The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Trump’s old military school looks for renewal

- By Michael Hill

CORNWALL-ON-HUDSON >> While Donald Trump talks tough about dealing with China, his old military prep school is building bridges to that country.

The New York Military Academy began classes this fall with new Chinese backing and a former New York City high school principal, originally from China, in charge.

Students here still march and study like when a teenage Trump donned a buttoned tunic and sash in the early ‘60s. But administra­tors trying to renew the 127-year-old school also are looking hard at the growing number of students coming from overseas.

“We’re in a position of rebuilding,” said the new superinten­dent, Jie Zhang.

The academy is a picturesqu­e but partially timeworn boarding and day school hosting students in grades seven through 12 on a campus of 120 rolling acres near the Hudson River. Founded in 1889 by a Civil War veteran, the school used to teach hundreds of students at a time at its campus 60 miles north of New York City. Last year, that number dwindled to 10.

The school was purchased at a bankruptcy auction last September for $15.8 million by the nonprofit Research Center on Natural Conservati­on. The center was formed by the family of the chairman of SouFun Holdings, a real estate internet portal in China, and in 2011 bought a nearby Gilded Age estate nearby once owned by the railroad magnate E.H. Harriman.

SouFun’s chairman, Vincent Tianquan Mo, noted that he studied in both China and at Indiana University and saw the purchase of the military acad-

emy as a way to give back to education.

The academy has 31 students this fall, still short of the 100 needed to avoid a deficit. Classrooms and barracks around the main grassy rectangle are kept up, but some outer buildings need care, and weeds sprout from the unused tennis courts.

This school taught composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim and film director Francis Ford Coppola, though Trump is easily the alum most in the news since his presidenti­al run. He played baseball and was noted as a “ladies’ man” in his yearbook.

During an April visit — his helicopter landed here before a political rally across the river — Trump stood at a podium and said he learned about toughness and the military here, according to a YouTube video.

“It was five of my better years in life. I don’t know if it was my best. It was good,” Trump jokes in the video.

Trump’s headshot now hangs on a wall of the main building among a long row of notable alumni. Zhang said that she is mindful of tradition here and that recruiting local and U.S. students, who will continue to make up the majority of the students, is more important than looking overseas. She plans to continue the long-running junior ROTC program.

But Zhang’s mere presence represents a break from the past. The 56-yearold educator is the first woman and the first Asian to lead the academy.

She came to the United States in 1985 from Shanghai to earn a master’s degree in applied math and began a long public school career teaching female inmates at the New York City jail complex on Rikers Island. She retired this year as principal at the city’s prestigiou­s Stuyvesant High School.

“I am Chinese, but my whole entire career has been in the United States,” she said.

While the academy has hosted internatio­nal students for decades, Zhang could help it compete in a time of quick economic growth in China and other countries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States