordshall sbe. engraved M idshipman Clarence. Eugene Ekstrom, class of 1 924; wasawarded this prize .
1 GENERAL SOC IETY , S ONS OF T HE REVOL UT ION CI
U P‘:
AI
ouphas beenpresented to the Naval Academy by the General S ociety,Sons:
i thSH
RevolutIon and remains here . Each year the nameI
ofI
the midshipmanismost proficlent in practical ordnance and gunnery is inscribed théreon;name of M idshipman Edward Vincent D ockWeiler, class of 1 92 4 Was ln
NAT ION AL SOC IETY , DAUGHT ERS'
QF THE -A M ERICAN .
.
i REVOLUTION C U P
A cup.ispresented each year by the N ational S ociety,Daughters Of theAmerican and the name Of the midshipman
'
who excels in practical Sea“
man'
ship is inséIibed thereon . M idshipman Henry Clay D iexler, class bf 1 924 ‘
was awarded the’
cup.I I
T HOM PS ON PRI Z EA navigating S' ext'ant 1 s aWaId
I
e‘
d' b‘y C ol
‘
f’ Robert M Thompson t
of each graduating class Who proves hiInSelf most prOficient intheoretical navigation . M idshipman Clarence Eugene Ekstrom, class of 1 92 4was the recipient of the sextant .
1 72