Sir Roger Gaskell Hetherington Central Bank, Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire was a British civil engineer and civil servant.
Background
Roger Gaskell Hetherington was born in Sherborne, Dorset on 10 February 1876, the eldest son of William Lonsdale Hetherington and his wife Mary Gaskell, daughter of John Dakin Gaskell, a barrister of Highgate, London. His father was assistant Master at Sherborne School when he was born, but the family soon after returned to Highgate.
Education
After school he attended Trinity College, Cambridge, where he gained a half blue for rifle shooting.
Career
He entered Highgate School in 1889. In spite of coming from a distinguished academic family Hetherington did not shine academically at this time, in fact he retained, to the end of this life, a copy of the Granta magazine (16 June 1897) that included the comment "I understand that Mr Hetherington of Trinity, is exceedingly annoyed at having missed the wooden spoon. lieutenant is one blot on an otherwise blameless career." This comment resulted from his coming bottom but one in the Mathematical Tripos.
Hetherington served as an officer in the 4th (Cambridge University) Volunteer Battalion of the Suffolk Regiment but resigned his commission as Captain on 24 November 1897.
Hetherington returned to the British Army during the First World War when he was appointed temporary Inspector of Works in the Staff of the Royal Engineers with the honorary rank of Lieutenant on 14 April 1915. All his life he suffered from a weak heart and was never passed fit for active service.
He relinquished that commission upon the completion of his service on 25 February 1919, retaining his rank. Hetherington married Honoria Ford on 24 April 1906.
She was the youngest daughter of the solicitor Arthur Ranken Ford, who lived close (1 Broadlands Road) to Roger"s parents in Highgate (3 Broadlands Road).
Both Roger and Honoria were strong believers in women"s education and as well as making sure that Mary had a university education Roger always travelled to Cambridge to vote for women having full degree rights at Cambridge. Hetherington had become a governor at Highgate School in 1917. He served the school as treasurer and chairman of governors from 1929 to 1944.
He had an interest in education and was also chairman of the council of Wycombe Abbey School.
Hetherington"s career as a civil servant began in 1930 when he became the Chief Engineering Inspector at the Ministry of Health, a post he would hold until 1944. He became an official adviser on water and the Director of Surveys for the ministry in 1941 in which capacity he served until 1952.
On 24 June 1947, at a special general meeting of the Institution of Civil Engineers, he was elected their president for the November 1947 to November 1948 session. Hetherington was only elected because the death of the president-elect Sir Frederick Cook following his election in May.
This was the second successive year that the Institute of Civil Engineers"s president-elect had died before entering office.
Hetherington died in 1952.