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Bernard
(Ben) Akillian
When Watertown attorney Bob Kaloosdian, Benny Akillian's classmate
and lifelong friend, heard of the latter's impending induction
into the Halt, he managed to sum up in a phrase the basis
for the honor: Benny, he said, was "a man for all seasons"
That meant the seasons of sport, of course - the diamonds
of spring, the turf of fall. But it also meant the seasons
of life, for Ben's achievements are many and varied, run through
with two common threads -their manifest magnitude, and his
own humility.
Ben's family came from Armenia in 1919, escaping the genocide;
he was born in 1930, the youngest of five children. He spoke
little English upon entering school, but was soon integrated
into the language of athletics. Sports in those days revolved
around the sandlof; organized youth athletics were yet to
come. But each neighborhood had a team. Ben's was "Muzzo's
Corner," centered on the corner of Dexter Avenue and
Hazel Street. He still remembers fondly as well thair main
rival, the River Rats, made up of people like Dick Phelps,
the Faherty Brothers, and Bill Fleet. Phelps recalls that
Ben showed his Hall of Fame spark even then.
That spark flared into a flame on the playing fields of Watertown
High School. He starred in three sports. He captained the
basketball squad, a "key man in the Red and Black's groundwork:'
He was a force in the backfield for Joe Murphy's gridiron
gang, as well as one of the state's best placekickers. And
he roamed the baseball diamond with grace and power His classmates
named him their year's best athlete.
A surprising array of sources converge on Ben's playing personality.
"Quiet but highly talented" noted one Boston paper
"A team man all the way;' a local scribe said. Hall member
and teammate Frank Cousineau recalled that Benny was "as
gifted and talented an athlete as any player in my time, but
one of the quiet ones. You don't hear much about this type
of player - he just got things done:' Aram "Sonny"
Gavoor classmate and teammate, used some of the same words:
"Benny and Wicky [Bill Wickstrom] were the heart of our
teams. They were the on-field spark. Benny was a quiet leader,
someone you could always count on."
Had he not been so humble, Ben would have had more than ample
material with which to boast. Against Belmont on Thanksgiving
Day his junior year, news accounts were happy to do it for
him: "easily the star of the day. In the second half
he treated the audience to an all-Scholastic display of leather
lugging, in which he exhibited speed, change of pace, swivel-hipping,
cutting back, spinning, and many other choice items."
He won the McHugh Trophy as the game's most valuable player
as the Raiders triumphed 20-6. The next year, despite recurring
injuries, Ben led the team in scoring after racking up 34
points in the season's first four games. Against Dedham he
was dubbed the "Hat Trick Kid" in honor of a 3 TD,
3 extra-point performance. And he played both ways, no less
a menace on defense; a constant interception threat, in one
game against Framingham he keyed the Raider win by picking
off a pass and running it back 60 yards for a touchdown.
These football feats aside, baseball may have been Ben's best
sport. Speedy and strong-armed, he played left field, shortstop,
and pitcher A local paper noted that he was a "courageous"
player not to mention" fast, sfrong at bat, and one of
the cleverest base runners on the team." Batting over
.500 his senior year he won WHS' Potter Trophy as its best
baseball player And he was chosen by the New York Yankees
as one of the top five local high school prospects and offered
a minor league contract in their farm system.
Instead, Ben chose to pursue a different dream and attend
Harvard College. There, he continued to star as a three-year
starter and permanent resident among the Ivy League batting
leaders. In one game the college paper gloated that he "submarined
the Navy," going 3 for 3 with a triple and three runs
scored, inciuding an audacious steal of home. Hall member
Tom Oates recalls that "Benny was the kind of person
who would run through walls if it furthered his team";
and in one game against Northeastern he proved it, giving
teammates a scare when, in typically daring fashion, he dashed
home with the tying run and was hit in the head with the throw.
He walked away, and the Crimson won the game.
Ben's aptitude for the Ivy League, iYs clear, makes it obvious
that there was more to the man than a sharp batting eye. He
had been, after all, two-time president of his high school
class, active in a wide variety of academic activities - even
the Math Club! He starred no less in the classroom than in
the locker room, a member of the National Honor Society and
the select Cum Laude Society to boot, and was named one of
two Class Marshals; the WHS newspaper rightly praised him
as "far and away the outstanding scholar-athlete of the
year" He did nothing at Narvard to contradict that prophecy.
And so, when after his collegiate career, the Yankees came
knocking yet again, it should come as no surprise that Ben
elected instead to attend Harvard Business School.
After military service in the Army, Ben joined government
service and retired not long ago from Natick Laboratories.
He lives in Ashland with his wife Vivian and enjoys his three
children and two grandchildren. And in retirement he has still
managed to contribute to his community, coaching and giving
of himself to help teach young special education pupils.
As noted above, it's impossible, when talking about Ben, to
find a detractor Despite his great abilities and the scope
of his life's accomplishments, he remains humble and hardworking.
He has carried himself through his endeavors and challenges
with dignity, doing the best he can with the too!s God gave
him. His demeanor, perhaps, reflects the quiet but intense
pride of a first generation family, proving itself in a new
land, grounded in history and eager for the future. Ben Akillian
has lived that creed, to be sure, has proven himself across
the fields of play and the arenas of life: "as time requireth,"
writes the poet, "a man of marvellous mirth and pastimes,
and sometimes of as sad gravity." His achievements, in
al! their callings, in all their seasons, are worthy of our
admiration; and the Nall is proud to do just that, this spring.
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