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Harry Agganis, The Golden Greek
Born Aristotle George Agganis in Lynn, Massachusetts, on
April 20, 1929, Harry Agganis was the seventh and last child of
George and Georgia Agganis, immigrants from the village of Loggonike
in Sparta, Greece. Harry's mother called him “Ari”
and over the years this nickname became Americanized to “Harry”
by his friends. Later on, Harry was affectionately known as “The
Golden Greek” in recognition of both his proud heritage and
outstanding athletic achievements.
By
1948, Harry was a football, basketball, and baseball phenomenon
at Lynn Classical High School; seventy-five colleges including
Notre
Dame tried to recruit the young sensation. Harry's mother-with
whom Harry was close-had been widowed in 1946, and Harry
wanted to attend a college that allowed him to stay near her
while he pursued
his academic and athletic goals. Boston University was a perfect
fit.
Agganis more than fulfilled his athletic promise while attending
Boston University, winning awards for his exploits on both the gridiron
and the diamond. After his sophomore year, Harry's collegiate
career was put on hold when he was activated for the Korean War;
he ultimately served fifteen months in the Marine Corps in 1950-51.
Never called to Korea, Harry spent his service time at Camp LeJuene
in North Carolina, where he played football and baseball and was
named Most Valuable Player of the National Baseball Congress tournament
in Wichita, Kansas.
Harry resumed his collegiate career in 1952 without missing a
beat-on the diamond, his batting average soared to .322 for
the season; on the gridiron, he played both offense and defense
and also handled
kicking duties. An All-American quarterback, he left BU holding
school records for passing yardage, touchdown passes, punting
average,
and interceptions.
Harry had long dreamed of becoming a professional athlete; it was
simply a matter of choosing which sport to play. As a junior,
he
turned down a lucrative offer to play football as the number one
draft choice of the Cleveland Browns, opting instead to play
baseball
for the Boston Red Sox as the team's starting first baseman.
A left-handed batter, Harry quickly became Boston's best hitter,
achieving an impressive .313 batting average. One memorable Sunday
in June 1954, he hit a home run at Fenway Park, and then raced up
Commonwealth Avenue to receive his Boston University degree.
Sadly, a vibrant young life and a promising future were cut tragically
short on June 27, 1955, when Harry Agganis died of a massive pulmonary
embolism at the age of twenty-six. His legend endures nearly fifty
years later, particularly at Boston University and in Boston's
thriving Greek-American community. The athletic stadium at Camp
LeJeune in North Carolina, a public square in his hometown of Lynn,
a street on BU's Charles River Campus, and a BU scholarship
are all named in his honor. "The Golden Greek" is also
memorialized at the Sports Museum of New England at Boston's
Fleet Center. Boston University is proud of the new Agganis Arena
in the Student Village, the most recent tribute to this extraordinary
individual who left us far too soon.
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