The United States established an academy for educating future army
officers at West Point in 1802. Why, then, did it take this
maritime nation forty-three more years to create a similar school
for the navy?
The Long Road to Annapolis examines the
origins of the United States Naval Academy and the national debate
that led to its founding.
Americans early on looked with suspicion upon professional military
officers, fearing that a standing military establishment would
become too powerful, entrenched, or dangerous to republican ideals.
Tracing debates about the nature of the nation, class identity, and
partisan politics, William P. Leeman explains how the country's
reluctance to establish a national naval academy gradually evolved
into support for the idea. The United States Naval Academy was
finally established in 1845, when most Americans felt it would
provide the best educational environment for producing officers and
gentlemen who could defend the United States at sea, serve American
interests abroad, and contribute to the nation's mission of
economic, scientific, and moral progress.
Considering the development of the naval officer corps in relation
to American notions of democracy and aristocracy,
The Long Road
to Annapolis sheds new light on the often competing ways
Americans perceived their navy and their nation during the first
half of the nineteenth century.