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Veterans

In Focus

Tradition of Service

Harvard celebrates the long, proud legacy of students and alumni who answer the call to military service.

Last updated: November 2025

Long history

Dating back to the colonial period, Harvard University has shared a deeply interwoven history with the U.S. military.

Learn more about these ties

Meet Lindsey Chrismon
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Lindsey Chrismon

While attending West Point, Lindsey, a U.S. Army veteran and recent HBS graduate, made history as the first female pilot of the AH-6M Little Bird helicopter in the elite 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment. She also served as Brigade Commander and First Captain, becoming only the fourth woman to hold the academy’s top leadership role.

Learn more about Lindsay

On campus and beyond


Two dental students wearing scrubs pose with an older man wearing a U.S. Navy hat.

Providing care

To help address a critical gap in care for veterans, Harvard School of Dental Medicine recently hosted its annual Give Veterans a Smile event. Now in its fifth year, the student-led initiative provides free dental care to veterans and their spouses.

Providing care

Preparing for service

Harvard was home to the first Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) battalion in the nation, formed in 1916. In recent years, there has been an increase in students interested in military service.

Preparing for service

Promoting scholarship

Harvard Kennedy School recently launched the American Service Fellowship, a new initiative that will provide full scholarships for at least 50 public servants and military veterans to enroll for a one-year, fully funded master’s degree.

Promoting scholarship

Protecting rights

Students in the Law School’s Veterans Law and Disability Benefits Clinic work to protect the rights of veterans and their families.

Protecting rights
Five students pose together holding the caps representing the military branches they plan to join.

Answering the call to serve patients and country

While many of their classmates went on to pursue specialty training in academic settings or work in private practice after graduation, five students from Harvard School of Dental Medicine—representing 15% of the class—went on to serve in branches of the military.

Read more about the graduates