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The Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation
Hall of Fame Archives |
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Henry Garvey |
2005 |
It's
official — Henry Garvey
will be the second
referee
to join ACBF Hall of Fame
By CHRIS LARICK
Staff Writer
Very few people knew the area sports scene as Henry Garvey did before
he retired.
That's because Garvey got to see the good athletes in three sports as
an official — football, basketball and track — for 40 years. Garvey,
now 85 and living in Naples, Fla., also officiated a fourth sport,
wrestling, for a while, though he admits he didn't like that job very
well and gave it up.
It is as a basketball official that Garvey will be inducted into the
Ashtabula County Basketball Foundation Hall of Fame on April 10 at
Conneaut's Human Resources Center. That seems appropriate since
basketball is the sport he enjoyed the most.
He is the second person to be inducted into the Hall of Fame as an
official. Ange Candela, inducted last year, was the first.
Garvey grew up in Andover and played basketball, baseball and track
there (the school was too small for a football team), before
graduating in 1939.
"We won a couple of county (basketball) tournaments when I was in high
school," Garvey said. "It was nothing exceptional, but we were at the
top most of the time."
Garvey began at Ohio State after graduating from Andover, studying
physical education. But World War II intervened.
"The war came along and grabbed me," Garvey said. "I went into the
Army in 1942 and got out in 1946."
The Army placed Garvey in the Coast Artillery, the 101st Anti-Aircraft
Battalion.
"We had 40-millimeter aircraft guns," he said. "I was the gun
sergeant, in charge of a gun crew of 15-16 men."
The first duty Garvey's unit drew was on Terminal Island in Los
Angeles Harbor, protecting the McDonald-Douglass Aircraft plant from a
potential attack from the Japanese.
From there his unit, Battery B, went overseas, to Port Busby,
Australia; French Haven, New Guinea and then to
the Philippine Islands, protecting United States airplanes from
attack.
"Manila's harbor was a very busy shipping port," Garvey said. "The
big supply depots had to have protection."
Despite the threat, Battery B never shot a plane down.
"We shot a boat up in Manila Harbor," Garvey said. "I have no idea if
it was Japanese. It was 2 o'clock in the morning and we were on red
alert. Everyone manned their battle stations, the searchlights came
on, we fired and blew the boat to smithereens. We had no idea who it
was. There was a lot of smuggling going on."
When Garvey got out of the Army in 1946, he went to work at Andover's
General Electric plant.
"I didn't like shift work," Garvey said. "I applied for my insurance
license got my license and went to work for Nationwide Insurance. I
worked there for 40 years."
When he was in his late 20s, he started officiating, in baseball at
first. He was supposed to play in a basketball game, but broke a
finger playing softball.
"They didn't have refs, so they asked me," Garvey said. "I said I
couldn't do it, but they said, ‘C'mon, try it.' I tried it, didn't
think it was so bad and kept doing it. The Conneaut athletic
director, Andy Garcia, told me to get a license."
Soon, Garvey had licenses to officiate basketball, football, baseball
and wrestling.
"But four sports was too many," he said. "I couldn't keep up. I
probably did baseball 43 or 44 years, basketball and football about 40
and wrestling only seven years. I didn't care for that. It was new
to northeastern Ohio and not many schools had it."
No one was about to get rich officiating high school sports. In
football, for example, Garvey was paid $7.50 per game when he started,
an amount that was gradually raised until it reached $35 by the time
he retired.
"When we worked a high school playoff game, they paid $50 a game plus
22 cents a mile," Garvey said of his biggest payday."
When Garvey began officiating, high school football games had just
three officials. By the time he retired, there were six or seven. In
basketball, the number was raised from two to three.
"It was better after (the change)," Garvey said.
While Garvey was officiating, the gymnasiums improved, too.
"I remember that Ashtabula played all of its games down at West Junior
High. The gym ceiling was only 25 feet high. Harbor didn't have a
gymnasium but a church they played in. Conneaut had Lakeside Gym,
with poles in the middle of the floor. If you hit a pole, you just
kept playing."
The whole style of basketball has changed, too, Garvey said.
"Basketball isn't basketball anymore," he said. "There's very little
strategy, except for a 7-4 guy dunking the ball. They all do it. It
used to be a technical foul to grab the rim. Now, it's OK to grab it
and swing on it."
Garvey also thinks modern-day rules allow for more handchecking and
moving screens.
"A lot of things about basketball are different," he said. "They used
to have a jump ball, now there's a possession arrow. That's probably
a good rule change. We had the 10-second and three-second rules, but
not the five-second rule. We went from gyms that were little
bandboxes to regulation 90-by-50-foot gyms. That's the reason they
made some of the changes.
"Coaching has changed, too. Coaches nowadays are recruiters, college
and high school coaches. They have summer camps. Down here (in
Naples, Fla.) they have the gym open year-round. You can go in
anytime. We used to have an outdoor court in back of Conneaut High
School."
Despite his age, Garvey still is involved in high school sports. In
Naples, Fla., where he now lives, he serves as a spotter in the press
box for the local football team, the Naples Golden Eagles, who won
their division's state championship in 2001.
Garvey and his wife, Louise (nee Babcock), celebrated their 60th
anniversary on Feb. 1. Henry and Louise have known each other since
they were second-graders in Andover. They got married in El Paso,
Texas, in 1945, when Henry was taking a course.
They have five children, Jeffrey, at 58 the oldest, is a retired
teacher living in Sandusky. Janice, 53, lives in Little Falls, Minn.,
where her husband works. Gloria, 52, and Mary Jane, 49, live in
Naples, about 150 miles south of Tampa on the gulf side of the state,
near Henry and Louise. Julie, the youngest, lives in Tampa, with her
husband, who works for a pharmaceutical company, Abbott Laboratories.
Mary Jane's husband is a teacher in Naples. Henry and Louise live in
Naples because they visited Gloria and her husband, David Flick
(formerly of North Kingsville) in Naples and fell in love with the
place.
"It's beautiful weather, 80 degrees today," Henry told a reporter on
the first day of spring in northeastern Ohio, when the temperature
failed to reach 40 degrees here.
Henry golfs free since he works as a ranger and starter two or three
days a week at Quail Village Golf Course near his home.
"They even pay me," he said. "I couldn't afford golf down here — $100
a round at the better golf courses."
Garvey knew many of the players in various sports who have since moved
on to bigger and better things. One he remembers well is Geneva High
School basketball player Gary Kreilach, who later became head boys
basketball coach at St. John High School.
"He was one of the finest players and gentlemen that I met in any
sport," Garvey said.
One of the officials on Garvey's football crew was Bob Smith, who
worked with Garvey for many years.
"I was the linesman for many years, then became the line judge," Smith
said. "Henry was the referee. He was our rules interpreter for all
those years.
"He was a good official who was highly respected, a good man to work
with. He knew the rules and could quote all the rules."
George Riser, head football coach at Riverside for many years, also
speaks highly of Garvey. Riser, now retired but a competitor in the
national masters track circuit, specifically requested Garvey to
officiate his football games over the years.
"He was just a top official," Riser said. "He was a gentleman. He
had it all and was a tip-top person on top of that. I'm real happy
he's going into (the Hall of Fame)." |