Click on small photos

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do


USMA at West Point


We have changed the wording of our Alma Mater to reflect the fact that our Women Graduates have also given their lives serving this Nation.


----- Class of 2012 Motto ------

- "For More Than Ourselves" -Thank you Class of 2012 - for the Honor of Marching with you The Class of 62 - Can Do


Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First


Motto -- Duty Honor Country


The Cadets of West Point


They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most


Washington's Letter recommending the establishment of the Academy and the History of West Point


The Oaths We Take


West Points Medal of Honor Winners


Jefferson Hall - the Academy's new Library.


Douglas MacArthur

Vinegar Joe Stilwell cleaning his Thompson -The Walkout -Burma 1942

George Patton


The Monuments of West Point


Kosciuszko Monument - Guarding the Hudson ensuring there is no passage of British Man of War


Forts of the Hudson

So we'll sing our reminiscences of Benny Havens, Oh!


Academic Excellence


---- Colonel Thayer


West Point


Trophy Point


L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets


Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Superintendant was not Happy Black '57



Home of the Dean


Quarters 104

Cadet Chapel


Michie Stadium


Arvin Gym


Kimsey Athletic Center


Holleder Center


Washington Monument


United States Military Academy Band


Cadet Barracks


Rugby Complex


Great Chain


Plain looking toward Washington Hall


Battle Monument


Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.


Hudson River


Captured Trophies


Battle Monument


West Point Cemetery


Plain


Cost to this Nation of Differing Views


Trophy Point -- Our Flag


Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s


Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s


Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy


Army Mule


Color Guard


Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area


Battalion Mass Early 50's


Flirtation Walk



Arvin Gym


Duty Honor Country


Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do


Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Click on Photos Below

Please note it takes a couple of hours to update all pages as material is added to this section. You may have to return to the home page to see all of the current links

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

We have changed the wording of our Alma Mater to reflect the fact that our Women Graduates have also given their lives serving this Nation.

----- Class of 2012 Motto ----- "For More Than Ourselves" Thank you Class of 2012 for the Honor of Marching with you The Class of 62

---------- Class of 2008 --------- ----- Class Crest & Motto ----- "No Mission Too Great"

---- Their Commencement ---- "Here am I; Send me."

Thank you Class of 2008 and Please Thank the Men & Women --- the Soldiers you will lead --- The Class of 62.

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Jefferson Hall - the Academy's new Library.

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Arvin Gym

Duty Honor Country

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

United States Military Academy Band

Barracks

Rugby Complex

Great Chain

Plain looking toward Washington Hall

Battle Monument

Washington Hall with Cadet Chapel on rocks above.

Hudson River

Captured Trophies

Battle Monument

West Point Cemetery

Plain

- Cost to this Nation of Differing Views

Trophy Point -- Our Flag

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Corps of Cadets Formed in Companies early 1960s

Sending the Army Team off to Beat Navy

- Army Mule

Color Guard

Band Box Review Early 1950's in Central Area

Battalion Mass Early 50's

Flirtation Walk

Cadet will not Lie, Cheat, Steal, or Tolerate Those Who Do

Motto -- Duty Honor Country

Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First

Academic Excellence

--They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game. They were the Team that Gave The Most

---- Colonel Thayer

West Point mid 60's

Trophy Point

L'Ecole Polytechnique Monument, or The French Monument by Cadets

Superintendent's Quarters viewed from Thayer Road

Cadet Chapel

Michie Stadium

Arvin Gym

Kimsey Athletic Center

Holleder Center

Washington Monument

The material below this point is a site a work area.


Page 2








































































The '54 Crest

General MacArthur stated it would take

"at least 10 years"

to return Army Football to Respectability


28th Infantry Regiment
Black Lion Award is intended to go to the person on his team "who best exemplifies the character of Don Holleder: leadership, courage, devotion to duty, self-sacrifice, and - above all -

an unselfish concern for the team ahead of himself."


General George Patton

"The Army moves as a team, eats as a team, and fights as a team."


The '55 Crest











They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game.

They were the Team that Gave The Most


Don Hollender Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First


Vann and Holleder


9 Army A's


The '56 Crest


The '57 Crest










Can Do


Gen Van Fleet addressing the Corps prior to the Navy Game


Constructed under supervision of Jay Gould "54 and the Ord Dept from a German Rocket Gun captured at Kasserine Pass. First used in the Duke Game.


COL "Red" Reeder granted the Cheerleaders Corps Squad status to obtain financial support for their spirit-inducing initiatives.


Bob Mischak - - It should be pointed out that Bob was an All American selection, but is not recognized by the Academy as such because of the organization which selected him.









Ubel scores 3 Times against Navy - Vann's facking results in Peter getting tackled - #10 on the ground behind Ubel

Vann to Sisson

Army's B Squad

Vann to Mischak.

Uebel Intercepts

Cody to Don Holleder








Lasley

Frank Hicks

Burd

Bill Purdue

Cody

Meador Mgr

Ron Melnick







Ralph Chesnauskas

Pat Uebel

Tommy Bell

Sisson headed for another score

Peter Vann stuffs the ball in Jerry's gut

Leroy Lunn & Jerry Lodge

Uebel after taking the handoff from Hagan







Attaya - Army's Fullback

Sisson - one of 3 Great Ends

Bob Mischak

Ralph Chesnauskas


Bob Farris

Vann moving out of the pocket

Peter Vann 10, Billy Chance 38, Herdman 68







Ken Kramer

Joe Lapchick

Kirk Cockrell


Lodge going down tosses to Paul Schweikert for score.




Dick Zeigler

Bob Farris
Played the 2d half of the Navy Game blind in one eye.







Pat Uebel

Tommy Bell

Peter Vann

Freddie Attaya

Mike Zeigler

Jerry Lodge wearing #67, playing fullback.

Johnny Wing




Lowell Sisson


Norm Stephen

Jack Krause

Dick Ziegler

Jerry Lodge

Leroy Lunn






Norm Stephen

Jerry Lodge

Corps of Cadets for Navy Game

Can Do

General MacArthur stated it would take

"at least 10 years"

to return Army Football to Respectability

General George Patton

"The Army moves as a team, eats as a team, and fights as a team."

Don Hollender Remember - The Soldiers you will lead Always Come First








The '54 Crest

The '55 Crest

28th Infantry Regiment
Black Lion Award is intended to go to the person on his team "who best exemplifies the character of Don Holleder: leadership, courage, devotion to duty, self-sacrifice, and - above all -

an unselfish concern for the team ahead of himself."


They played perhaps Army's Greatest Game.

They were the Team that Gave The Most


The '56 Crest


The '57 Crest





Robert L. Scott

Army Mule Rider

Graduated 6th off the bottom of the Class

Bob Scott in his P-40 He flew with The Flying Tigers

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Tigers

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Lee_Scott,_Jr.

http://www.aviationartstore.com/robert_scott_2.htm

http://www.robertlscottfanclubassociation.com/Scottyphotos.html

https://forums.af.edu/_layouts/Ecco/CommunityBrowser.aspx?id=15245&view=l&vm=Brief

http://www.collectspace.com/ubb/Forum23/HTML/001849.html

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/macon/obituary.aspx?n=robert-l-scott&pid=16892560&fhid=4415

http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/rlscott.htm

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0037746/

http://www.historyforsale.com/html/prodetails.asp?documentid=190260&start=11&page=153

http://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/flying-tigers-print-signed-general-101661216

I (Irish - Post Captain Member # 722) was born in 1939 and clearly remember reading, when I was a pre-teen, God is My Co-Pilot by Brig. Gen Bob Scott. It was one of the motivators that led me into a flying career.

Recently, when learning of a fellow New Hampshireite, Dan Ford, who has written Flying Tigers: Claire Chennault and His American Volunteers, 1941-1942 I discovered the obit of Gen. Scott who passed away on February 27, 1996 at the age of 97. If you read this you will marvel has his career, especially when you learn that he, in 93 days, walked the entire 2000 miles of the Great Wall of China!

Since this article doesn't fit any SJ topic I'm taking the liberty of posting it in the TWA topic. Enjoy. Paul

3/1/2006 - WARNER ROBINS, Ga. (AFPN) -- Brig. Gen. Robert L. Scott Jr., World War II fighter ace and author of the 1943 book "God Is My Co-Pilot" has died.

The general passed away Feb. 27 in Warner Robins after a stroke. He was 97.

Though the general retired from the Air Force in 1957, for the following decades he continued to serve the Air Force.

Known to his friends and family as "Scotty" the general lived his final two decades as the "champion and cheerleader" of the Museum of Aviation in Warner Robins, officials there said.

The general was born in Waynesboro, Ga., April 12, 1908, the son of a traveling salesman. He was raised in Macon. From an early age he showed interest in air travel.

His legacy is portrayed at the museum in a large exhibit featuring his photos, books, personal items and memorabilia.

General Scott's lifetime story and flying career are legendary. A West Point graduate, he amassed more than 33,000 flying hours in 60 years of flying. During World War II, official Army Air Force records credit him with 13 aerial victories while flying the P-40 Warhawk over China. But the general said he actually shot down nine more, though they were listed as "probable".

But he once said, "You had to have two witnesses in the formation, or you needed a gun camera to take a picture. Only we didn't have gun cameras in China. I actually had 22 aerial victims." That made him one of the top American aces of the war.

Never shot down, the general never lost an aircraft and his feats in the early years of the war inspired an entire generation of young pilots. God Is My Co-Pilot, inspired by his wartime experiences, was a best seller and turned into a movie.

The general graduated from Lanier High School in 1928. The summer between his junior and senior years of high school, he took a job as deck boy aboard a Black Diamond Line freighter and sailed halfway around the world. It was the beginning of a lifetime of adventure.

But General Scott's life-long ambition was to fly. At age 12, he flew a home-made glider off the roof of a three story house in Macon and crashed landed into a Cherokee rose bush -- the state flower of Georgia.

As Scott recalled later, "Gliders were built out of spruce, but I didn't have enough money, so I made mine out of knotty pine. I cleared the first magnolia, but then the main wing strut broke and I came down in Mrs. Napier's rose bushes.

"It's the only plane I ever crashed," he said.

He enlisted in the Georgia National Guard and President Hoover appointed him to West Point in 1928. When he graduated in 1932, he used the summer to sail to Europe. He bought a motorcycle in France and motored across Europe and Asia -- turning around at Mount Ararat. After returning, he joined the Army Flying Center at Randolph Air Base, Texas. He earned his wings Oct. 17, 1933, and went to his first assignment at Mitchell Field, N.Y.

In 1934, President Roosevelt cancelled commercial air mail contracts and gave the duty to the Air Corps. General Scott immediately volunteered and flew airmail in an open cockpit plane through the "Hell Stretch" -- as it was know then -- from Newark, N.J., to Cleveland. Then he served a tour at Albrook Field, Panama. He became a flying instructor after that and was promoted to lieutenant colonel during the expansion program before World War II.

When the war broke out, General Scott -- then 33 -- was running the largest flight training academy in the country, the Cal Aero Academy in California. To his dismay, he did not receive orders to go fight. So he wrote numerous letters begging for an assignment to a combat flying unit. He was told he was too old to be a fighter pilot and he needed to keep training younger pilots.

But one night, he received a call from the Pentagon. An intelligence officer asked him if he had ever flown a B-17 Flying Fortress. The general -- who had never flown the plane -- said yes. That's how he got orders to the secret Task Force Aquila -- to fly B-17s to China to bomb Japan.

After days of flying across the Atlantic, Africa, Middle East and China, he landed to receive the news that the mission was scrubbed because the Japanese had captured their planned take-off bases in the Philippines.

So he flew C-47 Gooney Birds over the Himalayas instead, flying fuel and supplies from India to combat bases in China. Soon General Scott, by then a colonel, met Brig. Gen. Claire Chennault, the tough commander of the American Volunteer Group in China -- the Flying Tigers. General Scott convinced the commander to let him use a P-40 to fly escort missions for the transports and he was soon flying daily combat missions -- in addition to escort duty.

In his first month of combat, he logged 215 hours of flight time and quickly became a double "ace" with 13 confirmed aerial victories.

On July 4, 1942, at the request of Chiang Kai-shek, General Scott was given command of the 23 Fighter Group of the China Air Task Force -- the Army Air Force unit activated with remnants of the Flying Tigers. It later became the 14th Air Force.

In January 1943, the general was ordered back to the United States to make public relations speeches to war plant workers. He wrote "God Is My Co-Pilot," and served as technical advisor to Warner Brothers in making a movie.

After the war, the general served at the Pentagon on a task force to win autonomy for the Air Force from the Army, which occurred in September 1947. That year he took command of the Air Force's first jet fighter school at Williams Field, Ariz. He then moved to Europe in 1950 to command the 36th Fighter Wing at Furstenfieldbruck, Germany.

In 1954, after graduating from the National War College, he was promoted to brigadier general and assigned as Air Force director of information. He retired in 1957.

Then he pursued his life-long dream to walk the Great Wall of China. After writing more than 300 letters in two years to ask for official permission, General Scott finally signed on for a package tour to just get inside China.

While there, he managed to get a visa and travel permit and in 93 days -- with a 70 pound backpack including 1,200 oatmeal cookies he baked himself -- he walked the 2,000 miles of the Great Wall to complete Marco Polo's trip that had fascinated him for 57 years. On a 9,000 foot mountain overlooking Kunming -- General Chennault's home base in World War II -- he left an engraved stone memorial to his former boss that read: General Claire Lee Chennault. We, your men, honor you forever.

In 1976, with special permission from Gen. Charles Gabriel, Air Force chief of staff, he flew an F-16 Fighting Falcon. Ironically, his first military airplane had also been a Falcon, a Curtiss O-1G fabric-covered biplane.

In 1986, General Scott arrived at Warner Robins for the unveiling of an exhibit of his memorabilia at the Museum of Aviation. He was asked to stay and the next year moved to Warner Robins to become the head of the Heritage of Eagles Campaign -- which ultimately raised $2.5 million to build the museum's three- story Eagle Building.

In 1988, the general released his autobiography, "The Day I Owned the Sky." That year, at age 82, he was flown in an F-15 Eagle out of Dobbins Air Force Base, Ga. In May 1995, the general joined 19 veterans of the China-Burma-China campaign on a 50th anniversary return to meet Chinese veterans they flew with during World War II.

On April 2, 1997, in celebration of his 89th birthday, General Scott flew his last flight -- in a B-1 Lancer bomber from Robins' 116th Bomb Wing. His flight log closed with over 33,000 hours in the air -- a total few pilots have reached.

In the last two decades of his life, General Scott continued to work tirelessly at the museum, helping to raise millions of dollars to develop the heritage and education center. His legacy, he said, was to "teach the younger generation that if we are strong, we will never have to endure another tragedy like World War II."

General Scott is survived by daughter Robin Fraser of Bakersfield, Calif., a grandson, three granddaughters and several great-grandchildren.

The general will be buried at Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

Copied from http://www.smilinjack.com/cgi/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=6;t=001289

Prev | Next | 1932