Harris Manchester College, Oxford
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This article is about the college now in Oxford. For other uses Manchester College (disambiguation)
Harris Manchester College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. Formerly known as Manchester College, it is listed in the University Statutes (V.1) as Manchester Academy and Harris College, and at University ceremonies it is called Collegium de Harris et Manchester. Located in Mansfield Road in central Oxford, Harris Manchester is one of very few mixed-sex Higher Education colleges in the UK whose undergraduate places are exclusively for mature students (aged 21 or over). It is the smallest of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford, and as of 2006 had an estimated financial endowment of £7 million.[1]
HistoryThe college started as the Manchester Academy in Manchester in 1786. Originally run by English Presbyterians, it was one of the few remaining dissenting academies that provided religious nonconformists with education. At the time, nonconformists were denied admission to Oxford and Cambridge. The Manchester Academy went back to the well-known Warrington Academy. It taught radical theology as well as modern subjects, such as science, modern languages, language, or history. This did not mean that the classics were neglected. The college changed its location five times before settling in Oxford.
Under Wellbeloved's Principalship 235 students were educated at the college. Divinity students numbered 121 and laymen 114. Of the divinity students 30 did not enter the ministry and 5 entered the Anglican priesthood. Among the lay students were scholars, public servants, notable people in the arts and businessmen. The majority was Unitarian. Among the distinguished Unitarian students were James Martineau (later Principal), William Gaskell, Philip Pearsall Carpenter, John James Tayler (later Principal), Joseph Hunter, Joseph Hutton, William Raynor Wood, Daniel Jones, William Turner, Jr., James Yates, Robert Wallace (later Principal), Mark Philips (prominent Member of Parliament), and Edward Worthington.
Harris Manchester College was granted Permanent Private Hall status in 1990. It was only in 1996 that the college became a full college of Oxford University.
Today the college focuses on mature students (i.e. for those above the age of 21), both for undergraduate and graduate studies. The college tries to continue its liberal and pioneering ethos; considering its mature student focus as a modern means of providing higher education to those that have, in the past, been excluded from it. In its early days, the College supported reforming causes, such as the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts and the abolition of slavery. In 1901 the College was the first academic institution in Britain to accept a woman candidate for the Nonconformist ministry. In the 1920s and 30s the College provided courses for the Workers' Educational Association (W.E.A.). Harris Manchester College is also the base for the Farmington Institute for Christian Studies which sponsors the ongoing training of teachers of Religious Education. Ralph Waller, principal of Harris Manchester, said that although the college provided the Oxford Round Table with an office, "we don't run the ORT in any sense".[2] Student life
Despite the small student body, the college offers a wide array of courses and has a very international atmosphere. Most undergraduate tutorials are carried out in the college, though for some specialist papers undergraduates may be sent to tutors in other colleges. Members are generally expected to dine in the Arlosh Hall, where there is a twice-weekly formal dinner at which grace is always recited and students dress in jackets, ties, and gowns. Aside from the College punt, The Royle Yacht, and a croquet lawn, the college has no real sports facilities. However, the College is collectively a member of a central Oxford gym and health club to which members of the college have free access. In recent years the college's basketball team has been exceptionally successful, winning third place in the intercollegiate cuppers tournament last year. Moreover, Harris Manchester also has an affiliation with neighbouring Wadham College for those interested in rowing and other popular sports. The college boasts one of the largest, if not the largest, specialist non-conformist college theological libraries in Oxford - it owns approximately 70,000 items. The collection has been built up and developed over the two hundred years of the College's existence. It includes a range of artefacts, an antiquarian book collection, and a large collection of manuscripts relating to the college and a specialist collection relating to the Non Conformist and Dissenting movement in England. The college is also the home of a chapel with ornate wood carvings, an organ, and notable stained-glass windows by Sir Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris. Academics/teachers
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