Newport News Apprentice School Set
To Celebrate Its 75th Anniversary
Just inside the 37th Street gate
at Newport News Shipbuilding
(NNS) in Virginia is a three-story,
red brick building housing the yard's
Apprentice School, which was es-
tablished in 1919.
The school, set to celebrate its
75th anniversary next year, opened
with 126 students and since then
has never had less, and during
World War II the student body bal-
looned to more than 1,000.
Today, when the first shift
whistle blows at 7 a.m., 600 young
men and women equipped with hard
hats, steel toed shoes and books file
into the brick building or go to a
production job on the waterfront to
study and work in 21 different
trades.
As President Clinton looks for
ways to successfully launch a feder-
ally-sponsored apprentice program,
one NNS Apprentice School gradu-
ate, Glen A. Davenport (Class of
1968), who is now president of his
own insurance company, thinks
Washington should turn to NNS for
ideas. "I remember reading how Bill
Clinton commissioned a task force
that did a study on why European
industry was more productive," said
Mr. Davenport.
"The task force reported that
Europe's great competitive advan-
tage was the apprentice system found
in just about every industry. I re-
member thinking that he didn't need
to send a task force to Europe to find
this out; he just needed to look at
Newport News Shipbuilding."
Just eight years after Newport
News Shipbuilding was founded in
1886, it certified its first apprentice,
Norwood Jones.
In 1911 the company initiated a
system whereby apprentices and
other company employees could at-
The Newport News Shipbuilding Apprentice School, which opened in 1919.
tend night classes at Newport News
public schools.
NNS is the largest and one of the
most modern shipyards in the west-
ern hemisphere, and it currently
builds some of the most complex
ships afloat, vessels which inclu
nuclear-powered aircraft carrie
and submarines, with state-of-th
art computer technology and pi
duction methods.
Over its history it has built hu
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