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Robert Kaprielian
Bob Kaprielian has been involved all his life in athletics.
He was a WHS basketbaN letterman and even went out for track.
Most crucially, he was an important part of Watertown's first
football Class B state championship in 1952, playing both
ways all game at left tackle for Joe Zeno's Hall of Fame squad.
He was a great team player: tough, spirited, and utterly reliable.
As a result, Kaprielian followed his mentor Gene Renzi to
Northeastern in 1953 and played four years for NU's legendary
football coach Joe Zabilski.
After graduating from Northeastern, Kaprielian was commissioned
into the army, went to flight school, and flew Army aircraft
for nearly a decade on active duty and in the reserves, leaving
the service as a captain in 1968. He started a new career
in the security industry, from which he recently retired.
These days he's still active as a certified scuba diver and
a deputy boxing commissioner for the state of Massachusetts.
And, of course, as the chairman of the Board of Directors
of the Watertown High School Athletic Hall of Fame.
Kaprielian's own athletic career was distinguished, but not
immortal. 1n his dedication to the Watertown community though,
he has had made a contribution that will be just that. As
a result, the Board of Directors overrode Kaprielian's objections
and voted to honor him in this spring's ceremony as the Hall's
"founding father" in this tenth anniversary year
of that founding. Many peopfe have done yeoman service on
behalf of the Hall - both towards the tangible activities
it sponsors and the ideals for which it stands. But there
is only one person without whom the Hall would never have
become reality, much fess a Watertown institution - and that
is Bob Kaprielian.
Kaprielian recalls that a decade ago he had a chance encounter
with James "Skip" Viglirolo, a Northeastern acquaintance
and the namesake of the Belmont skating rink. He congratulated
Viglirolo on the latter's induction into the Belmont High
Hall of Fame, and was asked whether Watertown had its own
equivalent. The answer then was no - but soon, thanks to Kaprielian,
it would be yes. The conversation triggered a flurry of phone
calls and meetings. A Board of Directors was formed. Meetings
were held, athletic resumes passionately debated. A hall was
booked - and a Hall came into being.
The first induction ceremony was held in early May 1992. No
one quite knew how it would turn out. But those working at
the event that night arrived early to find a line already
forming at the door of the Hellenic Cultural Center. The crowd
of over five hundred people was held rapt through the night
by the sheer joy of the occasion. The event "marked a
new zenith in town pride," the Watertown Sun commented
the next week.
And that zenith has moved ever higher in the ten years since.
A Wall of Fame has grown in the foyer of Watertown High School,
with championship teams commemorated as well at the new field
house at theVictory Field complex. A television show has hit
the cable airwaves, remembering that "It Was a Very Good
Year" by revisiting the athletic events and world happenings
of the last six decades. Thirty college scholarships have
been awarded to WHS student-athletes, and a scholarship endowment
put in place to help future generations as well. The Hall
has become an institution, in the best sense of that word.
For Kaprielian, it has been a labor of love to recall and
extend the long history of excellence in Watertown athletics.
He gains a large measure of personal satisfaction in meeting
new people, "from people who were my heroes growing up,
to old cfassmates and friends, to an incredible younger generation
of athletes."
Each year is special in its own right. "I'm always awed,"
Kaprieliari comments, "by people's connection to Watertown,
by the memories you think must be long-forgotten but are still
very much seared into their memory banks. The Hall has served
as a means for people who live far away to reconnect with
their roots."
Each ceremony reminds us of what we had - and what we might
yet have. For community blends the past and makes it a stepping-stone
to the future; and for Kaprielian, the Hall is all about community.
That comes as no surprise in some ways. His family is the
centerpiece of his life, as his wife and two daughters (and
their husbands!) will attest. And he's been involved in many
Watertown organizations over the years, from the Rotary Club
to the Amvets to the St. James Men's Club. He was an elected
Town Meeting member in the 1970s, serving until charter reform
created the Town Council. He's the state coordinator for the
AARP's voter program. He's active in local politics, following
with the special devotion of a father the career of Watertown's
State Representative, his daughter Rachel.
The Hall has proven to be an institution that illuminates
not only athletic history but the town's strength of character
arising from its history and diversity. It has proven each
year to be a giant reunion, stirring up the best parts of
the past and putting them to the service of the future, "Memory
is a very powerful force," Kaprielian muses. "The
success of the Hall has little to do with me - and everything
to do with how special a place Watertown is. I'm just grateful
at having had a part in this."
One can only respond, it is the Hall itself - and Watertown
itself - which should be grateful. Thanks, Bob.
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