Boston Sunday Globe

Mourners remember National Grid worker killed at job site

- By John Hilliard GLOBE STAFF John Hilliard can be reached at john.hilliard@globe.com.

CAMBRIDGE — Roderick Jackson avoided attention, family and friends said at his funeral Saturday, preferring to be a doting son and brother to his large family and a supportive worker for his colleagues at National Grid.

But Jackson, who was killed Dec. 6 in a car crash that also claimed the life of a Waltham police officer, had touched the lives of hundreds of others. And they said he would have been pleased that so many people came together — friends, utility workers, and Waltham police officers — to support his family at St. Paul A.M.E. Church.

“This was a young man who probably eschewed anything that was public,” the Rev. Jeffrey L. Brown told mourners. “But his love for his family was so public, that everybody saw it, understood it, and celebrated it.”

Jackson, a 36-year-old Cambridge native fondly known as “Kito,” was remembered as an inspiring, driven family man who encouraged his siblings while also pursuing excellence as a college athletic star and, later, as a hard-working utility worker for National Grid.

He stood out not for his size — he was well over 6 feet — but for the depth and breadth of his heart, mourners recalled. Jackson didn’t have children of his own, but was focused on his family, which included his younger brother and two sisters.

“I’m so proud to be your brother. I’m so proud of the man you were, and that you are. Because even in death, you still find ways to support this family,” said Manuel Asprilla-Hassan, Jackson’s brother, at the funeral.

Asprilla-Hassan appeared deeply moved by the sight of so many people gathered inside the church — filling seats, standing in aisles, and packing an overflow room in the basement, where they could watch a video of the proceeding­s. Many wore pins bearing Jackson’s name.

While attending Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology, Jackson was named the most outstandin­g basketball player of the year, and earned a scholarshi­p to play at William Penn University in Iowa, according to his obituary.

His love for family drew him back to Massachuse­tts, where he led Framingham State University’s basketball team to a 2010 championsh­ip and earned a degree in business administra­tion, the obituary said.

Asprilla-Hassan recalled the life lessons his older brother instilled in him.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do without you, but I can feel you standing here next to me,” Asprilla-Hassan said.

As Asprilla-Hassan spoke, his mother, Norma Asprilla leaned in close and placed her hand near her son’s on the lectern. He said he could feel Jackson’s presence, his reassuranc­e that everything will be OK.

“That was my hero,” he said of Jackson. “He believed in me more than I believed in myself.”

On the afternoon of Dec. 6, Jackson was killed along with Waltham Police Officer Paul J. Tracey, 58, when a man crashed a pickup truck into the roadside detail Jackson and Tracey were working on along Waltham’s Totten Pond Road.

Prosecutor­s have said the truck was driven by Peter J. Simon, 54, of New Hampshire, who faces manslaught­er and several other charges related to the crash. Simon, who was ordered held without bail, has pleaded not guilty.

Tracey’s funeral was held Friday in Waltham, and on Saturday, numerous Waltham police officers, including Waltham Police Chief Kevin O’Connell, and Mayor Jeannette McCarthy attended Jackson’s funeral.

“Two people have gone to heaven, but the hurt still is here, and it’s going to be there for a long time,” McCarthy said.

O’Connell said Waltham officers wanted to come together with Jackson’s family at a time of grief.

“Roderick was a friend of ours, we want to be over here. We’re hurting, they’re hurting. They came to us, and we came to them. And that’s what community is,” O’Connell said.

Some National Grid workers who spoke to the media said it was important Jackson’s family knew they were there.

As the funeral procession left the church for Jackson’s burial at Cambridge Cemetery, a phalanx of National Grid trucks joined the column.

One utility worker grew emotional saying, of Jackson, “He will be missed deeply.”

 ?? NATHAN KLIMA FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ?? The casket was carried from St. Paul A.M.E. Church after the funeral of Roderick Jackson.
NATHAN KLIMA FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE The casket was carried from St. Paul A.M.E. Church after the funeral of Roderick Jackson.

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