06/24/2026
It starts with I-Day … but it doesn’t end after Plebe Summer.
With the Plebe Parent Photo Program, you can follow your midshipman through all four years at the U.S. Naval Academy, capturing the moments that matter most, from their first salute to their final hat toss at Commissioning.
Be part of the journey from start to finish.
Sign up today → https://www.usna.com/parent-photo-program-public
06/24/2026
Help us welcome the 42 incoming Naval Academy Athletic Foundation Class of 2030 students.
Since 1944, this program has empowered more than 4,000 exceptional scholar-athletes through a combination of athletic excellence awards and academic scholarships, ensuring the United States Naval Academy continues to attract the nation’s most accomplished and driven candidates.
Here’s to the next generation of leaders in academics, athletics and service!
06/24/2026
How to sign-up for the USNA AA&F Photo Program and the Plebe Parent Mixer
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
06/23/2026
Hey Class of 2030 families! Looking for something to do during I‑Day?
Come hang out at Dry 85 for a LIVE Sing Second Podcast from 1–2 PM 🎙️
06/23/2026
The 2026 USNA Entrepreneurs Summit brought together alumni and industry leaders to explore innovation, resilience and mission-driven leadership. The summit celebrated the strength of the USNA entrepreneurial community and the power of the U.S. Naval Academy network to connect and inspire leaders across industries. Thank you to our speakers, volunteers, sponsors and planning committee for making it possible!
06/22/2026
Donors are part of the leadership story at the U.S. Naval Academy. Their support creates opportunities, strengthens programs and ensures future generations of midshipmen are prepared to lead in an increasingly complex world.
Make your year-end gift to the Naval Academy Fund today and support the next generation of leaders.
👉 usna.com/give
06/18/2026
JUST ANNOUNCED: President Trump awards Ripley '62 Medal of Honor
In a White House ceremony, President Donald Trump officially awarded Colonel John Ripley '62, USMC (Ret.), the Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions during the Vietnam War.
“Today, we posthumously award him the highest of all awards, the Congressional Medal of Honor,” President Trump said at the ceremony on Thursday in which he presented the Medal of Honor in a case to Ripley's son, Tom.
Ripley originally received the Navy Cross after he single handedly destroyed a crucial bridge at D**g Ha. On 2 April 1972, then-Captain Ripley, the senior advisor to the 3rd Vietnamese Marine Battalion, repeatedly put himself in harm's way to place explosives on the D**g Ha bridge over the Cua Viet River in South Vietnam's Quang Tri province.
Efforts to upgrade Ripley's Navy Cross to the Medal of Honor stalled for years. Earlier this year, Secretary of the Navy John Phelan called Ripley's son, Tom, to meet with him and share the story of Colonel Ripley's heroics. Phelan, at the orders of the president to evaluate military honors, was impressed and a few days later, the Marine Corps had written an endorsement.
That was followed by Phelan's and the Secretary of War's endorsements. Within a couple of weeks, the recommendation was sent to the House Armed Service Committee. Congressman Morgan Griffith, representing Virginia's Ninth District, sponsored the bill to honor the Radford, Va. native with the nation's highest military decoration. On 3 March 2026, Congress passed a resolution to recommend Ripley for the Medal of Honor.
During his heroic endeavor in Vietnam, Ripley arm-walked steel girders five times to set explosives while under continuous enemy fire for five hours. The destruction of the bridge blunted a massive offensive by the North Vietnamese. On Easter Sunday, 1972 communist forces crossed the demilitarized zone in a division level mechanized invasion. Thousands of tanks, troops and artillery advanced toward the D**g Ha bridge.
A diorama of Ripley at the Bridge is on display in Memorial Hall. He is the first Naval Academy graduate to be awarded the Medal of Honor since Vice Admiral James B. Stockdale '47, USN (Ret.), received his on 4 March 1976.
Tom Ripley said his father, who died in 2008, would have wanted to ensure proper credit to those who supported him, trained him and served alongside him. That includes his wife, Moline, fellow advisor Major Jim Smock, and the 300 men of the 3rd Vietnamese Marine Battalion who fought a desperate battle to buy Ripley time. Of those 300 less than 60 would survive the battle.
Tom always believed his father's service would be recognized with the Medal of Honor.
“You have faith that your country's going to do the right thing,” he said. “For us, this is really the completion of a circle.”
Ripley is the 73rd Naval Academy's alumnus to be awarded a Medal of Honor. He was the first Marine to be named a U.S. Naval Academy Distinguished Graduate (2002).
06/18/2026
Happening now: Col John Ripley '62, USMC (Ret.) posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor. Watch LIVE (4:00 p.m. ET 18 June 2026)
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