•
Field Marshal Mannerheim was a cadet at Hamina cadet school. Due to a disciplinary breach he was expelled in his final year in 1886, which caused him to continue his military career in the
Imperial Russian Army. •
Hugo Robert Standertskjöld colonel, business magnate, and owner of
Aulanko. •
Alexander Järnefelt was a Finnish topographical officer who made a topographic survey of large swathes of
Bulgaria in the late 1870s. In the 1880s, he served as a governor in several Finnish provinces, advancing the programme of the
Fennoman movement forcefully, ending his career as a senator of the
Senate of Finland •
Karl Fredrik Wilkama was a Finnish general who graduated from Hamina Cadet School in 1896. He served in the Imperial Russian Army and returned to Finland after independence. Wilkama fought in the Finnish Civil War on the White side, where he played a key role in organizing cavalry units. After the war, he held several senior positions in the Finnish General Staff. Wilkama was appointed Commander of the Finnish Army in 1919, 1924, and 1925, overseeing the early development of Finland’s defense forces. He retired from active service in 1926 but remained influential in military circles. His brother,
Oskar Wilkama, also graduated from Hamina Cadet School and had a notable military career in Finland. He served as an officer in the Finnish Army and held various command positions. Oskar served in the Imperial Guard Cavalry and was a riding instructor at the Russian imperial court. He also competed for Russia in the 1912 Stockholm Olympics. •
Carl Enckell, a politician, officer and a diplomat, graduated as an officer from Hamina Cadet School after which he served in the Imperial Russian Army learning fluent Russian. In 1917 Enckell negotiated for Finnish independence in
Saint Petersburg in the position of
Finnish Minister Secretary of State and representative of
Senate of Finland. Later he served Finland on several occasions as the minister of foreign affairs and as the Finnish delegate to the League of Nations. •
General Rudolf Walden received his military education at Hamina Cadet School 1892-1900. He was the best of his class. Walden was dismissed from service in 1902, in connection with a conscription strike. After leaving the army Walden had a notable career in business. •
General Hannes Ignatius received his military education at Hamina Cadet School 1885-1892, and in the
Nicholas General Staff Academy in St Petersburg 1896-1899. Served in the Finnish Dragoon Regiment 1892-1901 after which he was a businessman. •
Vilhelm Aleksander Thesleff received his military education at Hamina Cadet School from 1894–1901, and in the Nicholas Academy of General Staff in St.Petersburg 1904-1907, and the Officers Cavalry School 1910-1911. He was a Finnish general, first
Minister of Defence of Finland and briefly the commander in chief of the Finnish army in 1918. •
Waldemar Becker graduated from the Hamina Cadet School in 1858, served in the Finnish Guard and then in the Nicholas General Staff Academy. Deserted Russian army in 1862 after which he served with several different regimes and armies on four continents, including France, Spain, Mexico, Egypt and Serbia. •
Johan Mauritz Nordenstam graduated from Hamina Cadet School in 1823, served in the Russian army in two wars, and went on to be the longest-serving head of the Senate of Finland, effectively prime minister, from 1858 to 1882. ==References==