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On Davey’s Knee

I knew Davey O’Brien before he was DAVEY O’BRIEN, but I didn’t know it. I was four years old when Davey won the Heisman Trophy in 1938, bringing the national recognition for himself and for TCU that lingers in national athletic annals still, after these 61 years.

If memory serves, Davey was a geology major and, as a student of science, he was also a student of my father, Willis Hewatt, who taught biology. The Hewatt family lived on land owned by TCU on Lowden Street, across from the library, and Daddy’s students would drop by occasionally. My parents would also have students stay with my sister and me sometimes, and apparently Davey was one of those. I don’t recall that, but Davey did, and got a laugh from it, years later after I was married to Johnny Swaim.

Davey was the master of ceremonies for most of the TCU athletic gatherings in the ’60s and early ’70s, when Johnny was on the TCU basketball coaching staff. The night that Johnny was inducted into the TCU Letterman’s Hall of Fame, Davey was at the podium, and I, our children, and my mother and father were in the audience. When he introduced Johnny, he told the audience of his own history with the Hewatt/Swaim families, boasting that he had held me on his knee long before Johnny Swaim did.

Davey was also one of Mom Harris’ “boys.” “Mom” was the name that the students gave my maternal grandmother, Georgia Harris, who was the university dietitian from 1921 until her retirement in 1942. The cafeteria was in the basement of what was then the “Ad Building” (now Dave Reed Hall), and the athlete’s dining room — if you can call it that — was at the rear of the kitchen on what was basically a screened-in back porch, where a single long “training table” was set up. In inclement weather, canvas awnings let down to keep out the wind and rain. It was here, I was told, that Slingin’ Sammy Baugh and Little Davey practiced their throws. When the players clamored for more milk than “Mom” had set out, she would have the wire basket of pint bottles put down beside Davey or Sam, and they would “pass” them down the length of the table to their “receivers,” while the tolerant “Mom” shook her head and tried not to smile. My grandmother loved her boys, and they, I hear tell, loved her. I don’t have personal recollection of those times, either, but it was one of my grandmother’s stories, and L. D. “Little Dutch” Meyer vowed to me that it was true.

What I do personally recall is that Davey was a one-of-a-kind, a personable guy with a quick wit and ready laugh, and a modest man who seemed to be everybody’s friend. He may have been small in stature, but he was in so many ways a giant among men — and a true Frog Prince.

©2000 Joan Hewatt Swaim

Published inTCU Magazine