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Ernest Mannino
For thirty-four years, Dr. Ernest Mannino served as the Director
of the Office of Overseas Schools in C the United States Department
of State. This meant he was responsible for 187 American-sponsored
elementary and secondary schools in 101 different countries,
accounting for close to 100,000 students. He served under
eight different presidents, from John F. Kennedy to Bill Clinton
and eleven Secretaries of State. He was, in addition, a three-sport
varsity athlete at Watertown High School and captained Harvard's
baseball team.
It is for his unique melding of all of this into one outstanding
career - and one outstanding person that the Hall is proud
to honor Ernie this year in recognition of his lifelong contributions
to education: here in Watertown and, literally, around the
world.
At WHS, Ernie shone as a pitcher and infielder for Dan Sullivan's
Watertown baseball squads of the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Graduating from WHS in 1940, he captained the football and
basketball teams at Huntington Prep School before going onto
Harvard College, where he captained the baseball team. After
serving in the U.S. Air Force during World War II as a lieutenant
bombardier navigator he returned to Harvard in 1946. There
he came into his own as a third baseman. Harvard coach Stuffy
Mclnnis noted that Mannino played "a dandy third base.
He came up with some unbelievable plays." Ernie was a
clutch hitter too, slugging .408 in the early going his senior
season. One highlight was a game-winning single in a 17-inning
marathon against Navy.
Already Ernie was showing himself to be a teacher. As a Harvard
senior he had already been named
the next head basketball coach at Huntington Prep, and up-and-coming
Watertown athletes who knew him from Victory Field knew him
to be an excellent mentor of young talent. Hall of Famer Don
Costello recalls that "he had that natural athletic ability....We
respected him and marveled at his wonderful way of handling
young athletes."
In 1950, Ernie joined the Watertown school system as a teacher
and coach, soon becoming a principal at the Coolidge School.
He served there for a decade before a new challenge called
him to Washington. Attorney General Robert Kennedy, a personal
friend asked Ernie to bring his talents in educational administration
to the State Department, where a new committee assisting overseas
schools had been set up. As U.S. activity abroad flourished,
the need for "global education" became clear. Ernie's
leadership, it soon became clear was crucial. In July 1964,
he was asked to establish and direct the State Department's
Office of Overseas Schools. The complexities surrounding the
challenge of achieving educational excellence within widely
varying cultures and contexts required great skills in thinking
creatively, managing effectively, and bringing both political
and policy savvy to bear on a huge range of tasks.
He stayed in that post, as noted above, for more than three
decades. The post brought him to more than fifty countries
and earned him the Distinguished HonorAward, the U.S. Department
of State's highest performance award. That he served eight
administrations in the same role is indicative of the outstanding
job he has provided. He was a leader and a diplomat, as well
as a good listener. Among his other achievements while at
State, he nurtured the development of regional associations
to assistAmerican schools around the world, providing expert
training and development for teachers, administrators, and
school board members, helped by a network of stateside consultants
who are leaders in their areas of expertise. He also created
the Overseas Schools Advisory Council, which involved American
businesses on behalf of our overseas schools, generating over
$100 million in support for American-sponsored schools abroad.
From a maze of isolated campuses, Ernie's vision and dedication
have created a strong, supportive network of schools providing
a world-class education. U.S. SenatorTed Kennedy noted in
1996 that Ernie s "tireless efforts are largely responsible
for the development of the comprehensive, unified overseas
education system that exists for the children of U.S. citizens
today."
Ernie is, above all, an educator - he received his Ph.D. in
1970 from Michigan State in educational administration. He
has been recognized in citations from the American Association
of School Administrators and the Association for the Advancement
of International Education. John Nicklas, president of International
Schools Services, praised Ernie's "expertise, leadership,
and quiet diplomacy" in nominating him for the 1997 Harold
W. McGraw, Jr., Prize in Education. He has been, as former
U.S. Senator Sam Nunn noted, "a diplomat for schoolchildren
all over the world."
The road to all that, began in Watertown. And it is easy to
see that the characteristics that made Ernie a success on
the diamond aided his success around the globe. He was - and
is - a fierce competitor a leader. As Hall of Famer Dick Bradley
comments, "I submit that Ernie Mannino represents to
an admirable degree what we hope schools and athletics produce
for our nation. Certainly leadership is high on that list,
along with knowledge, fairness, compassion, the ability to
understand the shortcomings and strengths of others, an understanding
of the sacrifices needed to achieve success while always remaining
focused on the ultimate goal."
It is for that lifelong commitment to educational leadership
that the Hall honors Ernie Mannino this year. Senator Nunn
put it nicely: "It has been said that eagles do not flock.
You find them one at a time - soaring above the crowd. Such
an eagle is my friend Ernie Mannino."
Eagles don't flock; but they do roost. And the Hall is proud
that for all of his life, Ernie Mannino has roosted here,
that he has called Watertown his hometown.
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