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In my travels to nursing homes I have come to know many memorable people, perhaps none more so than Sean Hanrahan, a poor Irish kid from Southie in Boston.
When I met him, he was shortly to become one of the few humans alive to have had the personal enjoyment of the last two Red Sox baseball championships--1918 and 2004.
On my way to his room at rural Meldon Meadows, the nurse pulled me aside and warned me he was cranky, unfriendly, and in a world of pain. A fit ninety-six, he fell off a ladder while hanging a picture and broke his leg. At that age, a fracture is usually a one-way ticket to institutional confinement. But Sean was determined to get home.
Born in Boston, 1908, he wasn't at the 1918 World Series clincher. He was poor, plus there were only 36,000 seats. "I didn't even hear it on the radio. There was no radio. I heard the newsboys down the street hawking the late-edition extra."




