| Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
| William D. Leahy |
1897 |
Chief of Naval Operations (1937–39); became the first admiral of the Fleet during World War II and crafted "future thought leadership"; served as chief of staff to the Commander in Chief, the role model for the first chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; governor of Puerto Rico (1939–1940); ambassador to Vichy France; father of Rear Admiral William Harrington Leahy |
[i] |
| Alfred Wilkinson Johnson |
1899 |
Vice admiral; destroyer, light cruiser, and battleship commander; director of Naval Intelligence; commander of the Atlantic Squadron; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal; U.S. minister to Nicaragua; married to the great-niece of U.S. Senator Ira Harris and father-in-law of U.S. Ambassador Charles Burke Elbrick |
[258] |
| Julius A. Furer |
1901 |
Rear admiral; recipient of the Navy Cross; USS Julius A. Furer was named for him |
|
| Ernest King |
1901 |
Fleet admiral; chief of Naval Operations in World War II (1942–45) |
[i][259] |
| William "Bull" Halsey Jr. |
1904 |
Fleet admiral; commander of the United States Third Fleet during part of the Pacific War against Japan |
[260][261] |
| Chester W. Nimitz |
1905 |
Fleet admiral; held the dual command of commander-in-chief, United States Pacific Fleet (CinCPac), for U.S. naval forces and commander in chief, Pacific Ocean Areas (CinCPOA), for U.S. and Allied air, land, and sea forces during World War II; chief of Naval Operations (1945–47) |
[i][217][218] |
| Harold Medberry Bemis |
1906 |
Rear admiral; recipient of the Navy Distinguished Service Medal |
|
| Frank Jack Fletcher |
1906 |
Admiral; recipient of the Medal of Honor for saving hundreds of refugees during the United States occupation of Veracruz in April 1914; operational commander at the pivotal Battles of Coral Sea and of Midway; nephew of Admiral Frank Friday Fletcher |
[f][262] |
| Henry Kent Hewitt |
1906 |
Admiral; recipient of the Navy Cross commanding USS Cummings during World War I; commander of the United States Eighth Fleet through the amphibious invasions of Casablanca, Gela, Salerno, and Southern France |
[263] |
| John S. McCain Sr. |
1906 |
Vice admiral, posthumously promoted to admiral; pioneer of aircraft carrier operations; commanded Fast Carrier Task Force in World War II; he and his son John S. McCain Jr. are the first father-son four-star Admirals in US Navy history; grandfather of John S. McCain III, also an Academy graduate; and 1908 Republican presidential candidate |
[264] |
| Raymond A. Spruance |
1906 |
Admiral; destroyer and battleship commander; commander of the United States Fifth Fleet; commander-in-chief of the United States Pacific Fleet recipient of the Navy Cross and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal; U.S. ambassador to the Philippines; USS Spruance (DDG-111), USS Spruance (DD-963), and Spruance-class destroyer series of ships were named for him |
[140] |
| Jonas H. Ingram |
1907 |
Admiral; recipient of the Medal of Honor for courage and leadership in handling an artillery and machine gun battalion during the United States occupation of Veracruz in April 1914; Navy Cross recipient for actions during World War I; commander, United States Atlantic Fleet during World War II; football player and head football coach at the Academy |
[f][265][266] |
| Thomas C. Kinkaid |
1908 |
Admiral; commander of U.S. 7th Fleet; commander of Eastern Sea Frontier and the Atlantic Reserve Fleet |
[267] |
| Hugh J. Knerr |
1908 |
Major general; observation squadron commander; commander of the Air Technical Service Command; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal, Legion of Merit, and Bronze Star Medal |
[268] |
| Robert Grimes Coman |
1909 |
Commodore, destroyer, collier, and battleship commander |
|
| Theodore S. Wilkinson |
1909 |
Vice admiral; recipient of the Medal of Honor for courage and leadership during the United States occupation of Veracruz in April 1914; veteran of World War I and World War II; director of Office of Naval Intelligence when Pearl Harbor was attacked in 1941 |
[f][265][269] |
| Marc Mitscher |
1910 |
Admiral; recipient of three Navy Crosses; commander of the Fast Carrier Task Force in World War II; commander-in-chief, U.S. Atlantic Fleet |
[270] |
| George McMillin |
1911 |
Rear admiral; 38th and final naval governor of Guam (1940–41); surrendered to the Empire of Japan during the First Battle of Guam |
[190] |
| Charles A. Lockwood |
1912 |
Vice admiral; gunboat, destroyer, and submarine commander; recipient of three Navy Distinguished Service medals; USS Lockwood was named for him |
[271] |
| Pedro del Valle |
1915 |
First Hispanic Marine Corps officer to reach the rank of lieutenant general; served in World War I, Haiti, and Nicaragua during the so-called Banana Wars of the 1920s, the seizure of Guadalcanal, and later as commanding general of the U.S. 1st Marine Division during World War II |
[272][273] |
| Frank Edmund Beatty Jr. |
1916 |
Vice admiral; destroyer and light cruiser commander; recipient of the Navy Cross; son of Rear Admiral Frank E. Beatty |
|
| Charles L. Carpenter |
1926 |
Rear admiral; attack transport commander; recipient of the Navy Cross |
[274] |
| Ralph A. Ofstie |
1919 |
Vice admiral; aircraft carrier commander; deputy chief of Naval Operations; was married to Captain Joy Bright Hancock |
[275] |
| John W. Roper |
1918 |
Vice admiral; battleship commander; recipient of the Legion of Merit |
[i][276] |
| Earl E. Stone |
1918 |
Rear admiral; battleship commander; chief of Naval Communications; commandant of the Naval Postgraduate School; recipient of two Legions of Merit |
[276] |
| Jerauld Wright |
1918 |
Admiral; destroyer and cruiser commander; commander of the United States Naval Forces Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean; commander of the United States Atlantic Command; recipient of two Navy Distinguished Service Medals and the Silver Star; U.S. ambassador to the Republic of China; son of Army Lieutenant General William M. Wright |
|
| Winfield S. Cunningham |
1919 |
Rear admiral; officer in charge of U.S. forces during the Battle of Wake Island; seaplane tender commander; recipient of the Navy Cross |
[277] |
| Charles B. McVay III |
1920 |
Rear admiral; captain of USS Indianapolis, which was sunk by a Japanese submarine in World War II and lost most of its crew to shark attacks after delivering nuclear bomb parts to Tinian |
[278] |
| Walter Schindler |
1921 |
Vice admiral; recipient of the Navy Cross and the Silver Star |
[279] |
| Rodger W. Simpson |
1921 |
Rear admiral; recipient of two Navy Crosses; destroyer commander |
[280] |
| Irving Wiltsie |
1921 |
Captain; seaplane tender and escort carrier commander; recipient of the Navy Cross and the Silver Star; USS Wiltsie was named for him |
[281] |
| John Higgins |
1922 |
Rear admiral; recipient of the Navy Cross, the Navy Distinguished Service Medal, the Silver Star, and two Legions of Merit |
[282] |
| Merrill B. Twining |
1923 |
General; chief of staff of the United States Marine Corps Forces Pacific; nephew of Rear Admiral Nathan C. Twining and brother of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Nathan Farragut Twining |
[283] |
| Clarence Ekstrom |
1924 |
Vice admiral; recipient of the Navy Cross; escort carrier commander |
[284] |
| Henry C. Bruton |
1926 |
Rear admiral; submarine and battleship commander; director of Naval Communications; recipient of the three Navy Crosses and two Legions of Merit |
[i][276] |
| Elmer Salzman |
1926 |
Major general; recipient of the Navy Cross |
[285] |
| James H. Flatley |
1929 |
Vice admiral; aviator; recipient of the Navy Cross, the Navy Distinguished Service Medal, and the Silver Star; USS Flatley was named for him |
[286] |
| Warner S. Rodimon |
1929 |
Captain, rear admiral; recipient of the Silver Star, the Bronze Star; captain of USS Hopewell during retaking of Corregidor |
[287] |
| William T. Nelson |
1930 |
Rear admiral; submarine commander |
[288] |
| Marvin John Jensen |
1931 |
Rear admiral; submarine commander; recipient of the Silver Star |
[289] |
| John O. Miner |
1931 |
Rear admiral; destroyer and battleship commander; U.S. Naval attaché in Rome, Italy; recipient of the Silver Star and Legion of Merit |
[i][276] |
| Louis Joseph Kirn |
1932 |
Rear admiral; aviator; recipient of the Navy Cross, the Navy Distinguished Service Medal, and the Distinguished Flying Cross |
[290] |
| Edmond Konrad |
1932 |
Rear admiral; recipient of two Navy Crosses and the Silver Star |
[291] |
| Waldemar F.A. Wendt |
1933 |
Admiral; destroyer commander; commander-in-chief of the United States Naval Forces Europe; recipient of three Distinguished Service Medals |
[292] |
| Bernard A. Clarey |
1934 |
Admiral; submarine commander; commander of the United States Second Fleet; recipient of three Navy Crosses, five Distinguished Service Medals, and the Silver Star |
[293] |
| Eli Thomas Reich |
1935 |
Vice admiral; as a lieutenant commander and commanding officer of USS Sealion, sank the Japanese battleship Kongō, the only Japanese battleship sunk by a submarine during World War II |
|
| Louis Robertshaw |
1936 |
Lieutenant general, Marine Corps; Marine aviator; recipient of three Distinguished Flying Crosses; World War II, Korean War, Vietnam War |
[294] |
| William F. Bringle |
1937 |
Admiral; aircraft carrier and supercarrier commander; commander of the United States Seventh Fleet; recipient of the Navy Cross |
[295] |
| Harry Brinkley Bass |
1938 |
Lieutenant commander; naval aviator; recipient of two Navy Crosses; USS Brinkley Bass named in his honor |
[296] |
| Carl Ferdinand Pfeifer |
1939 |
Captain; destroyer commander; aide to Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower; recipient of the Silver Star and Legion of Merit |
|
| Wilfred Holmes |
1922 |
Captain; submarine commander; in May 1942 devised the ruse that revealed that "AF" was Midway Island, which led to the Japanese defeat at the Battle of Midway |
[297] |
| Carl Henry Jones |
1914 |
Admiral; battleship commander; commanded the USS Maryland as commodore throughout 1943 and was named sub-area commander of the South Pacific after participating in the Battle of Tarawa |
[298] |