Everything about Churchill College Cambridge totally explained
| women_only =
| mature_students =
| head_label = Master
| head =
Sir David Wallace
| undergraduates = 440
| graduates = 210
| sister_college =
Trinity College, Oxford
| sister_college_pl =
| homepage = http://www.chu.cam.ac.uk/
| boat_club = http://www.srcf.ucam.org/ccbc/
}}
Churchill College is one of the constituent colleges of the
University of Cambridge and was founded in 1958 as the national and
Commonwealth memorial to
Winston Churchill.
Churchill is situated on the outskirts of the town away from the traditional centre of old
Cambridge, but close to the University’s main
new development zone. Its 160,000 m² (42
acres) of grounds make it physically the largest of all the colleges.
Churchill was the first all-male college to decide to admit women, and was among three men's colleges to admit its first women students in 1972;
(External Link
) Within 15 years all others had followed suit. The college has a reputation for relative informality compared to other Cambridge colleges and traditionally admits a larger proportion of its undergraduates from state schools.
Cambridge University Radio is broadcast from Churchill College.
History
In 1955, on holiday in
Sicily soon after his resignation as Prime Minister, Winston Churchill discussed with
Sir John Colville and
Lord Cherwell the possibility of founding a new institution. Churchill had been impressed by
MIT and wanted a British version, but the plans evolved into the more modest proposal of creating a science- and technology-based college within the
University of Cambridge. Churchill wanted a mix of non-scientists to ensure a well rounded education and environment for scholars and fellows.
The first postgraduate students arrived in October 1960, and the first undergraduates a year later. Full College status was received in 1966.
The bias to science and engineering remains as policy to the current day, with the statutes requiring approximately 70% science and technology students amongst its undergraduate intake each year. The college statutes also stipulate that one third of junior members of the college should be advanced (postgraduate) students.
Buildings
In 1958, a 42 acre (170,000 m²) site was purchased to the west of the city centre, which had previously been farmland. After a competition,
Richard Sheppard was appointed to design the new college. Building was completed by 1968 with nine main residential courts, separate graduate flats and a central building consisting of the dining hall, buttery, combination rooms and offices.
The dining hall is the largest in Cambridge and
formals can cater for up to 420 guests.
In the centre of the college is the Churchill Archives Centre, opened in 1974 to provide a home to Sir Winston’s papers (and also more recently endowed with papers from former Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher and
Neil Kinnock) alongside those of eminent scientists and engineers, including
Rosalind Franklin and
Sir Frank Whittle.
In 1992, the Møller Centre for Continuing Education was built on the Churchill site, designed by
Henning Larsen.
At the farthest end of the college is the Chapel. The idea of having a religious building within a modern, scientifically-oriented, academic institution deeply annoyed some of the original fellows, reputedly leading to the resignation of
Nobel Prize winner
Francis Crick in protest. Eventually a compromise was found: the chapel was sited away from the other buildings, and funded and managed separately from the rest of the College itself, being tactfully referred to as “the Chapel
at Churchill College”. The chimney of the heating system at the front of the college substitutes visually for the missing chapel tower.
According to the anecdote, Crick had agreed to become a fellow on the basis that no chapel be placed in Churchill. A donation was later made by
Lord Beaumont of Whitley to Churchill College for the establishment of one, and the majority of fellows voted for it. Winston Churchill reputedly wrote to Crick, saying that no-one need enter the chapel except under free will so it need not be a problem. Crick, in short order, replied with a letter containing 10
guineas saying that if that were the case, here were 10 guineas for the establishment of a
brothel.
Masters
The Mastership of Churchill College is a
Crown appointment. To date the College has had six Masters:
- Sir John Cockcroft, (Master 1959–1967), Nobel Laureate in Physics, who split the atom.
- Sir William Hawthorne (Master 1968–1983), who helped develop the jet engine.
- Sir Hermann Bondi (Master 1983–1990), cosmologist who helped develop the Steady State theory of the universe.
- Sir Alec Broers (Master 1990–1996), nanotechnologist (left to become Vice-Chancellor, University of Cambridge).
- Sir John Boyd (Master 1996–2006), formerly British ambassador to Japan, 1992–96.
- Sir David Wallace (Master 2006(External Link
)-present), previously Vice-Chancellor of Loughborough University and is now also Director of the Newton Institute.
Ents
Every week of the Michaelmas and Lent terms, Churchill is host to
The Pav, a weekly music event unusual for Cambridge events in that it's free and open to all university members. (The name
Pav originates from the pavilion buildings of the college where the event was originally held. Since 1992 the Pav has been held in the main bar area.) The college funds sports clubs and societies which provide entertainment for students. An example of this is the Churchill Regular Association for Poker, established in 2007 with help from the college, which organises weekly poker events open to the all members of the college and guests from other colleges.
In the early years of the college’s foundation, the college held a ball in
May Week, in common with many older colleges. However, more recently Churchill has held a Spring Ball every February. Past themes have included
Great Ball of Fire (2008),
Back in the Day (2007),
Karishma (2006),
Showdown (2005),
Arabian Nights (2004),
Hakuna Matata (2003) and
Ocean Bound (2002). In 2007 the theme was
Back In The Day, featuring the legendary TV presenter of
Fun House,
Pat Sharp.
(External Link
)
During May Week the college
JCR organise a free garden party. Last year's garden party included performances from Man Like Me and Plaster of Paris.
Students of the College run
Churchill Casino
, a charitable casino organisation who can provide professional casinos at various social events. Churchill Casino is frequently hired for
Cambridge May Balls as well as balls at
Oxford University and corporate events.
Art
The college contains many examples of modern artwork including:
Four square walk-through – Dame Barbara Hepworth
Prints of Marilyn Monroe – Andy Warhol
Gemini (1973) – Denis Mitchell
Diagram of an Object (Second state) (1990) (External Link
) – Dhruva Mistry
Spiral – Michael Gillespie (1993)
Flight – Peter Lyon (1981)
Black Bag – Graham Murdoch (1990)
There are also works by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi, Bridget Riley, Patrick Caulfield, Sir Peter Blake, and Daphne Hardy Henrion.
Mistry’s piece can be found at the front of college. Sir Anthony Caro’s Forum (External Link
) used to stand near it but it was removed before the start of the 2004-2005 academic year. In January 2007 its place was taken by Beast Alerted 1, a sculpture by British sculptor Lynn Chadwick.
Traditions
In special formal meals such as Matriculation Dinner or Audit Feast the master usually raises a toast, first to The Queen and then to “Sir Winston". In other Formal Halls a toast to “Sir Winston” is often raised spontaneously and informally by one of the students once the fellows have left.
Notable past and present fellows
See also
Roy Porter - Historian and prolific author
Stephen Roskill - Naval historian
George Steiner - Literary critic and linguistic theorist
Correlli Barnett - Military historian
Jacques Barzun- Historian, cultural critic; (Extraordinary Fellow at Churchill while also Provost, Dean of Graduate studies, and Dean of Faculties at Columbia.)
Frank Hahn - Economist
George Gamow - Cosmologist (overseas fellow)
Mike Gregory - Head of the Institute for Manufacturing
John Kinsella - Poet and novelist
Piers Brendon - Writer and historian
C. B. Macpherson - Political scientist
C. P. Snow - Physicist and novelist
Sir Colin St John Wilson – Architect
Edward Bullard - Geophysicist, former head of the National Physical Laboratory
Archie Howie - Physicist
Richard Keynes - Physiologist
Michael Ashburner - Biologist, former head of the European Bioinformatics Institute and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory
Dick Tizard - Engineer
Michael Young - Sociologist and politician
Nobel laureates
Francis Crick - co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, Medicine, 1962
Kenneth J. Arrow - Economics, 1972
Antony Hewish - co-discoverer of pulsars, Physics, 1974
Gerard Debreu - Economics, 1983
Philip Anderson - Physics, for the behaviour of electrons in magnetic solids, 1977
John Cockcroft - Physics, for using accelerated particles to study atomic nuclei, 1951
Wole Soyinka - Literature, 1986 (overseas fellow)
Eric Maskin - Economics 2007 (overseas fellow)
Notable alumni
See also
Kari Blackburn - BBC World Service executive
Peter Fincham - former controller, BBC1
Sir Christopher Frayling - writer and educationalist
Mike Gascoyne - Force India Formula One Chief Technology Officer
John Gladwin - Bishop of Chelmsford and Chair of Christian Aid
Christopher Haigh - Historian
Diarmaid MacCulloch - Historian
Viscount Monckton - Writer and policy advisor to Margaret Thatcher
Simeon Nyachae - Kenyan Minister and 2002 presidential candidate
Ian Stewart - Mathematician
Gavin Strang - Labour MP
Bjarne Stroustrup - inventor of C++
Sir John Stuttard - Lord Mayor of the City of London 2006/7
Fabian Tassano - Economist and author
Geoffrey Thomas - President of Kellogg College, Oxford
Geoff Travis - Founder of Rough Trade Records label and shops
Neil Turok - Mathematician
Stephen Tweedie - Software Developer
Rick Warden - Actor Band Of Brothers, Rome
Jeremy Warmsley - Singer/SongwriterFurther Information
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