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Tyrone Keys Brings His Jackson, Mississippi 6th Grade Teacher To Tampa

Teacher and Hall of Fame Student 40-Year Reunion Continues in Tampa. Tyrone Keys and Mrs. Mary Hagan will be at the HOPE CENTER Saturday, October 9th on 22nd Street from 9:00AM to NOON.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 
Mrs. Mary Hagan - Tyrone's Keys teacher pictured in the 1970's
Mrs. Mary Hagan - Tyrone's Keys teacher pictured in the 1970's
PRLog (Press Release) - Oct 09, 2009 -
On Friday, October 9th, Tyrone Keys, All Sports Community Service, Inc. Founder and Director, is bringing his 6th grade grammar school teacher, Mrs. Hagan to his adopted home ground of Tampa, Florida.  

It was his grammar school teacher who helped inspire former NFL player Tyrone Keys and plant the seeds that inspired him not only on the field, but off the field. Keys went on to become a Super Bowl champion with The Chicago Bears and was recently inducted into the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame.

Mr. Keys will begin his celebration with Mrs. Hagan by taking her to the office of All Sports Community Service and give her a tour of what her inspiration actually inspired. They will then visit the HOPE Center in Ybor City.

Tyrone Keys never forgot his sixth-grade teacher. Mary Hagan never drifted far from Keys' thoughts, even after he played for the Bucs and Chargers, retired from the league in 1988 and launched a successful nonprofit in Tampa.

"She just radiated love and compassion," Keys said.

Keys and his fellow students at Dawson Elementary School in Jackson, Miss., needed love and compassion in the worst way. It was 1970, the first year Jackson's public schools integrated, and Keys said the racial strife surrounding the change engulfed the children in negativity and chaos.   Hagan stepped into the fray and became the first white teacher at predominantly black Dawson.   "She didn't have all the supplies and tools, but she had a gift for inspiring the students," Keys says.

"I think the bottom line was we developed a sense of trust with one another," said Hagan, 67. "I was new to them. They were new to me. But I told them at the very beginning we were going to get along fine. "You've got to enjoy your students. You've got to get the job done, but you've got to make that connection."

Hagan regaled them with personal stories of how she grew up next to Beverly Hillbillies star Donna Douglas in Louisiana. She boasted about her LSU Tigers and the greatness that is SEC football. Keys specifically recalled how Hagan had him write a paper about the NFL draft and how he could achieve his dreams of playing in the NFL. "She was the first white person I had ever spoke to," Keys, 48, said. The turmoil, however, always loomed in Hagan's life. She drew criticism from integration opponents. Attendants refused to pump her gas, and management in her apartment complex threatened her.

"They were harassing me something horrible," she said. "It was to the point that I was afraid." The worst came around Thanksgiving. Hagan's husband had moved his bride from Baton Rouge, La., to Jackson for a job, but the employer told him if his wife didn't stop teaching at Dawson, he would lose his  job.   She refused to give up on the kids.   When she said she was leaving, the students screamed and cried and wailed. They understood the pressures Hagan faced but desperately wanted her to stay.

Hagan, too, cried all the way back to Louisiana. To soften the blow, she left the kids with a poem.

Love is knowing your students love you.
Love is being honest with one another.
Love is not being afraid.
Love is looking forward to each new day.
Love is making your husband happy.
Love is going where you husband goes.
Love is hating to say goodbye.
Love is wanting to cry but know you shouldn't.
Love is when a student writes to you.
Love is when he writes again when he's older.
Love is when your students come to visit you when you move.
Love is remembering our good times together when I'm gone.
Love is loving a new teacher next Monday.
I love you,
Mrs. Hagan

Keys took the poem to heart again, wanting to write as he got older, but he couldn't find an address for Hagan. In college, Mississippi State played at LSU twice. Keys woke up early and thumbed through the Baton Rouge telephone book hoping to find her name. No luck.  Years later he saved a pair of Super Bowl tickets for her but couldn't find her. This year, Keys hired an attorney to help find Hagan. They connected with the help of the Louisiana Department of Education. Since then, they've talked at
least six times, including an initial conversation that lasted 45 minutes.

Keys told her about his career and doing the Super Bowl Shuffle with the '85 Bears. He told her about starting All Sports Community Service, a nonprofit that has helped more than 1,000 high school kids reach college. He told her she was with him for every step.  "I shared with her how she inspired us coming into our school at the time period in our lives," Keys said. "The courage she had and the compassion she had for us as young people, I never forgot it."

Hagan, who became a principal, said Keys' call out of the blue is a defining moment in her career. She has never forgotten her "special class" at Dawson, and she kept a folder with mementos from that time, including the class roll.  "That's what makes the teaching profession what it is. … The rewards you get," Hagan said. "The rewards may not come this year or next year; maybe 20 years down the road a reward may come. "This is a testament to what I've been preaching all these years." Hagan's greatest reward continues this weekend. She will be Keys' special guest when he's inducted into the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame today in Jackson. "Society has changed," Hagan said. "It's come around. Thank goodness."  "Who would ever believe that this defining moment would come my way thirty-nine (39) years later! Your thoughts and words of wisdom have also inspired my family, my colleagues, and the State Department of Education," Mrs. Hagan wrote to Keys.

Keys is a former NFL player for the Chicago Bears, Tampa Bay Buccaneers and San Diego Chargers. His Bears team won Super Bowl XX in January 1986.   In 2003, People Magazine published an article featuring Keys and All Sports Community Service in one of its issues. Keys has been recognized twice by the USA Freedom Corp. and the White House.

Photo:
http://www.prlog.org/10370194/1

# # #

All Sports Community Service (ASCS) is a Tampa-based 501(3)c organization supported by various Tampa Bay Florida charities that provides opportunities for student/athletes to attain personal enrichment through higher education Since 1993, ASCS has helped hundreds of students secure more than $20 million in support for their college educations. All Sports Community Service college graduates come full circle and dedicate themselves to
helping others achieve college educations.

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Contact Email:
***@allsportscommunity.org
Source:78 Degrees
Phone:813-966-1008
Fax:813-348-3999
Zip:33614
City/Town:Tampa
State/Province:Florida
Country:United States
Industry:Sports, Charity, Education
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Last Updated:Oct 09, 2009
Shortcut:http://prlog.org/10370194
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