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Harvey Conklin Inducted: 2004 - Graduated:
Harvey Conklin’s name became synonymous with the Nanuet Black and Gold Club. He joined the organization in 1965,when his oldest son,Rich, transferred fromAlbertus Magnus to Nanuet. These were the club’s formative years, when Ed Berich, Matt Vaccaro, John Poletto, Ralph and Mary Smith, Harvey Mellion, Frank Bria and others championed support for athletic participation by Nanuet male and female students in all sports, not just football as was standard at the time. HarveyConklin was, in his sonRich’s words, a “community servant type of person. He had a wholesome interest in young people and in sports, as a healthy alternative to other activities kids might get involved in.” Of course, Harvey was a big booster of his sons, Rich and Ed, both of whom were excellent athletes in youth sports and in the Nanuet schools. But his connection with the community went deeper. Typical of that devotionwas his involvementwith theNanuet Babe Ruth League. Over a 10-year period, he served as a coach, manager, secretary, vice president and president. He also reached the highest order of achievement in the Knights of Columbus fraternal organization, becoming a fourth-degree member and a grand knight in the Joyce Kilmer Council. Harvey wasn’t a bad athlete, either. He was a minor league catcher in the New York Giants organization in the early 1940s, advancing to Double-A ball, butWorldWar II effectively ended his baseball career.He served in theU.S.Army during the war, stationed in the Presidio in San Francisco. Most longtimeNanuet folks remember Harvey as a person who repeatedly brought stability to the Black andGoldClub when it needed a guiding hand. He served as president for four separate tenures from 1968 thought 1980, each time spearheading the club’s return to financial health and a solid base of support. “He constantly answered the bell,” saysRichConklin. “His organizational savvy and ability to motivate people helped to right the ship and keep it afloat after several misvoyages. He reorganized, rejuvenated and restructured the Black and Gold Club, and helped it get back on its feet. And he never lost sight of the fact that it was always for the good of the kids.” Harvey remained with the Black and Gold Club until about 1983. Meanwhile, other stalwarts of the Nanuet community came forward to maintain the Black and Gold Club as a support pillar for Nanuet athletics, people like Herb Johns, Jake and Shari Jacobson and, later, Jerry Tuchband. Harvey never wavered in his support for Nanuet sports and young people. In 1989, when he was ailing with a heart condition, he got a boost of pride every fall Saturday when the Golden Knights football team – coached by his son Rich – would shut out another opponent en route to that magical undefeated, untied, unscored-upon season. "That team brought chills to him,"Rich remembers. "He couldn’t fathomit. When I would come home after games that year, he would ask me, ‘Did we do it?’ I’d say, ‘Yup,’ and he’d smile." Harvey instituted the concept of a point systemused to determine Black and Gold Club scholarship recipients, a system that remains (in modified form) in place today. For all of his efforts on behalf of the organization, the award was renamed the Harvey J. Conklin Scholarship in his memory soon after his death in 1991 at age 71.Hiswife, Lillian, died of cancer in 1977 at age 58. When Rich Conklin thinks about the impact his dad had on his life, he can’t help but call to mind a Shakespearean quote that Harvey would always leave him with. Harvey’s version was in simpler language, but the passage fromShakespeare’s Hamlet is rendered as follows: This above all—to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. Harvey’s legacy lives on in his children and their families. Rich, 55, and his wife, Donna, live in Nanuet and have four sons: Chris, 30; Sean, 27; Derek, 26; and Ryan, 22. Ed, 49, lives in Port Jervis with his wife, Caryl, and three children: James, 22; and twins Caitlyn and Justin, 18. |