Ghost Stories (October 2002 | Volume: 53, Issue: 5)

Ghost Stories

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October 2002 | Volume 53, Issue 5

I HAVE THIS STORY FROM A classmate. Let’s imagine that I first heard it at dinner, where he and I sat with eight others at a rectangular table in one of the 10 or so rows of identical tables filling one of the six wings radiating out from the center of Washington Hall like the spokes of a caisson. You know it is winter because we wear thick wool dress-gray uniforms, and a double-breasted gold-buttoned coat hangs on the back of each cadet’s chair, a black scarf draped over the top. Our faces are still ruddy from the outside cold.

Bruce was returning to his room from his afternoon classes. He looked up and saw, on the third floor of Pershing Barracks, a classmate standing at the window in his daily academic uniform. Beside Eric at the window stood a figure Bruce couldn’t identify, decked out in a cadet’s full-dress uniform with crossbelts, shined brass breastplate, plumed tar bucket, the works. Knowing we did not have a parade that day, Bruce went straight to the room, where he found Eric at his desk, alone. Bruce asked, and Eric answered: There wasn’t anybody else here .

In my four years at West Point, although I never saw a ghost, I heard a number of ghost stories. We all did. The place is ripe with spirits. “The Long Gray Line has never failed us,” Gen. Douglas MacArthur once cautioned the Corps of Cadets. “Were you to do so, a million ghosts in olive drab, in brown khaki, in blue and gray, would rise from their white crosses thundering those magic words: Duty. Honor. Country.” Statues, memorials, building names, street names, and gravestones constantly remind us of those who have gone before, the successes and the failures, the famous and the forgotten. Walking around the grounds at night, you could feel the energy of the place, generated as much from its history as from the urgent present. The place pulses with the past.

It haunts. And cannot be exorcised. Former cadets hate it, love it, or both; they cannot forget it. I know of the devotion in alumni inspired by other schools—Duke, Kansas State, Arkansas—but I cannot believe that the hold those institutions have on their own approaches that of West Point’s on its own. A fine football team, some great parties, and the site of lost virginity are not enough to seize the soul.

The Naval and Coast Guard Academies, true to their East Coast seafaring heritage, feature the red bricks and white gables of colonial architecture. The Air Force Academy, built in the 1950s and 1960s, looked forward in its design in the spirit of the newly hatched, forwardlooking Air Force itself. Unfortunately, its flat, sleek halls look today exactly like a failed 50year-old effort to anticipate the future and, but for the chapel, do not do justice to their setting at the base