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  1. The V-12 Navy College Training Program was designed to supplement the force of commissioned officers in the United States Navy during World War II. Between July 1, 1943, and June 30, 1946, more than 125,000 participants were enrolled in 131 colleges and universities in the United States.

  2. Dec 21, 2022 · Open to both Navy and the Marine Corps officer candidates, the V-12 program proved more popular than the Army’s program since it did not require any basic military training (“boot camp”)...

  3. In this audio excerpt from his oral history, Admiral Duncan describes the Navy’s V-12 College Training Program, which was launched to beef up the numbers of commissioned naval officers during World War II (some 125,000 participants passed through the program during and immediately after the war years).

    • World War II Navyofficerprogram
    • V-12Navyvisitto Central
    • Program Announced
    • Benefits of Hosting A Program
    • V12 Routine at Central
    • Ending The Program

    The Navy maintained the value of a college-educated leader. Principles of navigation and propulsion were not easily grasped in a few months, so the Navy insisted it required the equivalent of civilian professionals to understandits technical ships. With a two-ocean war tofight and hundreds of new ships under contract, the Navy was concerned about f...

    Central College hosted a Navy inspection team on 1 April 1943. Lieutenant-Commander Hardy Steeholmfrom the Ninth Area Naval Command and Lt. Grant H. Brown of Great Lakes Naval Training Station touredcampus withPresident DeVoreand Dean Puckett. The officers found the McMurryHall men’s dormsuitable, but the Navy would double the capacity from the nor...

    The much anticipated decision by the Navy came in the mail on 30 April andwas warmly received as Dean Puckett, students,and facultyin the college church (Central Collegian April30, 1943). What Dean Puckett did not know at the time was how select a company of schools Central had joined. The initial group of interested schools was reduced to 500 and ...

    As a V-12 Naval Training unit, Central was not responsible for the cost of running the program on campus; the Navy covered the expense of messing navy students, the cost of instruction andfaculty and the cost of operating and maintaining buildings used by the Navy. In generalthe Navy paid thecosts of salary, supplies, repair, maintenance, utilities...

    The nerve center for the V-12 trainees was housed in the Navy offices in the main campus administration building – Brannock Hall. Typicallytrainees steered clear of those offices and limited their routine to McMurry, classes, and athletic fields. In the remodeled McMurryhall, now christened “Navy Barracks,” trainees slept in double decked bunks and...

    As the war neared an ending, with Germany conquered and Japan reeling from the final blows, it was obvious to all the end of the V-12 Program was neigh. The unit was gradually reduced, and all offices were consolidated into the Navy barracks in January 1944 (Swope to DeVoreDecember 18, 1944). On 18 July 1945, the anticipated word arrived, the progr...

  4. Aug 8, 2024 · In operation from July 1943 through June 1946, the V-12 Navy College Training Program was established to increase the number of commissioned officers available for wartime service. Over 125,000 participants were enrolled in 131 colleges and universities in the United States in the V-12 program.

  5. In response to the increased pressure for soldier training as WWII raged on, the United States instituted the Navy and Marine V-12 College Training Program. The program became a part of the Denison campus in February of 1942 and continued until October of 1945.

  6. The college did not have to wait long: A V-12 navy officer training unit arrived in July 1943. The unit consisted of 500 men of varying backgrounds and levels of education. All were expected to graduate in about four semester and then pursue specialized navy training.

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