# M85-4 - 1985 11c Alden Partridge
Birth Of Alden Partridge
The son of a Revolutionary War veteran that fought at Saratoga, Partridge was a studious and outdoorsy child. He enjoyed hiking the Green and White Mountains and worked on his father’s farm in addition to attending school.
Partridge attended Dartmouth College as well as the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. After graduation, he was made a lieutenant of engineers and appointed assistant professor of mathematics at West Point. In 1808, Partridge was promoted to professor of mathematics and also became acting superintendent.
Partridge was an active West Point superintendent and stressed the importance of physical fitness. He often personally led the cadets on long marches in New York and other nearby states. Partridge also made church service mandatory for his cadets and occasionally prepared and delivered his own sermons. In 1813 he was named professor of engineers and officially appointed superintendent the following year. Nicknamed “Old Pewt,” he became known as a strict disciplinarian.
In 1817 President James Monroe appointed Partridge’s former student (but superior officer) Sylvanus Thayer to replace him as superintendent. Partridge initially refused but after a court martial agreed to resign in 1818.
Partridge had to take a break from his planning when he was tasked with surveying and establishing the border between the U.S. and Canada as outlined in the Treaty of Ghent. He mapped the watersheds of the Saint Lawrence and Hudson Rivers before resigning so he could return to planning his own military college program.
In addition to his military career, Partridge worked as Vermont’s Surveyor General and served four terms in that state’s House of Representatives. Partridge died on January 17, 1854 in Norwich. His legacy largely lies in the founding of Norwich University, which remains America’s oldest private military college. It’s also known as the birthplace of the ROTC, because it was the first school to offer the Reserve Officers Tra
Birth Of Alden Partridge
The son of a Revolutionary War veteran that fought at Saratoga, Partridge was a studious and outdoorsy child. He enjoyed hiking the Green and White Mountains and worked on his father’s farm in addition to attending school.
Partridge attended Dartmouth College as well as the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. After graduation, he was made a lieutenant of engineers and appointed assistant professor of mathematics at West Point. In 1808, Partridge was promoted to professor of mathematics and also became acting superintendent.
Partridge was an active West Point superintendent and stressed the importance of physical fitness. He often personally led the cadets on long marches in New York and other nearby states. Partridge also made church service mandatory for his cadets and occasionally prepared and delivered his own sermons. In 1813 he was named professor of engineers and officially appointed superintendent the following year. Nicknamed “Old Pewt,” he became known as a strict disciplinarian.
In 1817 President James Monroe appointed Partridge’s former student (but superior officer) Sylvanus Thayer to replace him as superintendent. Partridge initially refused but after a court martial agreed to resign in 1818.
Partridge had to take a break from his planning when he was tasked with surveying and establishing the border between the U.S. and Canada as outlined in the Treaty of Ghent. He mapped the watersheds of the Saint Lawrence and Hudson Rivers before resigning so he could return to planning his own military college program.
In addition to his military career, Partridge worked as Vermont’s Surveyor General and served four terms in that state’s House of Representatives. Partridge died on January 17, 1854 in Norwich. His legacy largely lies in the founding of Norwich University, which remains America’s oldest private military college. It’s also known as the birthplace of the ROTC, because it was the first school to offer the Reserve Officers Tra