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In 1913, New York City threatened to close the school due to its costs. However, the state of New York took over its management and renamed it the New York State Nautical School. Despite being a state institution, the school was almost closed in 1916, again for budgetary reasons, but efforts from the maritime industry and the school's alumni ...
New York State Nautical School/New York State Merchant Marine Academy 4. Empire State I [3] Procyon, American Pilot, Bay State II: Hog Islander Cargo Ship 1921 1930-1941; 1943-1946 (as American Pilot) New York State Merchant Marine Academy/New York State Maritime Academy 5. Keystone State [4] Seneca: Cutter 1908 1942 (for half the cruise)
New York State Nautical School 21. CDR (USNR) E. V. W. Keen: 1925-1927 Graduate Superintendent New York State Nautical School 22. CAPT (USN ret.) James Harvey Tomb: 1927-1942 Superintendent New York State Nautical School/New York State Merchant Marine Academy 23. VADM (USN ret.) Thomas Tingey Craven: 1942-1945 Superintendent New York State ...
The following is a list of public and private institutions of higher education currently operating in the state of New York. See defunct colleges and universities in New York state that once existed but have since closed.
This category is for superintendents and presidents of the State University of New York Maritime College and all organizations preceding it. The Organizations included in this category are; New York Nautical School; New York State Nautical School; New York State Merchant Marine Academy; State University of New York Maritime College
Webb's Academy and Home for Shipbuilders, Bronx, New York City (c. 1899) On April 2, 1889, the state of New York incorporated Webb's Academy and Home for Shipbuilders as a non-profit institution. Webb had provided the academy with an endowment presumed to be sufficient to allow the institution to be self-supporting in perpetuity.
The charter high school shares space in a building on 111 East 33rd Street in Murray Hill with three other traditional public high schools: Murray Hill Academy, Manhattan Academy for the Arts ...
In 1945, Dance Magazine wrote that Louis Chalif had been "at the forefront of the movement that introduced ballet instruction to 'the average American child'". [11] [37] Upon his death, his New York Times obituary described him as "the dean of New York dance teachers". [32] Both in New York City and across the U.S., Chalif was a major promoter ...