The United States Naval Academy was founded 1845.
The Mathematics Department has offered a B.S. degree in Mathematics
since the 1960's. There are currently about sixty faculty members
of whom about 45 are civilian professors (all with doctorates) and
about 15 are active duty Naval or Marine Corps officers (all with
master's degrees). We graduate about 35 Midshipmen mathematics majors
each year.
The Mathematics and Science Division of the U.S. Naval Academy is
located in the twin buildings Michelson and Chauvenet, which overlook
the Severn River near its mouth on the Chesapeake Bay. Albert Michelson
was a midshipman and later an officer instructor at USNA. Michelson's
early experiments on the speed of light were conducted along the edge
of the Severn River just outside the building that now bears his name.
William Chauvenet was one of America's premier mathematicians in the
mid 1800's. He was a founder and one of the first faculty members
of the Naval Academy. In 1925 the Mathematical Association of America,
in order to honor the best expository mathematics paper of the year,
established the annual Chauvenet Prize.
A more complete history has been written by Professor Theodore J.
Benac, USNA Professor of Mathematics from 1941 until his death during
the fall semester of 1997 (
pdf file).
For the history of some of the awards won by the Mathematics Department faculty,
see the faculty awards page.