NAVAL INSTITUTE PRIZE ESSAY, 1896.
A prize of one hundred dollars, with a gold medal. Is offered by the Naval Institute for the best essay presented on any subject pertaining to the naval profession, subject to the following rules:
- The award for the prize shall be made by the Board of Control, voting by ballot and without knowledge of the names of the competitors.
- Each competitor to send his essay in a sealed envelope to the Secretary and Treasurer on or before January 1, 1896. The name of the writer shall not be given in this envelope, but instead thereof a motto. Accompanying the essay a separate sealed envelope will be sent to the Secretary and Treasurer, with the motto on the outside and writer’s name and motto inside. This envelope is not to be opened until after the decision of the Board.
- The successful essay to be published in the Proceedings of the Institute: and the essays of other competitors, receiving honorable mention, to be published also, at the discretion of the Board of Control; and no change shall be made in the text of any competitive essay, published in the Proceedings of the Institute, after it leaves the hands of the Board.
- Any essay not having received honorable mention, may be published also, at the discretion of the Board of Control, but only with the consent of the author.
- The essay is limited to fifty (60) printed pages of the Proceedings of the Institute.
- All essays submitted must be either type-written or copied in a clear and legible hand.
- The successful competitor will be made a Life Member of the Institute.
- In the event of the Prize being awarded to the winner of a previous year, a gold clasp, suitably engraved, will be given in lieu of a gold medal.
By direction of Board of Control.
J. H. Glennon,
Lieut., U. S. N., Secretary and Treasurer.
Annapolis, Md., January 1, 1895.