[if mso | IE]> wtYo1XYdht2FQzKshnaGCc1nxyx1FaYcvXBeVfskOAMcIKEjfD9M1X2yF6dtfIZVtXPGSGU2r H5QEm9t0PwbSw8m6rEj8wMmdxklaryCyft4mizfrgcbgES4LTcHjJ8ODs8z8QuhzJoOTBoj96 pN6wuHm83WZKczAsfYCBacOOQ7JSH5XzeG0FqiZ0IN6c7EjU1NMbd2SlgraIKXpXoIN1Pw3gn 2wGVlQpNZis0heC9IDJCRPTUYSPebdDnJpvKXa55zFhoBkSrva2X9IIlTDWCCbTljuIOVqpcF jYN5S5w2RJP6JWNGkMMFrDYEdKBLfpWy4D5MpckvDswoNOY7fqpDh3NJc5jcvYrEb7hA9eiM2 XHnwfNBpE2UKlw3WtQq5fM0Vx16cj59e193TxHyi4zfsR1SaLOe3HTDSWnsQe0FYv0X6lZcmW 2kQnHruziGT0IB0qM230aeUZbYOnp186BxfkLxSuLnAsK5XPqWGQY3Cfqg9J4axhoAMWbEKyr J43DOdPnsXOYV297lONOKh4nVEFUwSztTHmYcqIEPDWSp74JgTkYTW63jrQwZ0RINUiWsSp06 rHvy8MbkJPqk9njmS2BKIwuIwvMGuoYgf6dwcJ8NiBdGper99P6QHuoftR4gsZddeX2d3jDzj tJ8Wcm6JfUPnB9kf13uZQ79LAx3g2CH3FMavomJIsTvkcnQ39oNksMlxCAesCrMA9vJCdFCNC fpqYYAL1oeBtO9fMlVM94nKm4XI9RGOAI7dhwut2gt0P4OxgbDAuEV1cdY5eEhTfHEr7Nbixc lzy3XagzyuxJNEX6hgGepqshor9z7ZwrKA5sB9htH14OdHqlXJuqs1h5e9MowSmyoLegjkKOo I10Vt24YVyWdZo4kaJDiyxOcgFMCIL96JMrRAflw6Mu8XMG4asIOWX6qAIFpz4DzQ55mt5r90 MjdxWhD6hgO7vrHHPhTXao7NQGZRJETvEJ6Y9MvIHE5DEUU3tzjkOq39j0gAQekiflvdAq1Y9 eEvcpQGqwCU2Tw12qiohQaXnSdVURJ7Lh7cGZBSNOwFA7RmB8PHnq5CGIVwly7D2b1hKre6hI 7oHTATgLK5Yy2Lyis8MiN1uKZP3xFOg8NgkotC9WOsjlHDG7jJANjTz1KN0oUCDcy2kkKoekm 1h0RhPPh03pnAPeSTYZWGg0Jwbg7xqDV9wZLcO37kThzF7uCneJvfkolMVbA0YuFEhRxshxEy rXTRhKurQit8G0yvQVEN709TggECkAqPt3OGI1OBidtasTefXJGMgbZiVGOblKxkL9URObFda RMrxq4fGacqN0kc38XYu2ov3lyZ6GZcifGTfUIrNgyDhGNYDECUymxYuUpXgKGxHsYGOf0yvJ kf6PyWsxo7Yc4A5iQXv5y8UnUvVh5kOfmPTclpt33apGqHKraCWkHlBdwXh0FzhhmZb6cbf2Z osition for 50 years. Twelve of the fifteen superintendents were graduates of VMI. Francis H. Smith (1839–1889), United States Military Academy West Point Class of 1833 Scott Shipp '59 (1890–1907), wounded while leading VMI cadets into the Battle of New Market[53] Edward W. Nichols '78 (1907–1924) William H. Cocke '94 (1924–1929) John A. Lejeune (1929–1937), United States Naval Academy Class of 1888, 13th Commandant of the Marine Corps Charles E. Kilbourne '94 (1937–1946), Medal of Honor recipient and first American to earn the United States' three highest military decorations.[54][better source needed] Richard J. Marshall '15 (1946–1952) William H. Milton Jr. '20 (1952–1960) George R. E. Shell '31 (1960–1971) Richard L. Irby '39 (1971–1981) Sam S. Walker (1981–1988), matriculated at VMI transferred to United States Military Academy West Point Class of 1946 John W. Knapp '54 (1989–1995) Josiah Bunting III '63 (1995–2002) J. H. Binford Peay III '62 (2003–2020) Cedric T. Wins '85 (2021–present) Campus Virginia Military Institute Historic District U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. National Historic Landmark District Virginia Landmarks Register Virginia Military Institute is located in VirginiaVirginia Military Institute Show map of Virginia Show map of the United States Show all Location VMI campus, Lexington, Virginia Area 12 acres (4.9 ha) Built 1818 Architect Davis, A.J.; Goodhue, Bertram Grosvenor Architectural style Classical Revival, Gothic Revival NRHP reference No. 74002219[55] VLR No. 117-0017 Significant dates Added to NRHP 30 May 1974 Designated VLR 9 September 1969[56] The VMI campus covers 134 acres (54 ha), 12 of which are designated as the Virginia Military Institute Historic District, a designated National Historic Landmark District. The campus is referred to as the "Post," a tradition that reflects the school's military focus and the uniformed service of its alumni. A training area of several hundred additional acres is located near the post. All cadets are housed on campus in a large five-story building, called the "barracks." The Old Barracks, which has been separately designated a National Historic Landmark, stands on the site of the old arsenal. This is the structure that received most of the damage when Union forces shelled and burned the institute in June 1864. The new wing of the barracks ("New Barracks") was completed in 1949. The two wings surround two quadrangles connected by a sally port. All rooms open onto porch-like stoops facing one of the quadrangles. A third barracks wing was completed, with cadets moving in officially spring semester 2009. Four of the five arched entries into the barracks are named for George Washington, Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, George C. Marshall '01[57] and Jonathan Daniels '61.[58] Next to the Barracks are offices and meeting areas for VMI clubs and organizations, the cadet visitors center and lounge, a snack bar, and a Follett Corporation-operated bookstore. VMI's "Vision 2039" capital campaign raised more than $275 million from alumni and supporters in three years. The money is going to expand The Barracks to house 1,500 cadets, renovate and modernize the academic buildings. VMI is spending another $200 million to build the VMI Center for Leadership and Ethics, to be used by cadets, Washington and Lee University students, and other U.S. and international students. The funding will also support "study abroad" programs, including joint ventures with Oxford and Cambridge Universities in Enof weapons were confiscated in raids, and there were fears that martial law would be imposed. The government, which had come to power in a revolution, distanced itself from its own revolutionary past, famously removing from view Delacroix's painting Liberty Leading the People, which had been commissioned to commemorate the events of 1830. According to Albert Boime, "After the uprising at the funeral of Lamarque in June 1832, it was never again openly displayed for fear of setting a bad example" | |
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[if mso | IE]> ivil War period VMI cadets and alumni played instrumental roles in the American Civil War. On 14 occasions, the Confederacy called cadets into active military engagements. VMI authorized battle streamers for each one of these engagements but chose to carry only one: the battle streamer for New Market. Many VMI Cadets were ordered to Camp Lee, at Richmond, to train recruits under General Stonewall Jackson. VMI alumni were regarded among the best officers of the South and several distinguished themselves in the Union forces as well. Fifteen graduates rose to the rank of general in the Confederate Army, and one rose to this rank in the Union Army.[35] Just before his famous flank attack at the Battle of Chancellorsville, Jackson looked at his division and brigade commanders, noted the high number of VMI graduates and said, "The Institute will be heard from today."[36] Three of Jackson's four division commanders at Chancellorsville, Generals James Lane, Robert Rodes, and Raleigh Colston, were VMI graduates as were more than twenty of his brigadiers and colonels.[36] Stonewall Jackson Battle of New Market On 14 May 1864, the governor of Virginia once again called upon the cadets from VMI to participate in the American Civil War. After marching overnight 80 miles from Lexington to New Market, on 15 May 1864, 247 members of the VMI Corps of Cadets fought at the Battle of New Market. This event marks the only time in U.S. history wherein the student body of an operating college fought as an organized unit in pitched combat in battle (as recognized by the American Battlefield Trust).[37][38] This event was the 14th time VMI Cadets were called into action during the Civil War. The VMI battalion received an institutional battle streamer for its part in the battle of New Market, one of only five American institutions to be awarded such an honor. The four other institutes are: The Citadel for the Battle of Secessionville and the Battle of Tulifinny, Florida State for the Battle of Natural Bridge, William and Mary for the Siege of Yorktown, and the University of Hawaii for the Hawaiian Islands Campaign. At New Market, in a matter of minutes, VMI suffered fifty-five casualties with ten cadets killed; the cadets were led into battle by the Commandant of Cadets and future VMI Superintendent Colonel Scott Shipp. Shipp was also wounded during the battle. Six of the ten fallen cadets are buried on VMI grounds behind the statue "Virginia Mourning Her Dead" by sculptor Moses Ezekiel, a VMI graduate who was also wounded in the Battle of New Market.[39] General John C. Breckinridge, the commanding Southern general, held the cadets in reserve and did not use them until Union troops broke through the Confederate lines. Upon seeing the tide of battle turning in favor of the Union forces, Breckinridge stated, "Put the boys in...and may God forgive me for the order."[40] The VMI cadets held the line and eventually pushed forward across an open muddy field, capturing a Union artillery emplacement, and securing victory for the Confederates. The Union troops were withdrawn and Confederate troops under General Breckinridge held the Shenandoah Valley. Burning of the Institute George C. Marshall statue On 12 June 1864 Union forces, under the command of General David Hunter, shelled and burned the institute as part of the Valley Campaigns of 1864. The destruction was almost complete, and VMI had to temporarily hold classes at the Alms House in Richmond, Virginia. In April 1865 Richmond was evacuated due to the impending fall of Petersburg and the VMI Corps of Cadets was disbanded. The Lexington campus reopened for classes on 17 October 1865.[41] One of the reasons that Confederate General Jubal A. Early burned the town of Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, was in retaliation for the destruction of VMI.[42] Following the war, Matthew Fontaine Maury, the pioneering oceanographer known as the "Pathfinder of the Seas", accepted a teaching position at VMI, holding the physics chair. Following the war, David Hunter Strother, who was chief of staff to General Hunter and had advised the destruction of the institute, served as Adjutant General of the Virginia Militia and member of the VMI Board of Visitors; in that position he promoted and worked actively for the reconstruction. World War II VMI produced many of America's commanders in World War II. The most important of these was George C. Marshall, the top U.S. Army general during the war. Marshall was the Army's first five-star general and the only career military officer ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize.[43] Winston Churchill dubbed Marshall the "Architect of Victory" and "the noblest Roman of them all". The Deputy Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army during the war was also a VMI graduate as were the Second U.S. Army commander, 15th U.S. Army commander, the commander of Allied Air Forces of the Southwest Pacific and various corps and division commanders in the Army and Marine Corps. China's General Sun Li-jen, known as the "Rommel of the East", was also a graduate of VMI.[44] During the war, VMI participated in the War Department's Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP) from 1943 to 1946. The program provided training in engineering and related subjects tVqH8ULPuwjnEDP90IfD5eXnmCbCp0WWi2u6kvesuwq ge number of weapons were confiscated in raids, and there were fears that martial law would be imposed. The government, which had come to power in a revolution, distanced itself from its own revolutionary past, famously removing from view Delacroix's painting Liberty Leading the People, which had been commissioned to commemorate the events of 1830. According to Albert Boime, "After the uprising at the funeral of Lamarque in June 1832, it was never again openly displayed for fear of setting a bad example" | | To ensure our emails continue reaching your inbox, please add our email address to your address book. Polaris Advertising welcomes your feedback and questions. But please note: The law prohibits us from giving personalized advice. 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