A John Petercuskie Story
A tale of class, leadership, and brotherly love
By Tom Beccone, NHS Class of 1967
1963 John Petercuskie
There are many stories about Coach John Petercuskie floating around Langhorne to be sure. After all, the man is a bit of a legend in these parts and, dare I say, we mere mortals who played under his tutelage looked up to him as as something of a God, though I am pretty sure that he would’ve been the first one to decline that honorific. Even so, that was the way I viewed him from among the junior high school crowd at Carl Sandburg JHS in the spring of 1963.
I had played two seasons of football at Sandburg under coach Paris “Pal” Allison and his staff and I was looking forward to matriculating to the hallowed halls of Neshaminy High School and the grass of Playwicki Field where local football heroes were born. I was not a great football player. I was undersized for a lineman and the only things I had going for me was my ability to memorize plays and am intense love of the game. Other than that, I was just another part of the rabble who wanted to win a coveted spot on the Redskin football squad. Well, I did make the JV squad at the high school, complete with hand-me-down jersey and, I kid you not, a leather helmet. Holy jeez, I looked like Red Grange! Other than looking a bit like a player in a version of Andy Hardy Scores A Touchdown, I went largely unnoticed (I thought) by anyone on the coaching staff. Thus I was somewhat surprised when a letter came to me from “Coach Petercuskie” according to the return address. It read: