United States Military Academy class ring

Plebes admire a firstie's ring.
A class of 2012 ring, "For More Than Ourselves".
A USMA class ring, class of 2012, "Never Forget".

The cadets of the United States Military Academy first began the practice of wearing class rings in 1835.[1] The United States Military Academy class ring has traditionally been worn on the left hand, but most recent graduates choose to wear it on their right hand, which is likely in response to the dilemma posed by wearing both a West Point ring and a wedding ring on the same finger.[2]

Some graduates choose to wear both on their left hand. While at West Point, the ring is worn so that the class crest is worn to the inside and closest to one's heart. Upon graduation, the ring is worn so that the West Point crest is closest to the heart.[3]

Class rings within West Point culture

Ring Weekend is a tradition at the United States Military Academy where senior cadets are awarded their West Point class ring. West Point is the first American school to have class rings.[4] It is awarded to senior cadets shortly after the start of their senior year, after which there is a formal dinner and dance (called a "hop" in cadet slang) following the ceremony for the cadets and their guests.

After the ring ceremony, Firsties are mobbed by plebes reciting the "Ring Poop":

Oh my Gosh, sir/ma'am! What a beautiful ring! What a crass mass of brass and glass! What a bold mold of rolled gold! What a cool jewel you got from your school! See how it sparkles and shines? It must have cost you a fortune! May I touch it, may I touch it please, sir/ma'am?[5]

The term "ringknocker" refers to the alleged custom of some graduates to gently rap their ring against a hard surface in social situations; this serves as an unobtrusive signal of their status to any other graduates in the vicinity. However, a negative social-networking connotation also associates with the term, in that the term "implies that if there is a discussion in progress, the senior (West) Pointer need only knock his large ring on the table and all Pointers present are obliged to rally to his point of view." [6]

Ring design

Cadets choose their ring several months in advance, selecting everything from size (the traditional large and heavy men's casting, or the less bulky women's version), color (white gold, yellow gold, or no-luster palladium), and stone (some rings are all gold and embossed with the West Point seal where the stone would have been set). Some cadets opt to "inherit" pieces of rings from other family members or mentors who have also graduated from West Point.

The rings are customized for each cadet, and there are very few standard seen practices, save the use of symbol black onyx and gold to represent the school colors, but this is seen in a minority of rings. West Point alumni may donate their rings to be added to the smelting pot when a new batch of rings are cast. Also, the stone from an older ring can be removed and placed into a new graduate's ring.

There are also ring-related souvenirs. Students can pick out items for family members made to resemble their class ring such as cufflinks, pendants, and pins. All these items of jewelry bear the same markings as the ring: the West Point crest, the class crest, the class motto, and the year the Cadet graduated (e.g., "Keeping Freedom Alive. West Point Class 2005").

By longstanding custom, many graduates choose to present a miniature, of the West Point ring as an engagement ring; President Eisenhower, then a young Lieutenant, gave a miniature to Mamie Eisenhower as the couple's engagement ring.[7]

References

  1. "Classy Rings". Time. May 19, 1980. Retrieved 2009-01-12.
  2. CLASS RINGS, MINIATURES, AND A-PINS
  3. CLASS RINGS, MINIATURES, AND A-PINS
  4. "Public Affairs - Home". Usma.edu. Retrieved 2013-12-30.
  5. "Ring Weekend". West-Point.org. Retrieved 2011-08-19.
  6. Broughton, Jack (2007). Rupert Red Two: A Fighter Pilot's Life from Thunderbolts to Thunderchiefs, Zenith Press, ISBN 978-0-7603-3217-7, 141. Broughton is a 1945 USMA graduate.
  7. "Mamie Eisenhower". White House Historical Association. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
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