|
Gary
Brackett
Nick Papas, a forty-year observer of the Watertown High sports
scene, summed up Gary Brackett this way: "He's a leader,
first and foremost; that was my immediate impression, and
it's only been reinforced over the years. An athlete with
a lot of ability and exceptional work habits - I've followed
his career with pleasure."
Gary was a product of Watertown's early Pop Warner program;
probably, as one of ten children, he had good use for his
football skills! He graduated from Watertown High in 1966
following a stellar year in which he was All-Scholastic in
football and the captain of the basketball team, plus president
of his senior class. He played offensive tackle and fullback
with relish - as he would note later, ` `I like to hit people:
' It was a trait that served him well, as he went to Holy
Cross on a full scholarship.
There he continued his involvement both in athletics and in
the neighborhood. Among other activities he was a member of
the Purple Key Society, and received the college's Presidential
Service Award for his outstanding contributions to campus
and community life. All in all, as the Worcester Telegra~n
noted, "a doer, not a talker."
He did on the football field as well. He made the varsity
team as a freshman and, by hisjunior year, had become one
of the top tackles in New England. Gary was so well thought
of that he was drafted by the Miami Dolphins despite a team-wide
outbreak of hepatitis at Holy Cross, which led to the cancellation
of eight games his senior season. Gary graduated with honors
in 1970 and was named to the Holy Cross "All-Decade"
football team.
Going on to Case Western Reserve University, Gary graduated
with a law degree in 1973. He came back to Watertown and worked
in the county court system before becoming an assistant to
the Watertown legal department in 1974. When the town made
the decision to hire a full-time counsel, Gary was the unanimous
choice and, in 1978, he became Watertown's first Town Attorney.
Ten years later he became City Solicitor for the city of Worcester,
the job he still holds.
While at Holy Cross, Gary had doubled as an outstanding rugby
player, and he continued to pursue this interest after college.
He captained a team of Eastern all-stars that played an international
tournament in South Africa; and he was later named to the
United States Rugby Team, the first national team to represent
the U.S. internationally since 1924. He played against the
Australian and French national teams and, in 1977, was on
the U.S. team that toured England and played the English national
team. He was also President of the Boston Rugby Club, whicli
won the 1976 New England championship.
Bob Norton, a Watertown High star in his own right, was the
line coach at Holy Cross during Gary's years there, and his
words from a 1970 interview prophetically echo Gary's career:
"Gary is not only an outstanding football player, but
also a fine man, a real leader. He has tremendous desire and
wants to excel - and most importantly, he's willing to do
the work: '
That turned out to be true no matter what path Gary pursued.
He's been a great athlete, and an outstanding contributor
to his community; he's been a good lawyer and a good guy,
all at the same time. Now that takes something special!
Chuck has stayed in the Boston area; he now works for the
Ryerson Steel and Aluminum Company. Those who saw him play
and those who knew him off the field remember him with equal
regard. "What can you say about Chuck Laurie? He's what
every father would want in a son," notes longtime WHS
faculty member Fred Parshley. And Chuck's old coach, John
Barbati, recalls him as "my quarterback and my leader,
one of the best throwers who ever played for me." But
most of all? Well, says Barbati, "Ijust hope he's the
same as I remember him: ' He is.
|
|