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Happy Birthday to @Actual Pats Fan , born on this date in Framingham.
Happy 90th birthday to Walter Beach
Born Jan 31, 1935 in Pontiac, Michigan
Patriot CB/RB, 1960-1961; uniform #26, #41
Signed as a free agent after being released at end of NY Giants training camp, 1960
Pats résumé: two seasons, 18 games (12 starts), one interception
Walter Beach was drafted by the Giants in 1960, then signed with the Patriots early in their inaugural season. He played in 18 games for the Pats with one interception. Beach also played a bit on offense (with nine receptions and six carries) and on special teams (seven kickoff returns and one punt return). He had one touchdown with the Pats, a 51 yard reception from Butch Songin against the Chargers. Walter Beach also spent four seasons with the Cleveland Browns and was a starting corner on that team's last NFL championship, back in 1964.
1966 Browns Media Guide
Beach grew up two houses from a civil rights lawyer named Milton Henry and his family. Fast forward a bit, to a 1962 preseason game in New Orleans - that led to the Patriots cutting Beach.
Paul Brown was not just ahead of his time in as an innovative coach; he was also color blind when it came to his football players. The same was not true for Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell, who decided Beach was a troublemaker and should be cut in training camp. This infuriated the great running back Jim Brown, who knew Beach deserved a spot on the roster. Brown left camp to speak with the owner and coaches. Fifty minutes later Beach was back on the roster. That year Cleveland would win the NFL championship, thanks in part to the shutdown corner play of one Walter Beach. The powerful Baltimore Colts offense that featured quarterback Johnny Unitas and wide receivers Raymond Berry and John Mackey - all three all-stars, two future hall of famers - were decisively shutdown by Beach and the rest of the Browns in a 27-0 shutout.
A group of top African American athletes from different sporting disciplines gather to give support and hear the boxer Muhammad Ali give his reasons for rejecting the draft during the Vietnam War,
at a meeting of the Negro Industrial and Economic Union, held in Cleveland, June 4, 1967. Seated in the front row, from left to right: Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Kareem Abdul Jabbar.
Standing behind them are: Carl Stokes, Walter Beach, Bobby Mitchell, Sid Williams, Curtis McClinton, Willie Davis, Jim Shorter, and John Wooten.
Ballots and Bullets, by James Robenalt
Today in Patriots History
Walter Beach
Walter Beach
Happy 90th birthday to Walter Beach
Born Jan 31, 1935 in Pontiac, Michigan
Patriot CB/RB, 1960-1961; uniform #26, #41
Signed as a free agent after being released at end of NY Giants training camp, 1960
Pats résumé: two seasons, 18 games (12 starts), one interception
Walter Beach was drafted by the Giants in 1960, then signed with the Patriots early in their inaugural season. He played in 18 games for the Pats with one interception. Beach also played a bit on offense (with nine receptions and six carries) and on special teams (seven kickoff returns and one punt return). He had one touchdown with the Pats, a 51 yard reception from Butch Songin against the Chargers. Walter Beach also spent four seasons with the Cleveland Browns and was a starting corner on that team's last NFL championship, back in 1964.
1966 Browns Media Guide
Originally drafted 15th (round) by New York in 1960 but signed with Hamilton of Canadian League . . . coach was unhappy when he left squad to play in College All-Star game and was released . . . joined Giants but was released on final cut . . . New York wanted to place him on taxi squad but Boston of AFL attracted him with offer . . . became regular left halfback with Patriots in 1960, was shifted to defense in 1961 . . . new coach (Mike Holovak) switched him back to offense in 1962 but he was released before season started.
Beach grew up two houses from a civil rights lawyer named Milton Henry and his family. Fast forward a bit, to a 1962 preseason game in New Orleans - that led to the Patriots cutting Beach.
Ex-Brown Walter Beach Recalls Black Athletes’ Support of Ali (Published 2014)
Beach and his friend and teammate Jim Brown were part of a star-studded group that attended a 1967 gathering that backed Muhammad Ali’s refusal to be inducted into the United States Army.
www.nytimes.com
He had been released by the Boston Patriots of the American Football League the previous year, after he organized a protest by the black players on the team against segregated accommodations in New Orleans, where Boston was scheduled to play a preseason game.
While the white Patriots were set to stay in a luxury hotel, the black players were to stay with black families.
“I told them we signed up to play football, not to be segregated against,” Beach said. He told Mike Holovak, the Patriots’ coach at the time, that he would fly down the day of the game and then fly back to Boston after the game was over.
Identified as a troublemaker, Beach was cut the next day.
Paul Brown was not just ahead of his time in as an innovative coach; he was also color blind when it came to his football players. The same was not true for Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell, who decided Beach was a troublemaker and should be cut in training camp. This infuriated the great running back Jim Brown, who knew Beach deserved a spot on the roster. Brown left camp to speak with the owner and coaches. Fifty minutes later Beach was back on the roster. That year Cleveland would win the NFL championship, thanks in part to the shutdown corner play of one Walter Beach. The powerful Baltimore Colts offense that featured quarterback Johnny Unitas and wide receivers Raymond Berry and John Mackey - all three all-stars, two future hall of famers - were decisively shutdown by Beach and the rest of the Browns in a 27-0 shutout.
A group of top African American athletes from different sporting disciplines gather to give support and hear the boxer Muhammad Ali give his reasons for rejecting the draft during the Vietnam War,
at a meeting of the Negro Industrial and Economic Union, held in Cleveland, June 4, 1967. Seated in the front row, from left to right: Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Kareem Abdul Jabbar.
Standing behind them are: Carl Stokes, Walter Beach, Bobby Mitchell, Sid Williams, Curtis McClinton, Willie Davis, Jim Shorter, and John Wooten.
Walter Beach, who was at '67 Cleveland Summit, says he was 'never contaminated' by white supremacy - Andscape
At age 34, Walter Beach III stood in the back of a stuffy room in sweltering Cleveland next to Bill Russell, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown and Lew Alcindor. The year was 1967. Eleven athletes and attorney Carl Stokes stood before a host of microphones in support of Ali’s conscientious objection to the...
theundefeated.com
Ex-Brown Walter Beach Recalls Black Athletes’ Support of Ali (Published 2014)
Beach and his friend and teammate Jim Brown were part of a star-studded group that attended a 1967 gathering that backed Muhammad Ali’s refusal to be inducted into the United States Army.
www.nytimes.com
Ballots and Bullets, by James Robenalt












