The Trusty Servant May 2018 No. 125 | Page 6

N o .125 T he T rusty S ervant Geoffrey Hewitson (Co Ro, 63-00; Second Master, 91-97) Tommy Cookson (I, 55-60; Co Ro, 64-65, 67-72, 74-90; Headmaster, 03-05) writes: Geoffrey Hewitson, who has died at the age of 83, was an outstanding don, housedon and Second Master at Winchester for 37 years until his retirement in 2000. As a gifted soccer player, he was awarded his Cambridge Blue in 1957 and from 2001-2006 was chairman of the amateur football club, the Corinthian-Casuals, for whom he played over 80 games as a young man. He was, however, a greater man than the sum of his achievements. Widely respected and trusted by his colleagues, who elected him chairman of Common Room, he was known for his good humour, his modesty, his deft handling of all types of situation and the fairness of his judgements. When he became acting Head for a term in the Headmaster’s absence on sabbatical, he immediately showed how easily he would have filled the role in any school. The standard imitation of him began with a characteristic shrug of the shoulders and the words, ‘I’m a reasonable man’ – and so he appeared to generations of pupils Geoffrey Hewitson was born in Hackney in 1935, the only child of devoted parents determined to do their best for him. His father, who had started work at the age of 14 as a mining engineer in the Northumberland coal mines at Allendale, re-mortgaged the house to buy him the Cambridge Soccer Blue blazer. In later years he would recall with a blush how his mother would bring him breakfast in bed when he was well into his 20s; and how she would clean his football boots after a match and proceed to iron the laces. Evacuated during the war to Hertfordshire and something of a late developer, he surprised everyone by passing the 11-Plus exam and going to the prestigious Sir George Monoux Grammar School in Walthamstow. After a slow start as an A Level scientist he switched to History, discovered a lifelong interest and won a place at Selwyn College, Cambridge. Before going up he did his national service in the RAF, where he spent much time playing football and tennis, representing the RAF at doubles. Asked later whether he had ever been to Wimbledon, he would reply with an ironic smile, ‘Only as a competitor.’ He would then add, ‘We lost 6-0, 6-0.’ At Cambridge he was coached by Bill Nicholson, who would later manage Tottenham Hotspur. Hewitson loved recounting one of Nicholson’s half-time talks: ‘You’re the most intelligent side I’ve coached – and the worst footballers.’ After Cambridge, he had a difficult choice. Fascinated by how such things as classic cars worked, he became a management trainee at a large building firm. But his academic ability, his sporting skill and natural affinity with people of all kinds marked him out as a schoolmaster, first at Forest School in East London (where he later became a governor) and afterwards at Winchester where he became a member of its outstanding History department. His tenure as Housedon of Beloe’s began in 1970. He brought to it an instinctive understanding and amused tolerance of teenage boys at a time when the enforcement of traditional disciplines had become harder. For the nervous or vulnerable his manner was reassuring and his attention constant. But he set clear boundaries. On one occasion he refused a boy’s request for an absence. ‘Aren’t you even willing to discuss it?’ cried the boy. ‘Perfectly will