Admiral Farragut Academy: Difference between revisions

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[[Brooke Hogan]] graduated from the school.
[[Brooke Hogan]] graduated from the school.



There are approx. 200 students in the upper division, with a 5:1 ratio of boys to girls. It is a part boarding school with options of 5-day board, 7-day board, and day cadets. The students are 75% day students. The school is not a boot camp and will only consider students who wish to be there.

In the spring of 2006, a moon rock was given to astronaut Charlie Duke, who then donated it to the school. It is displayed in the main building of the school (Farragut Hall).


== External links ==
== External links ==
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[[Category:High schools in Florida]]
[[Category:High schools in Florida]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1933]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1933]]

There are approx. 200 students in the upper division, with a 5:1 ratio of boys to girls. It is a part boarding school with options of 5-day board, 7-day board, and day cadets. The students are 75% day students. The school is not a boot camp and will only consider students who wish to be there.

In the spring of 2006, a moon rock was given to astronaut Charlie Duke, who then donated it to the school. It is displayed in the main building of the school (Farragut Hall).

Revision as of 21:06, 18 January 2007

Admiral Farragut Academy is a college preparatory school with Naval training founded in 1933 in Pine Beach, New Jersey by, among others, Admiral Samuel Robison, one-time President of RCA.

In 1945, a second campus opened in St. Petersburg, Florida, occupying the famous "Jungle Hotel," a landmark in the Tampa Bay Area. In 1946, Admiral Farragut Academy was designated a "Naval Honor School" by Act of Congress, making it the only such secondary school in the United States.

The original campus in Pine Beach, NJ closed in 1994 and most buildings were demolished in 2003, but the St. Petersburg campus continues to operate, enrolling some 450 cadets from pre-kindergarten through the twelfth grade. In 1990, the previously all-boys Academy began accepting female students for the first time.

The Academy is perhaps most notable for graduating two of the twelve men to walk on the Moon. RADM Alan Shepard, USN was the first American in space and in 1971, during the Apollo 14 mission, became the fifth man to walk on the Moon. Shepard graduated in 1941 from the New Jersey campus. BGEN Charles Duke, USAF, was a class of 1953 graduate of the St. Petersburg campus, and in 1972 became the 10th man to walk on the Moon during the Apollo 16 mission.

Admiral Farragut Academy is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and the Florida Council of Independent Schools.

Brooke Hogan graduated from the school.


There are approx. 200 students in the upper division, with a 5:1 ratio of boys to girls. It is a part boarding school with options of 5-day board, 7-day board, and day cadets. The students are 75% day students. The school is not a boot camp and will only consider students who wish to be there.

In the spring of 2006, a moon rock was given to astronaut Charlie Duke, who then donated it to the school. It is displayed in the main building of the school (Farragut Hall).

External links