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William
Boyce
In the annals of Watertown High sports, Billy Boyce is an
icon, his name often discussed in hushed tones approaching
awe. Fiercely competitive and loaded with God-given talent,
Boyce dominated the field of play in three sports during his
high school years. Those who saw him play even in pick-up
games down at Victory Field still marvel today at his speed,
his strength, his instincts.
Bill graduated from Watertown High in 1941, a member of various
All-Scholastic teams including that named by the Boston Post.
He went on to Boston College, where he joined WHS teammate
Vic Palladino on Frank Leahy's Eagles. There he was the first
freshman in BC history to start at quarterback, throwing twelve
touchdown passes en route to a very successful season as the
team went all the way to the Orange Bowl against Alabama in
1943.
As World War II intensified, Billjoined the Army and served
for the duration of the war While inducted he played in the
Army's baseball league and was selected for the All-Army Team,
slugging .439 for the cause.
This served him well: upon leaving the Army in 1946, he signed
with the Red Sox, and played in the Sox or ganization for
some years at their affiliates from Louisville to Lynn. In
the late 1940s, with the Scranton Red Sox in the thick of
the AAA pennant race, Boyce's teammate Jimmy Piersall was
called up to the parent club. Boyce's friend Ernie Mannino
- a 1940 WHS grad who later became principal of the Coolidge
School and now serves as the L'.S. State Department's Director
of the Office of Overseas Schools - remembers the story:
"The Red Sox had Ted Williams and Dom DiMaggio in their
outfield back then, but needed another player Billy was tearing
up the league down in Scranton; he having a terrific year
and his team was on the verge of the championship. But when
Boston called, the Scranton manager didn't want to let Billy
go, he was desperate to win the pennant and didn't think he
could do it without Billy. Instead, he sent up Piersall. But
in my opinion and his manager's! - Billy was the better player."
Bill went on to play football with the Patterson Panthers
of the American Professional League during the 1950s, but
was forced to retire from professional sports due to a recurring
heart condition. Luckily he and his wife (the former Jeanette
Scanlon) have seven children; we doubt he had much trouble
filling the time!
Mal Whitney, a fixture of Watertown politics and 1942 WHS
graduate, recalls Bill as "just so friendly and jovial
and generous - an all-around nice guy."
And it is hard not to hearken back to the 1930s, with Billy
Boyce on Victory Field, the competitive fires burning bright
whether the game meant everything or nothing, throwing a football
on the run as if he were a shortstop pegging a runner at first.
Mannino reprises: "His athletic gifts were overwhelming."
The Hall can only agree.
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