History of the United States Merchant Marine Academy
The
Academy represents Federal involvement in maritime training that is
more than a century old. Since the administration of President
Ulysses S. Grant, the U.S. Government has initiated various programs
to train its citizens for service in the merchant marine. The United
States Merchant Marine Academy, dedicated in 1943, represents the
realization of these efforts.
Between 1874 and 1936, diverse Federal
legislation supported maritime training through schoolships,
internships at sea and other methods. A disastrous fire in 1934
aboard the passenger ship MORRO CASTLE, in which 134 lives were
lost, convinced the U.S. Congress that direct Federal involvement in
efficient and standardized training was needed.
Congress
passed the landmark Merchant Marine Act in 1936, and two years
later, the U.S. Merchant Marine Cadet Corps was established. The
first training was given at temporary facilities until the Academy's
permanent site in Kings Point, N. Y. was acquired in early 1942.
Construction of the Academy began immediately, and 15 months later
the task was virtually completed. The Academy was dedicated on
September 30, 1943, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who noted
that "the Academy serves the Merchant Marine as West Point serves
the Army and Annapolis the Navy."
World
War II required the Academy to forego normal operation and devote
all of its resources toward meeting the emergency need for merchant
marine officers. Enrollment rose to 2,700, and the planned course of
instruction was reduced in length form four years to 24 months.
Not-withstanding the war, shipboard training continued to be an
integral part of the Academy curriculum, and midshipmen served at
sea in combat zones the world over. One hundred and forty-two
midshipmen gave their lives in service to their country, and many
others survived torpedos and aerial attacks. By war's end, the
Academy had graduated 6,634 officers.
World
War II proved that the Academy could successfully meet the needs of
a nation in conflict. As the war drew to a close, plans were made to
convert the Academy's wartime curriculum to a four-year, college
level program to meet the peacetime requirements of the merchant
marine. In August 1945, such a course was instituted.
The Academy has since grown in stature and has
become one of the world's foremost institutions in the field of
maritime education. Authorization for awarding the degree of
bachelor of science to graduates was granted by Congress in 1949;
the Academy was fully accredited as a degree-granting institution
that same year; it was made a permanent institution by an Act of
Congress in 1956.
The Academy's national
value was again recognized as it accelerated graduating classes
during the Korean and Vietnam conflicts, and for its involvement in
such programs as training officers of the first U.S. nuclear powered
merchant ship, the SAVANNAH.
Admission
requirements were amended in 1974 and the Academy became the first
federal service academy to enroll women students, two years ahead of
Army, Navy, Air Force or Coast Guard.
During the Persian Gulf conflict in early 1991,
and for many months prior to the war, both Academy graduates and
midshipmen played key roles in the massive sealift of military
supplies to the Middle East. Midshipmen training at sea also
participated in the humanitarian sealift to Somalia in Operation
Restore Hope.
While
the Academy's curriculum has changed dramatically since 1943 to
reflect the technological advances of America's merchant marine, the
institution has maintained its unswerving commitment to quality
education and excellence among its midshipmen.
For more information about the history of the
Merchant Marine please visit the
American
Merchant Marine Museum located on campus.