The Challenge

The CNO invites entrants to submit essays that apply lessons from throughout naval history to solving today's Navy challenges. Entrants should consider that today's era is marked by:

    a.  Determined and increasingly aggressive efforts by China and Russia to coordinate their respective instruments of power (e.g., economic, political, and military) to compete for commercial, geostrategic, political, and military advantage and access.

    b.  Chinese and Russian expansion across the spectrum of military operations (competition, crisis, and contingency) and domains (sea, air, land, space, cyberspace, and electromagnetic spectrum).

    c.  The rise of China as an economic and maritime power and the importance of the maritime domain as well as the need for the U.S. to integrate Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard operations and multi-domain operational concepts and capabilities.

    d.  The increased importance of navies, sea control, and allies and partners in a globalized world where 90 percent of world trade (by volume)and information travels via the seas or undersea cables.

    e.  The proliferation of advanced weaponry and the erosion of key U.S. technological advantages that make it difficult for the U.S. to project power to manage crises, deter aggression, and reassure allies and partners.

    f.  Fundamental strategic and technological shifts and advances that promise to change the character and conduct of naval warfare and challenge the Navy's ability to adapt conceptually and materially.

CNOs Intent: Engage and leverage the intellectual talents of the members of the U.S. maritime services (i.e., the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard as well as the Merchant Marine) to provide insights and catalyze discussion on how to establish and maintain maritime superiority in an era of great power competition.

Eligibility

  • Entrants that do not fall in the Professional Category and are either active-duty, reservists, veterans, or federal civilian personnel of the U.S. Navy, U.S. Marine Corps, U.S. Coast Guard, or U.S. Merchant Marine; or
  • Contractors that currently work for the above services; or
  • Members of allied militaries that are serving with orders in official billets in the above Services, all of whom do not fall in the Professional Historian Category
  • Co-authored essays: All authors need to be eligible/qualify in the Rising Category

Submission Guidelines

  • Word Count: 3,000 words maximum (excludes endnotes/sources).
  • Submit essay by 31 May as a Word document online at: www.usni.org/cnonhessaycontestrising
  • Include word count on title page of essay but do not include author name(s) on title page or within the essay.
  • Note: Essays must be the author's original work, neither previously published (online or in print) or currently under consideration for publication elsewhere, nor previously submitted to the CNO Naval History Essay Contest.
  • Entrants may submit multiple essays, but the judging panel will select only one winning essay per entrant.
  • Author bios should include details of the author's eligibility for this contest.

Prizes

$5,000 — First Prize

$2,500 — Second Prize

$1,500 — Third Prize

a.  Invitational travel orders to the 2023 CNO Naval History Essay Contest Awards Reception to meet the CNO and present their respective papers.

b.  Winners will be published in Naval History magazine or Proceedings and online with the Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC). Other essays may be published in Naval History or Proceedings and/or online by NHHC.

c. Copper sheathing from USS CONSTITUTION (provided by NHHC)

d. Recognition on NHHC's website.

e.  A one-year Naval Institute membership and a one-year subscription to Naval History magazine (courtesy of the Naval Institute).

Judging

Essays will be judged on the following criteria:

    a.  Relevance to the topic:  Applying lessons from naval history to establishing and maintaining maritime superiority in an era of great power competition;

    b.  Readability;

    c.  Thoroughness of research;

    d.  Quality of insights based on historical events;

    e.  Uniqueness/novelty of ideas presented.

This contest is judged in the blind. The Judging Committee will be composed of naval historians from the U.S. Naval Institute, U.S. Naval Academy, Naval War College, Naval Postgraduate School, Naval History and Heritage Command, and the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. Since we receive so many submissions (more than 100 per month!), notification of acceptance on one of our platforms can take 4-6 months. We will notify you via email if your essay is selected for a prize or for publication.

Deadline

Submit your Essay

 

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Previous Winners

2020 CNO Naval History Essay Contest Supported by General Dynamics

CATEGORY
PRIZE
TITLE
NAME
Professional Historian
Winner
Commander Joel Holwitt, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
First Prize
First Lieutenant James Winnefeld, U.S. Marine Corps
Rising Historian
Second Prize
Lieutenant George Hageman, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
Third Prize
Lieutenant Commander Andrew Rucker, U.S. Navy

2019 CNO Naval History Essay Contest Sponsored with General Dynamics

CATEGORY
PRIZE
TITLE
NAME
Professional Historian
First Prize
Commander Joel Holwitt, U.S. Navy
Professional Historian
Second Prize
Salvatore R. Mercogliano
Professional Historian
Third Prize
Commander Joel Holwitt, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
First Prize
Lieutenant Commander Jeff Vandenengel, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
Second Prize
Lieutenant Commander Ryan P. Hilger, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
Third Prize
Lieutenant Philip D. Mayer, Judge Advocate General's Corps, U.S. Navy

2018 CNO Naval Hisory Essay Contest Sponsored with General Dynamics

CATEGORY
PRIZE
TITLE
NAME
Professional Historian
First Prize
Rear Admiral James Goldrick, Royal Australian Navy (Retired)
Professional Historian
Second Prize
Commander Joel Holwitt, U.S. Navy
Professional Historian
Third Prize
Lieutenant Colonel Frank G. Hoffman, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve (Retired)
Rising Historian
First Prize
Lieutenant Robert E. Swain III, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
Second Prize
Vice Admiral James R. Fitzgerald and Rear Admiral Richard F. Pittenger, U.S. Navy (Retired)
Rising Historian
Third Prize
Achieving Dominance in the Cyber Domain: Lessons from Rickover’s Development of the Nuclear Navy
Lieutenant G. Creigh Greensmith, U.S. Navy

2017 CNO Naval History Essay Contest Sponsored with General Dynamics

CATEGORY
PRIZE
TITLE
NAME
Professional Historian
First Prize
Lieutenant Commander Joel Holwitt, U.S. Navy
Professional Historian
Second Prize
Trent Hone
Professional Historian
Third Prize
Ryan Wadle
Rising Historian
First Prize
Lieutenant John Miller, U.S. Navy
Rising Historian
Second Prize
Lieutenant Colonel James W. Hammond III, U.S. Marine Corps (Retired)
Rising Historian
Third Prize
Lieutenant (junior grade) Daniel Stefanus, U.S. Navy