, 1951 On May 24, 1928, a group of students attending
Yale College and the
Sheffield Scientific School formed the Cannon and Castle military fraternity. The founders were all enrolled in the Department of Military Science and were members of field artillery and engineering units of Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC). Membership was limited to those in ROTC field artillery and engineering units. These members were selected for their "character, knowledge as reflected by general academic achievements and achievements in military science, and leadership qualities as demonstrated by performance as a cadet in the Reserve Officers Training Corps, and by contributing to the Yale Cadet Battalion." The six men would in turn, nominate twelve additional men for membership. The society met every two weeks at various campus locations. It hosted lectures by military and foreign policy leaders, screened films, and held social events such as the annual Army-Navy Dance. It also offered the Col.
Dean Hudnet Award for marksmanship in a competition that was open to any Military Science student at Yale. The award was named for a deceased professor of military science and tactics who was a member of the 1936 Olympic pistol team. Cannon and Castle discontinued operations during
World War II but reactivated in 1947 at its units' summer quarters in at
Camp Campbell in Kentucky and
Stewart Field in New York before returning to campus. == Current activities ==