St Peter's College, Oxford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colleges and halls of the University of Oxford
St Peter's College

Front entrance of St Peter's College, Oxford

                               
College name St Peter's College
Latin name Collegium Sancti Petri-le-Bailey
Named after St Peter
Established 1929 though part of the University since the 13th century. Attained full college status in 1961
Sister college none
Master Prof. Bernard Silverman FRS
JCR president Joel Mullan
Undergraduates 396
MCR president Francis Dennig
Graduates 125

St Peter's College, Oxford (Oxford (central))
St Peter's College, Oxford

Location of St Peter's College within central OxfordCoordinates: 51°45′10″N 1°15′39″W / 51.752762, -1.260721
Homepage
Boatclub

St Peter's College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford, Oxford, England, located in New Inn Hall Street. It occupies the site of two of the University's oldest Inns, or medieval hostels - Bishop Trellick's, later New Inn Hall, and Rose Hall - both of which were founded in the 13th century. These were initially part of the University in their own right (William Blackstone became the Principal of New Inn Hall after being appointed the Vinerian Professor of English Law at Oxford). The two halls later became part of Balliol College.

The modern history of the college in its present form began in 1929 when St Peter's Hall was founded by Francis James Chavasse, Bishop of Liverpool, who was concerned at the rising cost of education in the older universities in Britain, and projected St Peter's as a College where promising students, who might otherwise be deterred by the costs of College life elsewhere, could obtain an Oxford education. The commitment to make Oxford accessible to any student of ability, irrespective of means, remains a feature of St Peter's today.

In 1961, the University approved a statute giving St Peter's Hall full collegiate status. With the granting of its Royal Charter in the same year, it took the name St Peter's College. As of 2006, the college has an estimated financial endowment of £34 million. [1]

St Peter's College was the site of the first meeting of the Oxford Round Table.

Contents

[edit] Buildings

St Peter's has an interesting and varied set of buildings, many of them much older than the College itself. The College has, in effect, adapted existing buildings to provide the collective facilities needed for College life, and built new ones to provide for student accommodation. Linton House, a handsome Georgian rectory, dating from 1797, is the entrance to the College, and houses the Porters' Lodge and College library. Canal House, the Master's Lodge, dates from the early 19th century.

The College Dining Hall, known as Hannington Hall after the Victorian missionary, Bishop James Hannington, dates from 1832 and is the only surviving part of New Inn Hall. The College chapel was originally the Church of St Peter-le-Bailey, built in 1874, and the third church of that name on this site. The buildings of the former Oxford Girls' School, which adjoin the original site of the College, have been acquired more recently and provide living accommodation for students, seminar rooms, a Middle Common Room (for postgraduates) and a Music Room.

On-site, students are housed in the modern New Block, in the spacious Latner building and in the Matthews block, which is stylistically challenged.

Most recently, St Peter's has built two new student blocks a few minutes walk from the College, one by the site of the remains of Oxford's Norman castle title paradise street, and the old mill stream, the other behind St Aldate's. Although now operational the Paradise Street accommodation caused much controversy in 2005/2006 due to it being built late, with the then college first year rep, Naveed Somani, reporting to the student press that "we've been screwed over by college" after students were forced to find private accommodation months after it became available to other university students.

Meeting rooms
Room name Capacity Layout
Miles room 40 theatre style
Davis room 12 boardroom style
Theberge room 25 boardroom style
Music room 40 theatre style
Latner room 45 theatre style
Dorfman Centre 60/40 theatre/boardroom style
Junior Common Room 85 theatre style
Chapel 150

[edit] College culture

"The Peterphile" is one of the few college papers to publish four times a term. As well as running the production of the paper the jcr is in charge of the running of the college bar, which remains popular after being refurbished in the autumn of 2007. The current bar manager is Carl King.

[edit] Succession of Masters

  • The Reverend Christopher Maude Chavasse, M.C. (1929)
  • Julian Thornton-Duesbery
  • Robert Wilmot Howard
  • Julian Thornton-Duesbery
  • Sir Alec Cairncross
  • Gerald Aylmer
  • John Barron (until 2003)
  • The Reverend Professor Bernard Silverman FRS (from 2003)

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links