By: Michael Colbert
Only three graduates of the Westborough High School Class of 1937 still make Westborough their home; Charlie Fay is one of these people. Fay was born on July 21, 1919 in Westborough, MA. As a teenager, he enjoyed delivering newspapers around town throughout his time in high school. He made eight dollars a week which was “a lot of money in those days,” Fay says. Although he admits he did not enjoy reading Shakespeare, he was an honor roll student and excelled in economics. This pushed him to study business at Bryant College and Stratton Business School in Boston.
After college, Fay began working in the accounting department at Wyman Gordon in Worcester. He bought his first car, a 1937 Ford Coup which only cost two-hundred dollars, to get to work everyday. Although he transferred to the Grafton branch after the war, he worked for this company for several years.
During the war, Fay went to New Zealand and served as a sergeant in the dispensary clinic of the 39th General Hospital. For about three years he administered pills and checked the blood pressures of wounded soldiers from the fighting in Japan. As a career accountant, he enjoyed this change in work. It would be unlikely for people to go into his office at Wyman Gordon for first-aid assistance, so being in the field in New Zealand was a once in a lifetime experience. Sometimes Maoris, the indigenous people of New Zealand, came to the hospital to perform a show; Fay also got to witness the New Zealand culture through traveling on the weekends. He returned to America and married after spending three Christmases abroad and never returned to the clinic.
When in high school, Fay sat in front of a girl named Anne. He gave her the to answers to assignments and enjoyed talking to her in class. Once, he asked her to a school dance, but she was already going with somebody else. However, he didn’t give up and, luckily, there was another dance later on in the year and she said she would go with him.
Fay and Anne stuck together and have now been married for sixty-seven years. He says of Anne, “She was the love of my life, and still is.” Although Anne has been affected by Alzheimer’s Disease, they both still smile when they see each other and their love for each other shows in how Fay cares for his wife.
The Fays have enjoyed traveling to Bermuda. Anne had cousins and aunts in Bermuda, so they decided to take a cruise to this island. They had such a wonderful time that they went on the same cruise again. Fay laughs that there was food around every single corner.
Several aspects of Westborough have changed since Fay was a child. Fay went to Westborough High School in the Forbes Building, not on the campus we recognize as the high school today. Additionally graduation was in the Town Hall. While Westborough High School now boasts a number of sports teams, the athletic program offered when Fay was in high school was much smaller. However, there was an extremely popular horseshoe team, which Fay played on as a student.
Downtown Westborough has only recently seen the development of numerous corporate retailers. The town used to be home to many more local and family-run businesses. But, Fay says that his neighborhood hasn’t changed one bit. He lives in the same house where his children grew up. Though some things may be different, he is surrounded by welcoming and warm neighbors. Fay enjoyed working in and around the house. For fun, he used to take care of chickens in his backyard and gave their eggs away to friends and neighbors.
Fay’s humorous, considerate, and affectionate personality shine with his devotion to his loved ones and hometown. Fay served as a library trustee for six years and his wife was the school nurse at Westborough High School. While Anne used to play the violin, Fay says he can only “play the television.” Fay has seen many changes in Westborough during his lifetime and says that it’s a great town. He has certainly contributed to making it the place it is today.
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Story to Tell: Charlie Fay
May 4, 2012
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Katie Litwin • Sep 9, 2012 at 7:09 pm
The feature on Charlie Fay is definitely something I enjoyed reading. His love story with his high school sweetheart was touching and adorable and I think it’s great that we still have Westborough High history alive and well in the town. The article was well written also!
Delia Curtis • Sep 9, 2012 at 4:05 am
This was a very interesting article to read. I think that it is really amazing that students who went to the high school so many years ago still reside in this very same town. It is wonderful to see the students today taking an interest in the community and those who live here. I’d like to think that Westborough was a quaint town full of kids and adults who take pride in their area of Massachusetts, and I’m happy to see that that is true. I think that it would be so cool to go back in time and see Westborough as it was so many years ago and this article let me do just that.