Hobbies and interests
Reading
Tennis
Alpine Skiing
Water Skiing
Hiking And Backpacking
Calisthenics
Fishing
Weightlifting
Engineering
Reading
Academic
Adult Fiction
Historical
I read books multiple times per week
Jacob Magill
1,325
Bold Points1x
FinalistJacob Magill
1,325
Bold Points1x
FinalistBio
"We see people during the worst day of their lives." This mantra is constantly repeated in my firefighter training class because it serves as a constant reminder of the importance of what we are doing. I am currently taking a class where a firefighter trains to become an interior firefighter who can enter structural fires. I have been volunteering at my town's fire department for just over four years. This is a relatively short time for the fire service but I have already seen the devastation that a firefighter responds to. Each time I encounter this devastation I wish I could do more. No matter how tired we are, how much our mind and body want to give up, we must keep pushing and training to be able to deliver the required aid. Even though the class pushes me to the limits, I persevere because when it is someone's worst day, I want to be there to make it better. Firefighting has become a considerable part of my life and we see some of the worst disasters the world has to offer, each of them has had an impact on me. After seeing those disasters it makes me want to build a better future for the generations to come. This is why I want to get a degree as a mechanical engineer. Every day engineers make products to improve people’s lives. After I graduate I hope to join the engineers in the space industry. The number of inventions that are created to help us live in the deadly environment of space has an infinite amount of possibilities of helping people back on Earth. As I grow older I want to continue helping people by creating inventions that will be beneficial to everyone.
Education
Northeastern University
Master's degree programMajors:
- Mechanical Engineering
Minors:
- Mathematics
- Aerospace, Aeronautical, and Astronautical/Space Engineering
GPA:
3.9
Tunxis Community College
Associate's degree programMajors:
- Engineering Science
GPA:
3.8
Lewis S. Mills High School
High SchoolGPA:
4
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Mechanical Engineering
Career
Dream career field:
Mechanical or Industrial Engineering
Dream career goals:
Senior Engineer
Ski Instructor
Ski Butternut2018 – Present6 years
Sports
Esports
Varsity2019 – Present5 years
Skiing
Varsity2015 – 20194 years
Soccer
Junior Varsity2017 – 20192 years
Tennis
Varsity2018 – 20202 years
Research
Mechanical Engineering
AeroNU — Propulsion Engineer2021 – Present
Arts
School Band
MusicSchool Concerts2017 – 2019
Public services
Volunteering
Boy Scouts of America — Eagle Scout2017 – PresentVolunteering
Harwinton Volunteer Fire Department — Interior Firefighter2018 – Present
Future Interests
Volunteering
Chief Lawrence J. Nemec Jr. Memorial Scholarship
It was fourth grade when the red mysterious trucks parked outside my school. These enigmatic men climbed out with suits on that made them look alien. As a child, I saw it as a time when we could miss class and play around on the trucks with these mysterious people. I never thought seven years later I would be the person visiting my former elementary school.
After the mysterious men visited my school, my eldest brother signed up at the volunteer fire department and started leaving at all times during the day. At night, I often lay awake wondering what he was up to. I would watch as the trucks would speed past my house with their lights on and my curiosity about their activities would ignite. I grew up helping my community through the events that I would participate in with my local Boy Scout troop. I saw how my brother was able to help our community through his participation in the fire department and I wanted to make the same impact. At the age of fifteen, I filled out the application and joined the Harwinton Volunteer Fire Department in Connecticut. As a young teenager, I did not yet know how my participation as a volunteer would change my world views.
It was 2:33 a.m. when my pager toned on my nightstand. Still half asleep, I heard dispatch say those two fateful words, “structure fire”. My department had just been toned out for mutual aid to a three-alarm structure fire. I had just turned eighteen and was not yet certified as an interior firefighter. I was assigned to the tanker where I would help with water shuttle operations. That night each firefighter on scene fought their hardest, but as dawn broke the building was a total loss and over two dozen people had been displaced. As I was resting on a building’s steps with the rest of my department, apartment owners started to come thank us. These people had just lost everything and many of them only had bathrobes on, yet they still came to thank us for our hard work. Over the next few days, fire officials would be on the news saying that crews did everything they could but could not save the structure. The fire not only stole the building away from its residents but took the life of a brother firefighter who died of a preexisting condition on the scene that night.
I was told that I did an exceptional job that night but I felt that I should have been doing more. As the apartment owners thanked me, my “you’re welcome” response felt half-hearted and helpless. My curiosity about my brother’s activities is what led me to become a volunteer firefighter but it had evolved into something more. I could no longer sit on the sidelines while others suffered. Last year, I graduated from fire one school with my firefighter one, hazmat awareness, and hazmat operations certifications. Even after graduating, I drive myself to train as hard as I can because the next time I tell someone, “I did everything I could” I want to have no regrets. I now see myself as a public servant where failure is not an option and I try to live my life according to the quote from former president John F. Kennedy, “My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” I volunteer so that I can help people when they are having one of the worst days of their lives.
Bold Moments No-Essay Scholarship
It is a day that I would never forget, how could I? I was looking forward to it since I was a child. That day was when I responded to my very first structure fire and this is the picture afterward. It was Christmas morning and I had a gift in my hands waiting to open it, the anticipation was killing me. But that's when the tones went off and I heard those fateful words, "Harwinton Fire respond to a reported structure fire." I was only fifteen but at that time I felt that I could take on the world.