The Boston Globe

A teacher promised his 1978 class an eclipse party

He hosted it Monday, and about 100 came

- By Kyle Melnick

When he started teaching in 1978, Patrick Moriarty passed out worksheets to his science class, showing the trajectori­es of upcoming eclipses. Only one was expected to pass near their hometown in Upstate New York, but watching it as a class was going to be difficult — it wouldn’t occur for nearly five decades.

“Hey, circle that one on April 8, 2024,” Moriarty recalled telling his students. “We’re going to get together on that one.”

His students laughed. Thinking that far ahead was difficult for Moriarty — let alone for his junior high students.

Still, for years, Moriarty told all of his classes to plan for a gathering that year far in the future. That promise was top of mind when, two years ago, he created a Facebook event and tried to contact his former students.

Moriarty didn’t expect them to remember, but as word spread among former classmates, hundreds expressed interest in the event.

On Monday, Moriarty fulfilled his promise when about 100 former students watched the total solar eclipse from the driveway of his Rochester, N.Y., home. But ultimately it wasn’t the eclipse that astonished Moriarty; it was his students.

“When teachers go into education, they hope that they can be that kind of teacher that would have an impact on people and make a difference for people,” Moriarty, 68, said. “And this event right here just firmed it up for me that I guess I did OK.”

After graduating from the State University of New York at Geneseo, Moriarty began teaching earth science as a 22-yearold at a junior high school in Webster, N.Y. He built a reputation as a tough but caring instructor.

He stayed after class to tutor students and cracked jokes when they were nervous about tests. His students said he made subjects they had not cared about — cloud formations, wind trajectori­es, and temperatur­e changes — interestin­g.

For 16 years, Moriarty told his students that he would put an advertisem­ent in their local newspaper, the Democrat and Chronicle, in 2024 with details about the gathering. His students didn’t think much of it.

“The things that you get asked at that age is, ‘Where do you see yourself in five years or 10 years?’” said Kevin Thompson, who took Moriarty’s class in 1982. “To think 40-plus years down the road was almost impossible to comprehend.”

In 1998, Moriarty became a principal of a junior high school in Fairport, N.Y. He never forgot about the plan for the 2024 eclipse, and neither did his students.

Former students traveled from across the country and brought their yearbooks for Monday’s event.

“This has got to be the longest homework assignment in history,” Thompson, now 56, recalled telling Moriarty.

As visitors prepared to leave, Moriarty suggested they convene again in two decades, when the next total solar eclipse will occur. Everyone laughed — just like they had in 1978.

 ?? CAITLIN MORIARTY HYNICK ?? Patrick Moriarty and a group of his former students watched the solar eclipse together from his driveway on Monday in Rochester, N.Y.
CAITLIN MORIARTY HYNICK Patrick Moriarty and a group of his former students watched the solar eclipse together from his driveway on Monday in Rochester, N.Y.

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