Date: Fri 23-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 23-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: TOMW
Quick Words:
Harold-DeGroat-Hall
Full Text:
Hall of Fame - Harold DeGroat
When he was a young man, his friends called him "Dee;" during his 22 years as
a resident of Newtown, the young and old alike referred to him as "Coach;" and
when Harold S. DeGroat left Newtown in 1966, and later passed away at the age
of 80 in 1973, he was simply called a legend.
Nobody before DeGroat, or ever after him, did more for recreation and
athletics for the young people of Newtown. And nobody was more loved and
respected.
DeGroat happened upon Newtown in 1944 when he was transferred in from
Springfield College - where he was the director of athletics - to head up the
physical education department for a new regional school for Southbury,
Middlebury, and Newtown. The school was never built, and DeGroat ended up at
Hawley High.
There, DeGroat became the town's first physical education instructor where he
made PE an every-day part of the curriculum. His motto was: "a strong mind
should be supplemented by a strong body," and he made sure the administration
knew that physical education was as important as science or math or social
studies. DeGroat ran the boys' PE and Ann Anderson, who also started at the
school in 1944, ran the girls' PE classes.
DeGroat coached the Newtown High School six-man football team, the basketball
team, and the baseball team for 15 years until Bob Sveda took over the NHS PE
department in 1959. At that time, DeGroat went down to run the elementary
school PE, but remained coach of the NHS baseball team.
Ken Smith, a 1960 graduate, played baseball for DeGroat's team.
"He was a very dedicated guy," Smith said, "He really loved the kids and
worked hard with them. Winning and losing wasn't a big thing with Coach
DeGroat. He was very big on learning the fundamentals. He'd tell you things
like how many square inches of the bat you needed to make contact with the
ball. Little things like that I remember most about him."
While DeGroat put a lot of time into coaching the school's top athletes on the
NHS sports teams, he enjoyed working with all of the students regardless of
their athletic ability. He stressed participation and self-improvement and
always said that he strived to accomplish three things: that the students
learn at least one more thing about the activity that they are involved in,
that they exercise their muscles, and that they have fun.
During the school year DeGroat would keep detailed charts of each students
scores in a variety of fitness tests. The results were frequently posted so
that they could follow their improvements, and the scores were included on the
report cards.
He also ran enormous Gym Shows, which included elementary school students and
quickly became very popular in town.
"Those gym shows were amazing," remembers Sveda. "Every kid would participate
whether they did square dancing, or skipped rope, or tumbled. It was like a
three-ring circus. The important thing was that everybody who wanted to be in
it was in it. Participation was his big thing."
Away from school DeGroat would organize ski trips and excursions to West Point
and the Yale Bowl. He became involved with the Cub Scouts and the Rotary Club,
began a ROMP recreation program, and then started an organization called the
Teen Canteen - a social club that would meet on Friday nights at the Town
Hall. He was also responsible for the town's first playgrounds.
For all of his innovation, DeGroat's physical education program was featured
in a 1957 issue of Sports Illustrated where it was rated as one of the finest
in the country.
An excerpt from the article read; "They [the children] idolize DeGroat . . .
and each youngster works hard to increase his proficiency . . . The childrens'
enthusiasm for DeGroat and his program is shared by the adults in Newtown . .
. He holds a place as a beloved and well-known member of the community enjoyed
by few men in his position. Everywhere he goes, he is greeted affectionately."
In 1963, DeGroat retired from teaching and became the town's first Parks and
Recreation Director. The NHS class of 63' dedicated its yearbook to Coach
DeGroat and in the inscription wrote; "We who are personally acquainted with
the character and the accomplishments of Coach DeGroat hardly know what to
emphasize in a career which has been so vital in its contributions to human
beings. . .Coach always maintained that the task of every educational leader
is to incorporate his teachings in such a way as to develop a whole person -
strong in body, sound in mind, and kind in heart."
"Harold was a super guy," Sveda said. "He helped me with PE a lot. I was new
and just out of college. I'll never forget, he use to tell me 'all the learnin
aint in books.' And he was right on that one. He just did so much for the
young people of Newtown. He was involved with just about everything that went
on. He did just about everything that you could imagine."
DeGroat's work did not go unnoticed. He was honored by the townspeople
continuously right up until the day he left town when Newtown First Selectman,
Carl Schutz, signed a proclamation officially declaring May 5, 1966 as Coach
Harold S. DeGroat Day.
Before he retired to North Carolina to live with his oldest son, Eric, DeGroat
was honored by 300 people at a dinner held in his honor. Newtown High School
also began a scholarship in his name, The Harold S. DeGroat Award, still given
today to the school's top male athlete.
Over the years there has been talk of naming a Newtown ballfield or even a
school after him.
"I don't think there was a kid who grew up in Newtown, during that era, who
wasn't influenced by Coach in some way, shape, or form," said former NHS
principal Earl Smith.
Harold S. DeGroat; a most-obvious choice to start off the Newtown Sports Hall
of Fame.