Collections Item Detail
B+W panoramic group photo of U.S. Navy V-12 Unit, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, Nov. 1943.
2012.018.0001
2012.018
Purchase
Purchase
Museum Collections.
n/a
1943
Hoboken
8-1/2 in
52 in
Good
Notes: selected text below as found 2012 at - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V-12_Navy_College_Training_Program When World War II began in the early 1940s, American colleges and universities suffered huge enrollment declines because men who would have normally gone to college were either drafted or volunteered for service. As a result, some colleges worried they would have to close their doors. After the V-12 Program was established on July 1, 1943, public and private colleges enrolled more than 100,000 men in the V-12 program which reversed the trend of declining college enrollment. The V-12 Program, offered by the federal government under the direction of the U.S. Navy, paid tuition to participating colleges and universities for college courses that were taught to qualified candidates. The list included naval enlisted personnel who were recommended by their commanding officers, U.S.Navy and Marine Corps ROTC members and high school seniors who passed a qualifying exam. The primary purpose of the program was to "give prospective Naval officers the benefits of a college education in those areas most needed by the Navy." The Navy did not want to interrupt the "normal pattern of college life," but instead, the goal was for the participants to complete a degree in their field of study; while supplementing their course work with Navy classes, for which the colleges awarded regular academic credits. Original or Copy: Copy Status: OK Status By: dw Status Date: 2012-04-13