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Lives
of great men all remind us
We can make our lives sublime,
And, departing, leave behind us
Footprints on the sands of time;
Footprints, that perhaps another,
Sailing o’er life’s solemn main,
A forlorn and shipwrecked brother,
Seeing, shall take heart again.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

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Willis
Hewatt in trunks and "waders"
scouring the beach for marine life
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Willis Hewatt, hereinafter known as
"Daddy," loved poetry. Many an evening in our home on Rogers
Rd., with homework done and without the option of television,
my sister and I would snuggle up beside him on our living
room couch and listen to him read from the several books of
poetry we had on our shelves. His selections ranged from William
Wordsworth and Rudyard Kipling to Robert W. Service, Edgar
Allan Poe, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. His reading of Holmes‘
"The Chambered Nautilus" will be remembered by all who sat
in his invertebrate zoology classes.
Willis
G. Hewatt 1929
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One of Daddy’s favorite poems was Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s
Psalm of Life. I recall him reading it to me and my
sister when we really weren’t old enough to understand
its message, much less appreciate it. "…Bivouac of
Life…," "be a hero in the strife…," "Life
is real! Life is earnest!/ And the grave is not its
goal;/ Dust thou art, to dust returneth,/
Was not spoken of the soul…" etc., etc., sort
of wafted rhythmically into our ears and above our heads.
But the stanza that reads "Lives of great men all remind
us/ We can make our lives sublime,/ And, departing,
leave behind us / Footprints on the sands of time/"
always made me envision footprints on a wet sandy beach,
and I could certainly relate to that.The sea and seashore
with its myriad animal and plant secrets were revealed
to me from very early childhood, and at every opportunity
Daddy‘s first love of marine biology would find us seaside,
searching among riprap, tide pools, and pilings for
whatever moved or could be defined as living.
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Daddy’s cadence intensified as he read those Longfellow lines,
punctuating their importance. Those words and his voice still
ring in my head. And, as it turns out, Daddy not only left
his "footprints" on the "sands of time," but someone searching
for them sixty years later, actually found them, stepped into
and followed them to a destination that may have far-reaching
implications for how we manage our planet for sustainable
life. The story of the discovery of the brass "footprints"
and the intertidal "time" trail he left, and how that all
came about is a fascinating one centering around three extraordinary
scientists, each approaching the subject from slightly differing
aspects. (The particulars of that story are told elsewhere
in this issue of The TCU Magazine.)
Although he ended up a land-locked scientist in Fort Worth,
Texas, Daddy’s passion was the sea world of invertebrate life.
How he discovered this passion is somewhat shrouded in the
mist of Monterey, California. He was raised to manhood entirely
in the Fort Worth area, the fourth of five children to his
mother, widowed before the fifth was born. I am not sure that
he ever was near the sea before he left TCU in 1931 to pursue
his doctorate at Stanford University. I never questioned why
he chose the marine scene. That was always who he was ---
a professor of biology at TCU during regular semesters and
a specialist in marine biology on various coasts during the
summers. No one I have queried from that period seems to have
the answer, either. My guess is that he was "sent to" (read
"placed at") Stanford by Mr. Will Winton, his mentor at TCU,
and once there, fell in love with the coast and opted for
study at Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station at Pacific Grove
on the Monterey Peninsula, in turn falling in love with the
various beauties of the salt-water "beasts," as he called
them.
That he did his study on the protected shoreline of Hopkins
can simply be explained by the fact that he had no conveyance
to, or equipment for, another location. I think he felt very
fortunate to even be able to attend graduate school in the
middle of a serious national depression. I have a poignant
letter from him to his mother while at Pacific Grove, lamenting
the fact that he could not help more with her finances and
those of his own new family of wife and expected first child.
He seemed to be barely able to subsist. Speculation could
continue, but seems, in my view, unimportant here.
It was not until the spring of 2001, that I first heard of
a young Stanford University doctoral candidate, Rafe Sagarin,
who had replicated Daddy’s 1931-33 research at Cabrillo Point
in Monterey Bay. It was as if Daddy was suddenly standing
in the doorway. So unexpected -- so strange to have him materialize
in this way. I knew then that I would have to go meet these
men who knew my father in an altogether different way than
most who recall his memory to me. Rafe and his mentor, Charles
Baxter, who had suggested repeating the earlier research,
knew his intellect and work only. They had only a far-off
snapshot of him in black and white. On my side, I had scanned
his dissertation once and knew that it spoke to the adventures
of the little homing limpet of the west coast, Acmaea scabra.
I had no idea of the extent of the entire study. I wanted
to "touch" this connection.
Ironically, they had tried to connect, also, at the time
of the 1992 study, only to find to their great disappointment,
that Daddy had died in 1980. Again, ironically, they found
my website, but it had no addresses, and queries directed
to TCU on my whereabouts went unanswered. Then, my cousin,
Dale Gilliland, who lives in southern California, heard of
Rafe’s study on the Jim Lehrer News Hour, contacted the TCU
Magazine, who contacted me, and, as they say, thereby hangs
the tale.
My daughter Susie, grandson Asher, and I made the trip to
Pacific Grove/Monterey this past Easter to grasp yet another
shoot of our roots. It was good to sit with all those connections
on the promontory above the bay and talk the talk of the marine
natural world with Chuck Baxter and Rafe Sagarin. Their words
I had heard many, many times and many, many years ago in similar
settings. I had danced happily to that rhythm before.
Daddy was good, but he wasn’t prescient. His work was about
the ecological makeup of an intertidal transect off Cabrillo
Point; global warming was a concern off in the future. Then,
from the 1970s, Charles Baxter watched Cabrillo Point as its
flora and fauna changed, and he grew suspicious of its cause.
At Chuck’s suggestion and armed with the 1933 Hewatt guidelines,
Rafe Sagarin took up the baton and waded, literally, into
the issue of possible global warming and what it might mean
for the natural world in which we live -- three generations
reaching across the years, helping, with their combined efforts,
to find our way.
There is a kind of poesy there, methinks, that could fit
right in with "heroes in the strife." I know Willis
Gilliland Hewatt would have thought so.
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