Featured People

Harvard/North End Football Player Combat Zone Murder (1976) Book in the Making

 

Andrew Puopolo

Author Jan Brogna is researching the possibility of writing her second book, “Murder in the Combat Zone”, the killing of a Harvard student and football player, a very popular North End resident whose life was stripped from him in 1976.

Andrew Puopolo, a talented athlete, was in the prime of his life when he was murdered celebrating with many of his teammates.

Andrew, participated in all the North End sports programs, and play them all extremely well. He was also a popular person in the neighborhood.

The book is a narrative, non-fiction accounts of the Harvard football player and the two trials relating to the murder.

At the time of the murder, the so-called Combat Zone for years was a hotbed for all sort of crime including, prostitution, late night-early morning activities. It was Boston’s Red Light District.

The frustration over court-ordered busing, racial tension and police corruption in Boston were at its peak when upwards of forty Harvard football players descended on the city’s scandalous red-light District in what has become an end-of-the season ritual after the breakup dinner. When two of the football players were stabbed, one fatally, police arrested three black men at the scene, and the story made headlines in nearly every newspaper in the nation.

The story quickly became about privilege vs. poverty even though the victim, Andrew Puopolo, wasn’t a privileged Harvard boy at all, but a talented athlete who had grown up in one of the city’s poor white neighborhoods, the Italian North End’s. Ultimately, the story became about race.

The two trials would both be heavily influenced by the raw emotions of a city boiling with rage. Although the case would have a possible impact and make an important change in the way juries were chosen in Massachusetts, it would also leave the family and mourners of the victim to struggle with the very definition of justice.

Murder in the Combat Zone will be published by University Press of New England’s ForeEdge imprint in 2018.

3 Replies to “Harvard/North End Football Player Combat Zone Murder (1976) Book in the Making

  1. I think this is reprehensible. Andy was a member of my extended family, a great athlete at BLS and a stellar student at Harvard College. His murder was never about race. Why not leave his family alone and let Andy rest in peace?

    1. What was it then if i may ask Nick Dello Russo i myself can’t remember all the faxe been to many year’s and at the time i was about 11?

  2. The animals were let free after the second trial….disgraceful. The pimps were not poor, they were pulling in $130,000 a year off their whores. Not a bad pay day in 1977. The animals were never heard from again, but my guess is they went to prison for something else. Criminals know nothing else. RIP Andrew

Comments are closed.