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CHARLES GOFFET - MISCELLANEA
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Newspaper Articles About Charles Goffet
Adieu more
Au revoir Charlie more
Feature Story Herald 1990 more
Obituary
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What others say about Charlie ...
Peter Watchorn ...
"Charlie and Neta Goffet were friends of our family for over 50 years.
Dad (whose subject was music) taught with Charlie at NBHS from 1950-1955.
Dad was 21 and Charlie was 41.
Charlie's best friend was Len McCrae, the sports master (and also a modern languages teacher). Dad told a story about Charlie and Len staging a mock bull fight in the ground floor staffroom, sometime during dad's first days there in the early 50s. Len lunged at Charlie, who held up a handkerchief in lieu of a toreador's cape. Anyway, they connected and Charlie plunged through the (open) window, narrowly saved by his colleagues from falling 10 feet below. When they pulled him back into the room, Charlie's first words were "Christ, I broke Neta's fountain pen!", which had been in his top pocket.
There are lots of other Charlie stories, too, many told by himself, including one where, while visiting a French ship docked in Newcastle Harbour, he over imbibed on a particularly strong brand of French pastisse (a highly alcoholic concoction made with aniseed), from which he passed out.
He was an amazing student and scholar of everything French, for whom conventional lesson plans were an irrelevance.
He lived his craft. For the right student he was an inexhaustible source of information and learning. Not sure how many really cottoned on to Charlie's particular wavelength.
I've often found myself wishing I'd known then what I know now and simply asked him more. But he was one of the most amazing people I've known.
There's simply no other way Charlie could have departed this life than instantaneously, in the middle of a speech to the students of the school to which he devoted his entire career.
They don't make them like Charlie Goffet anymore. "Former educator" the headline says: they really had no idea."
Ross Alexander ...
" A great teacher and a fun bloke
Ross Alexander ...
I recall a tale as told by The Late Vic Rooney,
Apparently there was a considerable level of conjecture over what the school would do about caring and supervision of students during RI (religious instruction) where the said students were exempt (by note) from participation in the RI classes.
Vic said the only person with a solution to the problem was Charlie! His solution as stated by Vic was to gather said exempt students under the shelter of the tuck shop awning.
His main objective here was to ensure the students were protected from the weather and the sun. His final tenet was that because it was substitute for RI then it should be considered that “God” would look after these boys.
Darrel Cox ...
I had the pleasure of having been taught by both of these gentlemen. Charlie taught me more English than Vic did.
Rob Greenwood ...
I had the pleasure of having been taught by both of these gentlemen. Charlie taught me more English than Vic did.
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