The United States Naval Academy
in Annapolis, Maryland has been preparing young men for six generations and,
since 1976, young women to serve as commissioned Junior Officers in the Navy
and Marine Corps. In 1903, students
attending the Academy were referred to as Naval Cadets, but they are now called
Midshipmen.
U.S.N.A., ANNAPOLIS, MD, OCTOBER, 1903
Naval
Cadet 1st Class Albert Douglas Hurlock and his best friend and roommate, Cadet
1st Class Thomas P. Kelly, were members of the class of 1904. On a chilly Saturday afternoon, late in
September, they were aboard a small dingy rowing on the scenic Severn River
past the grounds of the Naval Academy and near the newly constructed railroad
bridge that linked the town of Annapolis with Baltimore.
Huge
old trees hung over the river all along the shoreline. There was a strange
quiet surrounding them. A light mist
had formed on the surface of the water as the two Cadets talked about their
upcoming exam in Navigation. They also
discussed the possible assignments they might receive after graduating as
Ensigns in eight short months from now.
Looking
about, Cadet Hurlock commented, "How peaceful the river is today. Seems like we're the only living things
inhabiting this place."
"Funny,
I was just thinking the same thing."
The
water was calm and the visibility was less than a mile in the mist. The Cadets continued to row further up the
river to begin their sextant surveying exercises, which they had been assigned
the day before in their class on navigation.
They
were also given several old hand-drawn maps of the region. Today, they planned to check the shoreline
station points for accuracy because their professor had indicated that sections
of the charts might have been deliberately altered to test their abilities.
Cadet
Kelly steadied the dingy as Cadet Hurlock, standing amidship holding the
sextant, said, "Ten degrees to the North, twenty degrees to the West. What the...steady as she goes Mister
Kelly."
Cadet
Hurlock spotted what appeared to be a log floating directly ahead of their
boat. The log appeared to be twice as
long as their craft. As Cadet Kelly
raised his oars out of the water to slow the boat's movement, they both yelled,
"Look! It's moving!"
To
their astonishment, the log turned out to be a living thing! It began to slither away under the waves as
the small dingy approached.
"What
the hell do you make of that?" said Cadet Hurlock to his quite startled
companion.