There will be loud ceremonial cannon fire in the Lexington area on several afternoons the week of Nov. 3-7 as VMI prepares for and celebrates Founders Day.
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“I Think Coming to VMI Will Change Your Life More Than You Expect It To.”
Sadie Smith ’26 was looking for a college that could prepare her for a successful career and life. At VMI, she found a place like no other. Although she believes that everyone has the potential to be a leader, she credits VMI for giving her the confidence and support to grow as one. Learn more about Sadie – an international studies major, NCAA Division 1 water polo player, and Hotel Company commander – and other cadets who hose No Ordinary College.
“Recalibrated” Veteran Motivates at VMI
Retired U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Travis Mills of the 82nd Airborne Division, who was critically injured by an improvised explosive device while on patrol in Afghanistan, will speak at VMI.
Furness Starts Tenure With High Energy
LEXINGTON, Va. Oct. 9, 2025 — Forty-two years after his matriculation to Virginia Military Institute, Lt. Gen. David Furness ’87 began his tenure as the 16th superintendent of VMI. In addition to moving into his office and helping his family acclimate to their new home, his first week at work mid-September was tightly scheduled with faculty and staff meetings, visiting offices around post, observing rat and cadet activities, hosting a Constitution Day ceremony, preparing for his first Board of Visitors’ meeting, taking review of his first parade, and addressing each class of cadets.
The Virginia 250 Commission (VA250) Constitution Day event, “To Support & Defend,” honoring the 250th anniversaries of the U.S. Army, Marine Corps, and Navy, was held on Constitution Day, Sept. 17 in Cameron Hall, where Furness spoke at his first public appearance.
He set aside time to meet separately throughout the week with the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Class cadets, as well as the Rat Mass on Friday morning. He told the rats they would always be special to him, since they are the first class he will fully see through the VMI journey.
Furness opened his relaxed talk with the rats by congratulating them on their courage in embracing the challenges at VMI. He confessed he had tried three times to get accepted to the Institute, but his poor grades prohibited it. He attended Virginia Commonwealth University for a while and got his grades up, retook the SAT, and finally was accepted to VMI. “Nobody wanted to be a VMI cadet more than me, but two months into it, I thought I had made the biggest mistake of my life.” At that point as a rat—too embarrassed to tell his parents—he sought help from faculty members who patiently tutored and encouraged him toward success. Furness then urged the rats to also seek help when they need it. “We have amazing faculty, dykes, and professionals on post. Develop relationships with them. Ask for assistance if you are struggling emotionally or academically.”Lt. Gen. David Furness ’87 takes review of his first parade as superintendent Sept. 19.

Furness also advised the rats to have faith in something larger than themselves; have faith in the VMI process; and have faith in themselves. “Our little school has produced great human beings. The process prepares you for the pitfalls of life. The journey is difficult, but it’s worth it. Keep moving, don’t quit. You are the life blood of the Institute. You energize the system.” He stressed they take the Honor Code seriously. “Take the ‘F’ rather than cheat. Maintain your honor and integrity. Never do the easy wrong. Always do the hard right.”
During a lighter moment at the conclusion of his talk, Furness dispelled the rumors that he is taking away ice cream in Crozet Hall and reinstating Saturday classes, to which the rats leaped out of their seats and cheered.
Later Friday, Furness took review of his first regimental parade. Alert spectators noticed the new three-star flag held behind him on the observation deck, indicating he is a three-star general. Saturday, Sept. 20, he watched the Keydet football game at the University of Richmond. He was proud of the team, dealing with a four-and-a-half-hour weather delay. “The team never quit and showed great tenacity.”
In a message he emailed post-wide early into his second week, Furness stated he is honored and privileged to be back at VMI. “I couldn’t be more passionate about VMI and simultaneously more humbled by the opportunity to start my ‘second rat year’ as your superintendent.”
Marianne Hause
Communications & Marketing
VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE
Tales From The Hallowed Halls: Ghostly Encounters Of Post
It was early morning and Trey Copenhaver ’12 was sound asleep in his room in Old Barracks at Virginia Military Institute. The year was 2011 and Copenhaver was a 1st Class cadet. He had tasked his rat to wake him up that morning for guard duty.
“We were in room 104, and usually our rats would come down and wake us up in the morning,” he said. “They would come in, flip on the coffee pot that we weren’t supposed to have, and roll our hays and put our beds up like they’re supposed to. We would go out to breakfast formation, and for whatever reason that morning, they didn’t come down.”
Instead, it was a soft, low knock on his door that jolted him from his sleep.
“I hear, like, ‘tap, tap, tap.’ Three knocks on the door. I woke up really quick, and I looked at the time and it was five minutes to the breakfast call,” he said.
The thing was, there was no one on the stoop. Copenhaver said it had been cold outside, so there were not a lot of cadets roaming around barracks. The sound also wasn’t from any rats because Copenhaver said they had some sort of training that morning, which is why his didn’t show for the wakeup call.
Talking with his fellow cadets, he heard from one cohort that the random wakeup calls from unknown sources was a thing.
“He’s like, ‘yeah, it’s probably the ghost that wakes you up if you’re going to be late,'” Copenhaver said.
He and others think the ghost is a former sentinel or guard, that’s why he goes around waking up cadets who are about to be late for things.
This isn’t the only ghost story to haunt the hallowed halls of VMI. Copenhaver, who now works at VMI as academic support coordinator for the Miller Academic Center with the rank of captain, said he’s familiar with a lot of haunting tales.

Battle Haunts
He was on guard duty one evening checking out all the academic buildings to make sure everything was secure. He and others who were on duty with him had just finished up at the Nichols Engineering Building, with their last stop at Memorial Hall.
Copenhaver was waiting outside Memorial Hall for two others to return. He saw them running up the side stairs that can be seen from the windows before they came racing outside. He had no idea why they had come racing out, until the two cadets said they were checking the museum and went to head up to Memorial Hall when something spooked them.
“They heard yelling, and they heard cannon fire, like gunfire and screaming,” he said.
He suspects the sounds they heard had something to do with the Battle of New Market painting that hangs in Memorial Hall.
“I have heard of people, if you go in at a certain time of night, you’ll see the painting move and you can see stuff going on,” he said. “This was the first time I was hearing about the guys freaked out by the battle sound.”
His third haunting occurrence was in New Market’s battlefield. He and a few others were walking past the orchard there, since they had camped on the battlefield for the night, when one of the cadets picked up an apple.
It had hit him and he was pointing the blame at the others he was with. Copenhaver said that everyone was accounted for and no one in the group had thrown it.
“All of a sudden, three or four more apples start coming at us from out in the field, in the direction of where the orchard is, and right near the cannons. No one else is there. The gates are locked. It’s nighttime. We were getting hit by apples from somebody in the field at night.”
The cadets at VMI are also familiar with other spooky stories around post, like the yellow specter that’s lingered around the Institute for over a century. The ghostly figure is said to appear around 3:30 a.m., the time that’s tied to the cadet drum-out ceremony that dismisses cadets with honor violations. The figure has led to such precautions from cadets as having revolvers under their pillows in the earlier years of VMI.
Tunnels and Turrets
Other stories include that of the underground network of tunnels, beneath Old Barracks, which was re-constructed in 1865 after being burned during Hunter’s raid in June 1864 during the Civil War. These include steam tunnels and former trunk rooms once used to store cadet belongings.
The tunnels, now used for maintenance access, are said to be roamed by spirits. One is a “ghost cadet” that was allegedly captured on VMI security cameras. This figure was seen near the entrance of a tunnel in an area of the Old Barracks known as the “Bear Den,” a place that housed the barracks carpenter.
Cadets have been told through the years that this spirit is not confined to the tunnels, and some have said they’ve seen him in the corners of their rooms, watching them as they study late into the night.
From below barracks to above, the haunting history of the turret rooms above Washington Arch is said to have paranormal activity for those who live below them. In the past, the turret rooms were high, secluded rooms where cadets who were found guilty by the Honor Court would remain prior to being expelled from the ranks.
Some say cadets were left a rope, a knife, and the words “Death before dishonor” etched into the stone walls, awaiting their consequences. Over the years, stories of strange occurrences and unsettling events have passed down from one generation of cadets to the next, fueling the haunted aura of these rooms.
Cadets who have lived in the rooms directly below the turret chambers shared unnerving experiences. Cups flying off surfaces, shades being pulled up or down. One cadet said windows would shut no matter what you’d do to keep them open. Others reported a far more personal encounter with the unknown, feeling a touch on their shoulder before falling asleep.
Whatever the truth may be, the legend of the turret rooms and the haunting phrase “Death before dishonor” have become inseparable from VMI’s haunted history.
If these stories are true or not, you can tell the energy surrounding certain spots on post are a little spooky.
Laura Peters Shapiro and Rhita Daniel
Communications & Marketing
VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE