MarketSt. John's Northwestern Military Academy
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St. John's Northwestern Military Academy

St. John's Northwestern Military Academy (SJNMA) was founded in 1884 as St. John's Military Academy (SJMA) in Delafield, Wisconsin, by the Rev. Sidney T. Smythe as a private, college preparatory school. In 1995, Northwestern Military and Naval Academy (NMNA) in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, merged with St. John's Military Academy to become St. John's Northwestern Military Academy on the Delafield campus. In 2020, a Leadership Academy was added and the combined schools became St. John's Northwestern Academies. SJNA is a coed independent boarding and day school for boys and girls in grades 6–12. St. John's Northwestern Summer Academy offers Little Lancers Day Camp, Summer Academy Plus, and ESL courses.

Historic buildings
St. John's Northwestern campus consists of a collection of historic buildings, many with towers and battlements in a style that suggests a medieval castle, with most of them arranged in a U around the drill field. • The school's oldest surviving building is the odd Shingle style Memorial Hall, designed by John A. Moller with its two caps and built in 1893 as a recreational building/gymnasium. • Next among the surviving buildings is DeKoven Hall, designed in Collegiate Gothic style by Thomas Van Alyea and built in 1906, a four-story barracks/administration building with octagonal towers at the corners and battlements topping the walls. • The dining hall and barracks Welles Hall was also added in 1906, designed by Van Alyea in a style similar to DeKoven Hall, but with a large square clock tower. • The Beacon is a fieldstone monument built in 1923. It holds an eternal light and displays quotes from St. John's founder. • Victory Memorial Chapel of St. John Divine was built from 1921 to 1926, modeled by Van Alyea on the chapel at West Point, and clad in lannonstone. • In 1927 the school added the two-story Hazelwood Hall designed by Van Alyea, housing barracks and classrooms, and it was expanded with Scott Johnston Hall in 1930, with a corner turret. • Smythe Hall was added in 1929, a dormitory designed by Van Alyea in a "castle" style like the previous buildings. In 1977 these historic campus buildings were listed on the National Register of Historic Places for the complementary design of many of them and since the school is the oldest military academy in Wisconsin. ==Notable faculty==
Notable faculty
William A. Shunk – professor of military science and tactics from 1904 to 1908 ==Notable alumni==
Notable alumni
Ehab Amin — Egyptian basketball player • Harold Huntley BassettUnited States Air Force major general • Ralph Barnes — journalist • Ed Bearss — Civil War historian, tour guide, and United States Marine Corps veteran • Roman R. Blenski — Wisconsin state politician • Arthur S. Born (SJMA, 1923) — United States Navy rear admiral • Charles F. Born (SJMA, 1924)— United States Air Force major general • Eliot Bostar — member of the Nebraska LegislatureMartin Breunig — German basketball player • Donald Clough Cameron — writer of detective novels and comic books • Jack Carson — actor in the 1940s and 1950s • Theodore Case — chemist, physicist, inventor of the Movietone sound systemAhmad Caver (born 1996) — basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League who played for the Memphis HustleJohn M. Cavey — Wisconsin state politician • Tom T. Chamales (SJMA, 1942) — writer and veteran of U.S. Army's Merrill's MaraudersEdward A. Craig (SJMA 1917) — U.S. Marine Corps officer who commanded combat units during World War II and the Korean War • Darroll DeLaPorte — American football player in the Milwaukee BadgersDonald Freed — playwright, novelist, teacher and activist • Daniel Gerber (SJMA 1916) — founder and president of Gerber Baby FoodsJohn A. Hazelwood — Wisconsin state politician • Reggie Hayes — actor, screenwriter and director • Trévon Hughes (2006) — basketball player in the Israeli National LeagueGeorge Kennan (SJMA 1922) — U.S. Ambassador to the USSR (1952) and Yugoslavia; helped develop the Marshall Plan for reconstruction of Europe after World War II • Frank Merrill (SJMA 1967) — equestrian • Sankar Montoute — American football player for the Tampa Bay BuccaneersAlex Moyer — American football player for the Miami DolphinsThomas Cebern Musgrave Jr. — United States Air Force major general • Brandin Podziemski —basketball player for the Golden State WarriorsAdam Rapp — novelist, playwright, musician and film director • Frank C. Rathje (SJMA) — honorary degree (1959), Chicago banker and lawyer • Jack Riley — American football player for the Boston RedskinsCurtis Roosevelt (NMNA 1948) — eldest grandson of President Franklin D. Roosevelt; statesman who served as a delegate representing the United States to the United Nations • Walter G. Schindler — highly decorated vice admiral in the United States NavyTony Schumacher — award-winning drag racer • Jayapataka Swami (Gordon John Erdman II, SJMA 1965) — Hare Krishna guru • Martín Torrijos (SJMA 1981) — President of PanamaSpencer Tracy (NMNA 1919–1920) — two-time Academy Award-winning actor • Ty Warner (SJMA 1962) — CEO and founder of Ty Inc., manufacturer of Beanie Babies • Minor Watson — character actor known for films in the 1940s • Harold J. Week — Wisconsin state politician • Ronnie Williams — basketball player • George Wilson (SJMA 1933) — NFL end with the Chicago Bears (1937–46), coached the Detroit Lions to the 1957 NFL Championship Game, later became the first coach of the Miami DolphinsHarry Wismer — sports broadcaster and the charter owner of the New York Titans (now the New York Jets) • Cornelius T. Young — Wisconsin state politician • Fred Young (SJMA 1960) — president and CEO of Young Radiator Company • Tony Zielinski (SJMA 1979) — politician in Milwaukee, Wisconsin ==Notes==
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