Tag Archives: John Darnton

Friday Flashback #389

Alert reader, avid sports fan — and 1971 Staples High School graduate Fred Cantor — contributes today’s Friday Flashback:

This month marks the 70th anniversary of the conclusion of one of the most successful seasons in Westport scholastic basketball history.

But that squad did not play at Staples. It was the Bedford Junior High School hoops team (at a time when junior highs fielded formal varsity squads).

The Bedford Junior High School basketball team.

The Bedford Bears went undefeated in 9 games against junior high competition from New Canaan, Darien, Wilton, Weston and Bridgeport. Their closest game: a 10-point win over Saxe JHS of New Canaan, whose best player, Wilky Gilmore, went on to become an area sports legend. He led New Canaan High to consecutive state titles, then starred at Colorado on a Big 8 championship squad.

Bedford’s leading scorer in that game against Saxe was Jack Mitchell, who scored as many points as Gilmore. Mitchell was Bedford’s leading scorer that season. He went on to star as Wesleyan University’s football quarterback, then worked at his parents’ clothing store, Ed Mitchell — and later become CEO and now chairman of Mitchells Stores.

His former Bedford teammate Bob Darnton went on to become a Rhodes Scholar, and an award-winning historian, professor, and director of the Harvard University Library.

He recalls: “When I played on the Bedford Elementary School basketball team against Greens Farms, we said to ourselves, ‘This guy Mitchell is unstoppable,’ or words to that effect. He had a formidable reputation.”

(Yes, Westport elementary schools participated in interscholastic basketball competition as well back then.)

Bedford Junior High athletes, off the court.

Darnton also remembers another teammate, underscoring a different time in Westport: “I always had a fondness for Red Izzo, a fast guard. Back then, I sometimes visited him in his home, where his mother spoke Italian. I learned the language as a grad student, remembering when I first heard the Calabrian variety around spaghetti dishes in my home town. We swore in Italian in elementary school.”

The 6 players who were the mainstays of the team (the “big 6,” according to a local newspaper account) were Mitchell, Darnton, Izzo, Bruce Cummings, John Aulenti and Kenny Linn.

Thanks to the margins of victory, the reserves saw plenty of action during the season.

Bedford’s superb play drew this quote in a local newspaper: “Nick Zeoli, well-known athlete, coach and official, rates the 1954 Bedford Bears as the finest junior high basketball team — the best he has ever seen in action.” Zeoli went on to serve many years as Wilton High School’s athletic director.

Perhaps the Bedford Bears’ greatest success was splitting 2 games against the Staples sophomore squad. They lost once in overtime and won the other, in front of a capacity crowd at a fundraising event for the Wachob Memorial Scholarship.

Cheering on the teams, at the Wachob Memorial Tournament.

The Bedford coach went on to make his mark at Staples, as a beloved history teacher. But in 1954 he taught math at Bedford. While undoubtedly having a terrific influence on the Bedford varsity players that season, his greatest impact might have been on a non-player connected to the team.

That impact was described in a memoir by Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times writer John Darnton — Bob’s brother.

Their father had died as a war correspondent at the beginning of World War II. That tragic event left a gaping hole in their childhood.

John wrote: “It mitigated some of my wild behavior that I was getting good marks at school. I was moved up to a more advanced math class, and the teacher there took an interest in me.

“He was also the coach of varsity basketball….The teacher, Gordon Hall, appointed me as official scorer, presumably to give me a position to buck up my self-esteem. I enjoyed traveling around with the team….

“Before long, the school year ended. I did not want to leave and found it painful to say goodbye to my friends…

“On the next-to-last day, the math teacher offered me a ride home.  As we arrived at the house where I was staying, he pulled the car to the shoulder…

“He reached over and patted me on the back, then grasped my hand to shake it and held on to it for what seemed like a long while. Then, his voice breaking, he wished me good luck.

“Two days later, I left Westport.”

(Friday Flashback is a regular feature on “06880.” If you enjoy it — or any other part of the blog — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

John Darnton Describes “Almost A Family”

John Darnton won a Pulitzer Prize.

During a 40-year New York Times career he covered African liberation movements and Eastern Europe during the Cold War.  He served as deputy foreign editor, metropolitan editor and cultural news editor.

He’s published 5 novels, taught at the SUNY-New Paltz, and now curates journalism’s George Polk Awards.

Yet after traveling the world, Darnton’s devotion to Westport is clear.  He lived here during his formative years — ages 4 to 14 — and this town, he says, was “critical to my upbringing.”

It’s not just idle chatter.  In his new memoir, Almost a Family, the veteran journalist devotes several chapters to Westport.

This Sunday (April 10, 2 p.m.) Darnton focuses on that long-ago yet still-vivid time, in a talk at the Westport Library.

John Darnton (Photo/Librado Romero)

He has not been a stranger.  Darnton returns often, usually visiting his friends Mike and Roz Koskoff.  He met them when he covered the Black Panther trials in New Haven.  (Koskoff was a defense lawyer.)

Darnton knows Westport has changed.  But — with a reporter’s keen eye, sharp memory and vivid words — he recalls his younger days with clarity and grace.

He was 11 months old when his  father — Times correspondent Barney Darnton — was killed in World War II.  His ship was bombed by friendly fire off the coast of New Guinea.

Darnton’s parents had met in Westport.  Both were married to other people.  The 2 couples rented a cottage near Compo Beach, and Darnton’s mother and father fell in love.  Both couples divorced — a rarity in those days.   The lovers then married.

They bought a house on Godfrey Road, off Bulkeley Avenue.  After his father’s death Darnton’s mother moved to Washington, D.C., then Washington Square in New York.  She too was a Times reporter — and the paper’s 1st “women’s editor.”

She and her late husband had wanted to raise Darnton and his older brother in “bucolic surroundings,” so when Darnton was 4 they moved back to Westport.   She bought a 1785 house on Edge Hill Lane, off Wilton Road.

Five years later the Darnton’s moved to Roseville Road, at the Whitney Street intersection.

“I lost myself in the woods every day after school,” he recalls.  “Kids had total freedom.  We constructed lean-tos, and played with dogs.  We wandered for hours on end.”  More than anything, he says, “those woods made me love Westport.”

Next came a rented apartment on Saxon Lane, off Bridge Street.  By then his mother had set up her own business:  the Women’s National News Service.  It started well, then hit a rough patch.  “She poured money into it, so we moved to smaller and smaller houses,” Darnton says.  “We were downwardly mobile.”

His mother then returned to Washington for work.  Darnton and his brother stayed, to finish out the school year at Bedford Junior High.  They moved in with a friend of their mother’s, on the top floor of a rundown house on Riverside Avenue.

Years later, Darnton had dinner at Viva Zapata’s.  When he went upstairs to use the bathroom, he realized that was the last house he lived in here.

But wherever he lived, he felt a sense of security.  “Westport was not a suburban town,” he explains.  “It was much closer in spirit to New England than New York City.”

He calls the Westport of the late 1940s and early ’50s “a self-sustaining village.”  There were onion farms, unheated bungalows and “polluting factories.”  No one locked doors; some even kept the keys in their car ignitions.

His mother — often the only woman — waited for the train with “a few dozen” commuters.  The station’s screen door slammed in the summer; in winter the radiator clanged.

There were no shopping centers.  Small local groceries delivered food — and deliverymen prided themselves on their ability to get through, even in blizzards.

“Westport was a very open place,” Darnton says.  “There was not the suburban anomie that Cheever wrote about.  Lucy and Ricky (Ricardo) hadn’t moved here yet.  It was long before the Man in the Gray Flannel Suit, and the Stepford Wives.”

The Fine Arts Theater was the center of Darnton and his friends’ lives.  They enjoyed Saturday matinees — with cartoons and newsreels — for 25 cents.  Next door, a novelty store sold whoopee cushions and fake wounded thumbs.

He remembers the drug store where Tiffany is now, with a real soda fountain; Bill’s Smoke Shop, a “shack” with penny candy; Klein’s for toys, and Western Auto (now 5 Guys), a “very exciting store” for boys.

The two “poles” of the town were the YMCA — with a pool table in the basement, where “slightly shady kids” smoked — and, across Main Street, the library.  Darnton spent hours there, reading.

“All in all,” he says, “this was a great place to live.”  There was one problem:  as a single parent working in New York, his mother was an anomaly.

“She saw pairs of people filing into PTA meetings like Noah’s Ark,” he says.  Some wives were suspicious of her.  Some men made passes.

To top it off, he adds, “she took to the bottle.”  When she moved to Washington she joined AA, and stopped drinking.

Though he calls Westport “Eden” for himself and his brother, Darnton notes that it was also “a difficult time.”  He reiterates that Westport — with its woods, friends and freedom — “saved” him.

“I biked and hitchhiked all over town,” he says. “Every child needs freedom like that.

“This small town shaped my life.  I felt rooted.  I knew the store owners, and drew a sense of identity from my surroundings.  It gave me a great identity.”

Whenever he returns to Westport, Darnton drives down his old streets —  Edge Hill, Roseville, Bridge Street.

“Your past is who you were, and who you are,” he concludes.  “My past in Westport really helped sculpt me.”

(Click here for the Times review of “Almost a Family.”)