John Mullin ’79 describes his life’s successes to the way a house is built. His time at Catholic Memorial was the laying of solid foundations, college builds the rest of the house, “…and your job,” he says, “pays for the whole thing.”
As one of four siblings raised by his grandmother in Quincy, Mullin understood early on that if he was going to succeed, he needed to find himself in a place that would challenge him and instill the necessary qualities with which to succeed. It helped that his older cousin, Jerry Connors, who was good friends with then CM faculty member Dan Burke, saw something in John to make him ask the question. “You want to go to college after high school, right? Well, it won’t happen with you going to Quincy High.”
Throwing himself into hockey and his studies, Mullin embraced the opportunities offered. CM became the arena where he would find out what he was made of. “Brother Sheridan had an awesome way of teaching religion, and I could relate to him because he was from New York City and I’d go there to visit my dad,” recalls Mullin. “And I’m also going to put it out there, Coach Hanson. He went out of his way to drive me home after many practices and had a knack for picking guys who wanted it, had drive and determination, and a refusal to fail.” Homework was done while dragging his hockey bag on the two buses he took to get home. While attending UMass-Lowell, Mullin maintained this mindset remaining on campus and not returning to his dorm until his engineering assignments for the day were done.
The start of his career saw a dream come true, working as an engineer for two startup companies headquartered in San Jose, CA. Upon the death of his wife in 1998, he made a pivotal career change becoming an educator, teaching middle school engineering at several local public schools and marketing courses online at Southern New Hampshire University and University of Phoenix. In retirement, Mullin is looking to help students like himself with the potential but who need an opportunity. As Mullin puts it, “Being a Bruce Springsteen fan, his new song, I’ll See You in My Dreams moved me to create an endowment and scholarship for CM. I want to give an inspired student with similar challenges a chance to fulfill his dreams and not be prohibited by financial challenges and who will succeed through their motivation.” His adopted father once said to Mullin, Fine feathers make a fine bird.” To which Mullin responded, “A fine bird makes a fine bird doesn’t matter about its feathers.” Perhaps he was talking about himself?