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A Proud Moment Linking Three Generations of the º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ Community

By Tom Porter
College employee Marko Melendy and his Polar Bear nephew, Jackson, recently unearthed a baseball signed some eighty six-years ago by star athlete , father of Marko and grandfather of Jackson, himself a varsity baseball player.
image of oakley melendy '39 on buck panel, next to Jackson Melendy '26 and Marko Melendy
Jackson Melendy '26 and his uncle Marko Melendy next to an image of Oakley Melendy '39 on a display panel in the Buck Center

“My pitching coach texted me and said, ‘Are you related to Oak Melendy?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, he was my grandfather.’  He said, ‘Because we found a ball lying around with his name on it.’” Jackson Melendy ’26 says he never really knew Oakley Melendy, Class of 1939, “So it’s kind of cool to have the ball he played with.” Oakley, known as Oak, was a shortstop and outfielder who aided º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ to a state crown and went on to captain the team.

1938 baseball signed by Oak Melendy, Andrew Haldane and others

The ball was signed by several members of º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ’s 1938 team, and a number of signatures are clearly visible on the faded leather item, including that of Melendy’s classmate and fellow Maine Sports Hall of Famer Nels Cory ’39, another of the College’s sporting legends who went on to be an esteemed coach. Also recognizable is the autograph of Andrew Haldane ’41, who was killed in action during the World War II and in whose name the College awards an annual leadership cup.

As a football player, Oak featured in three consecutive state championships, playing three different positions and marking the best four-year record for º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ in the twentieth century (20-5-3). Despite not having played hockey prior to coming to º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ, he skated with the Polar Bears to a pair of state championships and an All-New England honor in 1939.

oakley melendy '39 playing football and hockey
Oakley Melendy '39 was inducted into the Maine Sports Hall of Fame in 1984

Oak pretty much excelled at every sport he did, says Marko Melendy, who is º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ’s animal welfare and facilities manager. “People remember my dad as a gifted year-round athlete because he started on the baseball, basketball, hockey, football, and track teams.” During a baseball match, it was not unknown for his father to change kit between innings and run over to Whittier Field to go and throw javelin—another sport in which he was a state champion—before rejoining the ball game at the Pickard Field diamond. Oak was also a champion billiards player, adds Marko, and could sometimes be found in the pool halls of Lewiston and Auburn hustling some extra dollars on the side to help him through school.

As well as being an athlete, Oak was also class president and a chemistry major who went on to study medicine at Columbia University, serve as an army doctor during the war, and enjoy a long career as a surgeon.