FOOTBALL'S “SECRET WEAPON"
FINDS NEW CALLING
FINDS NEW CALLING
One Medium’s Mysterious Mishap Leads to Life in the Limelight
From The
New New Jersey News, September 12, 1928
They were an unbeatable team, often
scoring a dozen touchdowns before their opponents could make it past the
20-yard line. By 1917 Warren County had
become a football mecca, with fans arriving by train from all over the Eastern
Seaboard to see the Badgers play. But
how did this ordinary varsity team of ordinary farm boys rise to be the talk of
the nation?
Suspicions abounded that some
tomfoolery lay underfoot: that perhaps a wealthy backer had, out of regional
pride, bribed all competitors to wither before the mighty Badgers. Detectives were called upon to investigate
and the verdict was that the Badgers’ impeccable streak was won fair and
square. Suspicion turned to superstition
when sources revealed that the Badgers players would perform certain “rites and
rituals” before each and every game. Was
Beattystown Boys School a warren of occultist activity? And if so, who was their ringleader?
The answer lay in an extraordinary
boy: a straight-A student rumored to possess the power to predict the future.
“I knew Monty Medium as a pupil,” says
superintendent Schöenhorn who has been with the district for 33 tears. “He wasn’t particularly hard-working in
either academics or athletics, it’s just that he always knew what was about to
happen.”
Montrose “Monty” Medium arrived in
New Jersey an orphan and survivor of the Titanic disaster of 1912. He’d been a cabin boy while his parents
worked in the commissary before their tragic death by drowning when that ship
ran up against an iceberg. A prominent
New York family took him in and enrolled him in boarding school near their
summer home. Not wanting to dwell on his
tragic past, Monty Medium looked toward the future, so much so that he could
even predict it.
“We ran tests on the boy,” recounts
Dr. Sheldon Synapstein of Princeton University.
“Psychologically the trauma of losing his parents blocked his
memory. Physiologically, it may be that
he suffered a concussion when boarding the lifeboat, resulting in a
neurological condition that science has yet to understand.”
Whatever the cause, the benefits
outweighed the losses, as right before things happened, the young Medium knew
what would occur—from presents opened at Christmastime, to answers to classroom
quizzes, to football plays.
The football held by Monty Medium when he was "ambushed" on the field in 1917. It is rumored that he stills carries it with him on his travels. |
“He was never athletically inclined,”
says Schöenhorn, “he was just watching a school game one day and named every
play 20 seconds before it happened, so the coach recruited him.”
But even with a winning team in its
midst, not all stayed rosy in Warren County.
Beginning with the rumored occult activity around the Beattystown Badgers,
the team’s mystique attracted some unsavory doings. With the crowds of football fans came the
gambling syndicate. And crime.
“There were all these people coming
through here we didn’t know,” says Gela Macungie whose family has lived around
the Lehigh Valley for as long as she can remember. “Bad people who were always making noise,
leaving trash and causing trouble.”
That trouble apparently bore down
upon young Montrose. For even though he
could, by all accounts, predict the future, he found himself the target of an opposing
team’s clever play.
“They ambushed him,” remembers
Schöenhorn. “They’d studied the Badgers’
strategy, sliced it every possible way and came up with an offensive tackle he
couldn’t avoid.”
Some suspect foul play on the part of
the crime bosses’ influence over the game, others speculate the Monty Medium
had grown weary and wary of the attention he had garnered and so threw the
game. But the price he paid was dear: a
second brain injury, inflicted on the football field, put the boy into a
vegetative state for 99 days. When he
recovered, he was not quite the same.
End of Part One. Click here to read Part Two.
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