Lynn Tech Alumni Association

Lynn Tech Alumni Association Welcome to the Lynn Vocational Technical Alumni Association page

Board of Directors:

President - Kelly Papageorgiou

Vice President - Jim Ward

Treasurer - Rick Starbard

Secretary - Dave Bryson

Only two months away. Have a great time up at Gannon while supporting a great cause. Teams are starting to fill up. 🏌‍♀️...
05/22/2026

Only two months away. Have a great time up at Gannon while supporting a great cause. Teams are starting to fill up. 🏌‍♀️⛳️🏌🏽

Rick was always a proud Lynn Tech Alum and a great Lynner who was always there to support the community. Rick will be mi...
04/25/2026

Rick was always a proud Lynn Tech Alum and a great Lynner who was always there to support the community. Rick will be missed.

Lifelong Lynn resident Rick Ford died April 17 at 69.
April 24, 2026 by Joey Barrett

Whether it was pitching lights out for a state championship baseball team or pitching in around the community, that’s just what Rick Ford did.

Ford, who died April 17 at 69, was a lifelong Lynn resident. His smile and laugh were constants — contagious even. It was that way through different chapters of his life, new jobs and hobbies, as well as 44 years of marriage with loving wife, Tina.

“Nobody didn’t like him. He loved his family, kids, and wife. He will be missed,” said Tim Phelan, a friend who served on the City Council with Ford for more than a decade. “He wasn’t really a politician; he was a man of the people.”

Ford was like that at Lynn Tech (’75), where he led the baseball team as a star pitcher — all the way to the 1973 Div. 2 state championship.

“His pitching was incredible. After high school, colleges were after him and everything, then the pros,” said Bart Conlon, Ford’s high school baseball coach and then a teacher at Tech. “A great kid, too, at practice. He did everything you wanted.”

State tournaments consisted of six nine-inning games while Ford played. During the 1973 run, Ford, a sophomore, tossed Games 2, 4, and 6, allowing just one run across 27 innings. Tech defeated Quabbin Regional 1-0 to capture the title.

“6-0, 4-1, and 1-0 final scores. He gave up a run. Imagine that?” Conlon said. “There was a reporter from The Boston Globe covering a game. Three times during the game, he came over and said, ‘This kid can’t be a sophomore.’”

Jim Cowdell, another lifelong Lynner and friend of Ford’s, called him “one of the best athletes Lynn has ever produced.

“I’ve known him most of my life — just a solid person, all about his family, and a loyal friend. His laugh was contagious,” Cowdell said. “A huge loss for the City.”

Off the diamond — and through decades that followed — Ford remained a star teammate.

“On the 50th anniversary, we had a big party and the whole team was there. It was great,” Conlon said. “All over the years, he kept in touch with the kids on the team. Those guys were always getting together here and there. That was good.”

The left-hander was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers and Los Angeles Dodgers. He also coached pop warner football and Little League baseball, worked for the Massachusetts Gaming Commission, and served as Lynn’s Ward 7 councilor for 18 years.

The do-it-all man owned and operated Lynn’s Little River Inn for more than three decades.

“Every once in a while, we’d go down (to Little River Inn) and he was always very friendly and very personable,” Conlon said. “You could talk to him for a while.”

Ford enjoyed horse and dog racing, playing softball later in life, and attending games and events of his children and grandchildren.

Always smiling. Always laughing.

“Just a kind, caring person,” Phelan said.

A funeral service will be held Monday at Solimine Funeral Home beginning at 10 a.m., followed by a burial at Pine Grove Cemetery. A wake will be held Sunday from 2-6 p.m. at Solimine Funeral Home

Whether it was pitching lights out for a state championship baseball team or pitching in around the community, that’s just what Rick Ford did. Ford, who died April 17 at 69, was a lifelong Lynn resident. His smile and laugh were constants — contagious even. It was that way through different chap...

Time to think about getting your swing on while supporting the students and programs at Lynn Tech.  🐅
04/17/2026

Time to think about getting your swing on while supporting the students and programs at Lynn Tech. 🐅

Who remembers the Winter of 78!  I shoveled for days!
03/03/2026

Who remembers the Winter of 78! I shoveled for days!

The snow may still be on the ground but it is not too early to think about golf and mark your calendars for another fun ...
03/03/2026

The snow may still be on the ground but it is not too early to think about golf and mark your calendars for another fun Lynn Tech Alumni event.

LYNN — At Lynn Vocational Technical Institute, SkillsUSA students are turning service into something deeply personal thi...
02/24/2026

LYNN — At Lynn Vocational Technical Institute, SkillsUSA students are turning service into something deeply personal this year.

“SkillsUSA, we’re a student-based organization; it’s a national thing,” Dana Hurley, president of the chapter, explained. The organization focuses on three main pillars — community service, leadership, and competition — all centered around promoting career and technical education.

Throughout the school year, students design and carry out service projects that support their community. Those efforts are later documented and presented at district, state, and even national competitions in Atlanta, Georgia. But for this chapter, the real reward isn’t just medals; it’s impact.

Last year, the group chose “nourishment” as its theme after recognizing widespread food insecurity in the area.

“We noticed a lot of hunger and homelessness, a lot of food insecurity in our community,” Vice-President Bryan Belloso said.

The chapter hosted multiple events, culminating in a hunger and homelessness forum that combined service and education. Participants made peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for My Brother’s Table while also learning more about what hunger looks like locally.

This year, students decided to take a different approach. Instead of focusing only on awareness, they are focusing on the people who dedicate their lives to fighting food insecurity.

“There’s a lot of under-appreciation for these people,” Belloso said. “So we wanted to kind of be at least a group that could show that appreciation that is, like, much deserved.”

The result is the Appreciation Project.

The chapter plans to invite individuals and organizations who have made a meaningful impact on hunger and homelessness. Rather than simply hosting an awards ceremony, students are creating an interactive, hands-on event that reflects the school’s vocational programs.

Carpentry students are building handcrafted memory boxes. During the event, invited guests will work alongside student leaders to assemble and decorate their own boxes. Inside each box will be a custom metal plate created with help from the advanced manufacturing trade — a symbolic recognition of their contributions.

“It’s more of a community building kind of thing, not just: come in, we’re giving you something, and bye,” Jason McCuish, vice principal of Lynn Tech, said. “It sort of makes it a little more intimate.”

The project is expected to take place in mid-March, with students finalizing plans while balancing fundraising and competition preparation.

Service, however, does not begin or end with one event. The chapter expanded its school-based community closet this year by adding a community kitchen stocked with non-perishable food items. Through fundraising efforts and shop competitions, students raised more than $4,000 to support their initiatives and also donated $2,500 to My Brother’s Table earlier this year.

Members regularly volunteer and have supported younger students at Washington Elementary School as they establish their own community closet and kitchen.

For some students, the mission is personal.

“My family kind of survived off food stamps for a long time,” Belloso shared. “Now that I’m in the position where we’re financially stable… It’s time to pay it forward. Obviously, do we fix the issue? No, but we do what we can.”

Secretary of the chapter, Hailley Mendez, shared that their chapter stands out because they design and lead their own projects from start to finish, often arriving early, staying late, and even meeting during school vacations.

“Lynn is our home,” Historian Karla Figueroa said. “We really just want to create a better aspect for the future generation.”

Through the Appreciation Project, SkillsUSA members hope to inspire those already doing the work — and remind them they are seen.

“I think it’s very different when a bunch of young people are recognizing you for what you do,” McCuish stated. “It just hits something deeper.”

For these students, service isn’t just a competition category. It’s a commitment to their community and to the people who quietly sustain it every day.

LYNN — At Lynn Vocational Technical Institute, SkillsUSA students are turning service into something deeply personal this year. “SkillsUSA, we’re a student-based organization; it’s a national thing,” Dana Hurley, president of the chapter, explained. The organization focuses on three main p...

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