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"West Point Bicentennial"
A Pictorial History of the First Two Hundred Years of the United States Military Academy
Preface | 1776-1817 | 1817-1833 | 1833-1848 | 1848-1865 | 1865-1890 | 1890-1919 | 1919-1939 | 1939-1950 | 1950-1970 | 1970-1980 | 1980-2002 | Bicentennial and Beyond

"Interwar Expansion"

1919-1939

picture picture As the nation and the Army emerged from World War I, the War Department made efforts to make the Military Academy more responsive to the needs of the Army, hoping to ensure that the Army would be better prepared for future conflicts. Concerned by reports of the academy’s shortcomings, the Chief of Staff of the Army, Peyton C. March, appointed Douglas MacArthur as superintendent and charged him with rebuilding the academy. more information

MacArthur believed strongly that the traditions of the Corps should be preserved, even as the academy adapted to meet the requirements of the Army and the advances of its civilian counterparts. Part of the tradition rested on the honor system. To reinforce the credibility of the system, and to ensure that it followed some basic rules and procedures, the academy established the Cadet Honor Committee in 1922. In so doing, the institution assumed a greater role in promoting the responsible investigation of honor incidents and linking honorable conduct to the responsibilities of officership.

picture MacArthur argued that educational methods needed to be updated. He faced resistance from many graduates and much of the Academic Board, partly because they believed the Academy’s educational program sufficient, and partly in reaction to a leader they considered presumptuous, having only graduated from the Military Academy himself 16 years before. He contended that officers required a diverse education, including additional grounding in the humanities, in order to be flexible enough to meet the demands of modern warfare. MacArthur based some of his criticism on the assessment of Harvard president Charles W. Eliot, who argued, “During the Great War, West Pointers were unable to adapt to new methods in the fields of supply and procurement because of their stifling training.” Rather than have academy graduates become potential liabilities in modern warfare, MacArthur sought to place them at the forefront of a changing officer corps.

picture To accomplish this ambitious task, MacArthur was determined to “increase cadet responsibility, develop initiative, bring the academy into a newer and closer relationship with the Army at large, substitute subjective for objective discipline, broaden the curriculum to keep it abreast of the best civilian thought on education and, in sum, ‘deliver a product trained with a view to teaching, leading and inspiring the modern citizen’ in the next war.” Although the institution had been moving in that direction, MacArthur lent his considerable energy and charisma to the acceleration of reform at the academy.

picture Despite disagreement between MacArthur and the Academic Board, the academy undertook some important reform during his tenure, and the curriculum underwent some much-needed improvement. MacArthur and the board agreed on the idea of sending prospective instructors to study for a year at the best civilian universities. He sent members of the faculty to visit top civilian institutions and brought in visiting professors from those institutions. He placed greater emphasis on public speaking and brought the military course of instruction up to date by incorporating study of the campaigns of World War I. He abolished field training at Fort Clinton, which was such a small area in the immediate vicinity of barracks that no serious “field” training could be conducted. To provide a more rigorous summer training program, he sent cadets to Camp Dix, New Jersey. Most revolutionary of all, he liberalized pass and leisure-time policies for upper-class cadets, allowing them to interact more freely with each other and the outside world and take individual responsibility for their own conduct. All of this was accomplished during his tenure over the objections of many of the members of the more conservative Academic Board. After his departure, many of these reforms departed with him, but he had spurred the wheels of change, and subsequent superintendents would build on his foundations.

picture picture After years of contending that the distinction of a West Point diploma was sufficient, the academy began to reconsider the issue. Cadets and graduates argued that the institution should grant academic degrees, and their supporters noted the rising importance of degrees and the difficulties of graduates seeking advanced positions or civilian positions without them. The academy, however, declined to push the issue. On the other hand, in 1925, the academy sought and received accreditation by the Association of American Universities, the only university-accrediting agency in the nation at that time. Academy officials sought this when they learned that its first Rhodes Scholarship recipients, of 1925, would be denied appropriate standing at Oxford without such accreditation. more information Graduates of the Military Academy and other service academies continued to push for the granting of the Bachelor of Science degree and, in 1933, Congress gave the military service academies the authority to grant Bachelor of Science degrees to all graduates retroactive to when the institutions were formally accredited. Four years later, Congress amended the legislation to permit the granting of degrees to all living graduates.

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picture Military training evolved to meet the Army’s demands for officers trained in modern weapons and tactics. To help enable the institution to expand tactical training opportunities in the late 1930s, the federal government purchased additional land immediately to the south and southwest of the Academy. West Point, which totaled only 3,600 acres in the mid 1930s, increased to over 15,000 acres a decade later. This growth allowed the entire military instruction program, including mounted combat maneuvers and artillery firing, to take place on the West Point Military Reservation.

Beyond the military and academic programs, MacArthur and his successors further expanded the already rigorous physical education program. Impressed with the ability of physically fit officers to inspire young troops in World War I, MacArthur began to promote the view of “every cadet, an athlete” by expanding the intercollegiate sports program and instituting compulsory intramural sports for all cadets, a requirement that still exists. more information He also coined the following, oft-quoted phrase that expressed his view of the importance of sports to the Army:

"Upon the fields of friendly strife are sown the seeds that, upon other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory.”

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As the curriculum expanded and MacArthur’s successors advanced their own reform programs, West Point again grew in size and physical layout. In 1935, Congress increased the Corps of Cadets to 1,960. As more cadets filled the barracks and classrooms, another building program was undertaken and completed by 1938.



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West Point History

A Timeline of History
1802 through 1849 1850 through 1899 1900 through 1949 1950 through Present

BOOKLET:

Bicentennial Book
A Pictorial History of the First 200 Years of USMA
Photo of book cover

FACT SHEETS:

Notable Graduates

ARTICLES:

"Impact of an Institution"
By CPT Bruce W. Ollstein

EXHIBITS:

"Timeless Treasures"
West Point Museum