New York Military Academy | |
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Address | |
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78 Academy Ave , 12520 United States | |
Coordinates | 41°26′54″N74°01′39″W / 41.4483°N 74.0275°W |
Information | |
Type | Private, boarding school, military academy |
Motto | Toujours Prêt (Always Ready) |
Established | 1889 |
Founder | Charles Jefferson Wright |
Superintendent | Sunny Doman |
CEEB code | 331-515 [1] |
Grades | K–12 |
Gender | Coeducational |
Campus size | 121 acres (49 ha) 51 buildings |
Campus type | Rural |
Color(s) | Maroon |
Athletics | 22 interscholastic sports |
Athletics conference | NEPSAC – HVAL NYSAISAA |
Mascot | Knights |
Accreditation | MSA [1] [2] |
Tuition | $56,590 (local, boarding) $40,590 (day) $65,640 (international) |
Affiliations | AMCSUS NAIS (NYSAIS) [2] |
Website | nyma.org |
New York Military Academy (NYMA) is a college preparatory, co-ed boarding school in Cornwall, New York, and one of the oldest military schools in the United States. Originally a boys' school, it started admitting girls in 1975.
New York Military Academy was founded in 1889 by American Civil War veteran and former schoolteacher from New Hampshire Charles Jefferson Wright, a former Commandant of Cadets of the nearby Peekskill Military Academy. Wright's successor, Sebastian Jones, presided over the academy from 1894 to 1922, guiding it during its most critical period of growth from a young and small institution of 48 cadets, through a disastrous fire in 1910, and throughout an extensive reconstruction program. [3]
In some of its early years, the campus also hosted a non-military "NYMA Lower School" for grades one through six. [4] The academy previously admitted students as early as the fifth grade. [5] Gradually throughout the mid-to-late 1990s, grades five and six were no longer accepted. By the 1999-2000 school-year, the academy only accepted students from the seventh grade on. [1] Today, the school is Grade K-12.
Over time, the campus expanded from 30 acres (12 ha) to a peak of 550 acres (220 ha), and enrollment peaked at 525 students during the 1960s. Girls have been admitted since 1975. NYMA is a member of the Association of Military Colleges and Schools of the United States as well as several other school associations. [2]
The campus also has been host to popular camps like Camp All-America into the 1980s and currently the NYMA Leadership Program.
Due to financial problems and enrollment that had dwindled to 145 students, the school was scheduled to close in June 2010. [6] [7] However, a group of alumni and local business people created a plan to save the school, raising almost $6 million of financing in a matter of weeks, and expecting to sell off some less-utilized portions of the campus. [8] [9]
On March 3, 2015, NYMA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and the academy failed to open in September 2015 for the school year. Instead, it headed to bankruptcy auction, [10] [11] where on September 30 it was auctioned for $15.825 million to the Chinese-owned Research Center on Natural Conservation Inc., a non-profit corporation led by billionaire Vincent Tianquan Mo, [12] Chairman and CEO of SouFun Holdings, an NYSE-listed company, also operating as Fang Holdings Ltd., one of China's largest real estate internet portals. [12] The foundation also purchased the nearby E.H. Harriman Estate in 2011 and the former Pace University's 37-acre campus in Briarcliff Manor in 2017. [13]
After spending millions of dollars refurbishing the campus, supporting instruction and making capital improvements, the school reopened on November 2, 2015, with "a handful of returning students" and a recruitment drive. [14] [15] For 2016–17, the academic year began with a total of 29 students. [16] By 2019 the school had grown to a size of 100 male and female Cadets both day and boarding with 12 nations represented and an additional 1,000 students attending special programs throughout the year.
The school is located in the town of Cornwall, New York and uses the mailing address of Cornwall-on-Hudson. [17]
The days at NYMA typically begin at 6:00 am and end at 10:00 pm. Cadets attend classes and participate in interscholastic or intramural sports, activities, and study hall. During closed weekends, cadets are expected to attend additional leadership training, drill & ceremony, and maintain the appearance of their respective barracks. Upon gaining the opportunity for an open weekend, cadets in good academic standing can apply for weekend furlough. [18] Cadets are expected to follow the school's honor code that a cadet will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do. [19]
The structure of the Corps of Cadets is adjusted depending on the number of students enrolled at the academy. As a military school, the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps (JROTC) was previously a key component, but is no longer active. Participation in the school's military program is required to graduate. [1] The battalion has typically consisted of:
NYMA has competed in Football, Basketball, Baseball, Soccer, Bowling, Lacrosse, Rugby, Swimming, Softball, Track & Field, Volleyball, Cross-Country, Wrestling, Tennis, Rifle Team, Golf, Drill Team, and Raiders. The school's mascot is the Knight. [20] Teams have competed in the Hudson Valley Athletic League, a member league of the New England Preparatory School Athletic Conference (NEPSAC). NYMA was reigning champion of New England Preparatory School Athletic Conference Basketball "D" class 2018.[ citation needed ] In 2019, NYMA won the boys New England Preparatory School Athletic Conference Basketball "D" class championship and the girls NEPSAC championship class "E".[ citation needed ]
In earlier decades, NYMA's official regulations permitted a certain level of hazing and physical discipline by supervisors and older cadets, although the academy's senior administrators were forced to resign after a particularly severe incident in 1964. [21] [22] [23]
While hazing later became forbidden by the school's rules and policies, a lawsuit was settled in which it had been claimed that physical and emotional abuse in the form of hazing had taken place in 2005. [24] NYMA cited adverse publicity from the 2005 incident as one of the reasons the school nearly closed in 2010.
Trump graduated from NYMA in May of 1964