LCC Grounds

LCC Grounds

Longwood Cricket Club Grounds

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Friday, May 11, 2012

Charles


Two items on assistant superintendent Charlie Bartlett.

*Who is with him in the picture taken in the crew room today?
*Below is Charlie's bio/acceptance speech from last Sunday when his longevity and hard work were recognized at the LCC opening party.

Although he may now seem the picture of stability, Charlie Bartlett arrived at Longwood 31 years ago after a number of other aborted career attempts. He had worked, by the age of 23, at a resort in Santa Fe, as a maid in a motel, in a factory in Allston, as an intern at a tree forestry in South Africa, insulating houses, as a carpenter’s assistant in New Orleans, among others. When he responded to former head Groundskeeper Mike Humphrey’s ad in the Boston Globe in 1981, he didn’t realize he’d found his career, but he did know he enjoyed the colorful cast of characters he’d landed in.


“We had a lot of different types of people in those days: younger kids, non-English speakers, the occasional ex-convicts,” Charlie says. “Humphrey and I used to love those guys. The more eccentric the better and we have the pictures to prove it.”
Charlie has changed a lot in 31 years and so has Longwood and the entire grass court and country club industry. Technology and turf science have advanced and become more complex and so are more interesting and challenging. This has coincided with Charlie’s growth professionally and personally and is one of the main reasons he’s still here. It’s been nice to see the grass become healthier and thicker even as his hair has gone in the opposite direction.

The tournament was also one of Charlie’s favorite parts of the job. It epitomized everything he liked about Longwood – the festive communal atmosphere while keeping the courts in unparalleled condition for the second largest tournament in the US, and supervising a crew of over 20 for 18 hours a day. Of those tournament days, Charlie says “those matches could go on way past midnight and the crowd could get pretty rowdy. One year the East Stands would start chanting my name every time I stepped onto Center Court to sweep the lines, trying to get me to do a little dance, which I would gladly oblige.”

Nowadays things are a lot tamer for Charlie and the Club and the most interesting and rewarding part of the job for him is trying to keep the grass alive in July and August, and he’s grateful to work outdoors in such a beautiful place where people just come to relax and have a nice time.





7 comments:

Grounds Crew said...

Best blog article yet

John G. said...

Charlie left out the fact that the grounds crew used to harvest all of the cans and bottles during the tournament and got to keep the value of the deposits - not too shabby after a week of liquid consumption.
I recall a bit of a tempest in a teapot when the grounds crew was pitted against the ball kids who felt that they should get an opportunity to cash in some of the cans. The grounds crew won in a split decision in 12 rounds after Bobby Price landed a haymaker on a 14 year old.
Only joking about the punch, but the rest is true.
I saw Charlie returning the sport coat and tie to Mr. Tux on Monday.

John G. said...

I'm guessing that the person next to Charlie is a former grounds crew member who just got out on parole.

Et tu Charlie?

Tim Burns said...

Chris Erickson, crew member in 1999, is pictured with Charlie.

Charlie is the best! I would like more stories on Chipy, duct tape, Asic shoes, President Kennedy, Cheers, and the insulation in his apartment.

Neil said...

Today's Spock Quote of the Day is "Live long and prosper," that's not a very deep cut.

Rat said...

Congratulations Charlie! Good to know some things never change there. I just hope Lovey gets equal time at the Closing Party

Unknown said...

Charlie, was,and will always be Charlie, a man who stays true to himself, a good dude, who helped ground s crew members who sought it, congratulations to a good man!