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Richard
Bartley
There have been only two dynasties, in the true sense of that
word, in the last century of athletics at Watertown High.
We are in the midst of one, in field hockey, punctuated by
Coach Eileen Donahue's seventh state championship last fall.
The other just as impressive, came about on the track, in
the field, and across country in the late 1940s and 1950s:
For a decade and a half, under the tutelage of Arthur Perkins
and Bob Gleason, the Watertown High harriers were practically
unbeatable- indoor outdoor, long distance or short. The 1958
team has already been inducted; but those squads were laden
with too many state titlists and record holders to even start
to list here.
However one such, deserving of immediate recognition, is middle-distance
and relay star Richard Bartley. Dick IeftWatertown High having
been part of teams that won three state cross-country titles,
three state outdoor titles, and three state indoor titles
(including the aforementioned 1958 team's championship, Watertown's
eighth overall, which set a new record for points scored -
over three times the normal winning total, with six first
and three second placements out of ten events). He was a member
of the top-ranked relay team in the nation, which also won
three state titles.
Dick's track experience began when he was discovered by Coach
Gleason after running, as a ninth grader in the Moxley Road
Race. He was eager to join Gleason's team. "Of all the
people who have influenced me in my life," he noted recently
"my parents and Bob Gleason were the most inflaential."
Superintendent of Schools Francis Kelly was a great booster
and so was WHS principal Tom Blake; both had run for Watertown
in their younger days. But it was Gleason who set the tone.
He knew how to handle personnel and drove them to perform
at their peak; he formed them into a team. As state phys-ed
czar Ralph Colson noted with regard to the 1958 champs, "I've
been close to this...since the first state meet forty years
ago....and in all this time, I've never seen a team with such
terrific balance."
Still, even the greatest coach needs some talent to work with.
And with that the WHS harriers were amply stocked, given the
presence of Jim Gleeson, Ron Young, Mike McLaughlin, and Hall
of Famers Jay Luck and Nick DeNitto. "You knew there'd
be someone who'd perform. That gave us confidence," Dick
recalled. But it was Dick himself who frequently played that
role. As a sophomore, he ran the 800, 440, and relays, and
ran on Watertown's Penn Relay squad. As a junior, he competed
in the 600 and 1000 yard runs, winning all his league contests
and winning a silver medal in the 600 at the state meet. As
a senior, he turned that silver to gold, and added a triumphant
leg on the relay squad. That team went to Madison Square Garden
for the national championships and finished an astounding
fourth - the top performance by a public school in the country.
Dick went on to Brandeis and captained the Judges' cross-country
squad. He also gained an interest in coaching and officiating.
Soon after beginning his teaching career in mathematics in
the Watertown school system, Dick coached the track team at
the junior high level. The team had several undefeated seasons
in the Middlesex League, and Dick moved on to assume the head
coaching slot in Belmont. In six years there, his squads won
a number of individual championships and two state relay titles.
Dick's business career has been very successful; but he has
also devoted a good deal of his time to working for the sport
of track and field. After leaving Belmont High, Dick became
commissioner of track officials for the Middlesex League,
a position he still holds. Indeed, over the past few years
Dick has become a star official on the broadest of national
and international stages. He's officiated some of the most
prestigious meets in the country, from the Boston Marathon
to the NCAA National Championships to the USATrack & Field
Championships to the 1996 Olympic games in Atlanta. He served
as president of the MassachusettsTrack & Field Officials
organization and as clerk of the two latest Olympic trials;
and he will officiate the Goodwill Games and the National
Masters Meet later this summer.
All in all, then, Dick has striven to give back to the sport
what it has given him, and more besides. The Hall is proud,
in turn, to give back the recognition he so richly deserves.
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