Central to Bancroft Hall is the Rotunda, with wings on either side. Over the Rotunda is a large mural of the , during the
Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands in
World War II. Memorial Hall is up the large staircase from the Rotunda. This hall contains the honor roll of over 2,660 Naval Academy alumni who have died in military operations; their names are listed by class year on the walls and includes non-graduates and midshipmen. In the front of the hall, opposite the entrance, is a panel containing the full names and class years of the 963 alumni who are listed as killed in action. This panel is organized by war and alphabetically by last name. Throughout the rest of the hall there are memorials and plaques to specific alumni or small groups of alumni. (Details about the lives of the men and women honored in Memorial Hall are catalogued at the Virtual Memorial Hall project.) There are 489 panes of glass in the
skylight. Below Memorial Hall is Smoke Hall. :
Memorial Hall Dedication The Dedication in Memorial Hall was written by
William Nathaniel Thomas, Chaplain USNA (1892–1971) who was the seventh US Navy
Chief of Chaplains (1945–1949). Memorial Hall within Bancroft Hall honors those United States Naval Academy alumni lost in combat or military operations in service to their country. In 1952 after soliciting suggestions for the dedication, Royal S. Pease, Professor, Department of English, USNA, wrote Chaplain Thomas "...There was a very widespread search for this and scores of suggestions were made. None seemed at all satisfactory until yours was presented. It was at once seized upon as being the right sort of thing: in the right spirit and in the right phrase. Widespread criticism was invited... but they found none to improve upon yours. It is now in Memorial Hall, below the
'Don't Give Up the Ship' flag." In the aftermath of the 1967
USS Liberty incident, the Navy balked at listing Lieutenant Commander Philip Armstrong Jr. and Lieutenant Stephen Toth, two
Liberty crew members, on the memorial wall. It took
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral
Thomas H. Moorer's personal intervention to reverse their decision; Moorer angrily commented on the Academy's attempt to omit the names: "I intervened and was able to reverse the apparent idea that dying in a cowardly, one-sided attack by a supposed ally is somehow not the same as being killed by an avowed enemy." File:USNA Memorial Hall.jpg|Dedication in Memorial Hall USNA File:Memorial Dedication Close up 041.jpg|Dedication Plaque in Memorial Hall ==Commander-in-Chief's Trophy==