United Theological College, Aberystwyth
The United Theological College located in Aberystwyth, in the county of Ceredigion in mid Wales was the ministerial training college of the Presbyterian Church of Wales and an associate college of the University of Wales. According to the Cardiganshire County History,[1] 'Theol Coll' (as it was affectionately known in the town) opened in Aberystwyth in 1906 on the seafront site of the former Customs House. This in turn was demolished and the impressive stone-built Cambrian Hotel was built on the site in 1896 to the design of George Croydon Marks, engineer to the Aberystwyth Improvement Company.
The hotel failed to prosper and the building was purchased by David Davies Esq. M.P. in 1906 and was presented to the Calvinistic Methodist Connexion as a residential theological college, at a total cost of about £30,000. The professors and students of Trevecca College, in Breconshire, were transferred to the new college in the autumn of 1906. In 1910 there were about 30 students.
Later, because of the falling number of students training for the ministry, the college opened its doors to students wanting to take a Theology degree as an academic subject alone. Degrees offered included Bachelor of Divinity (BD) and the Master of Theology (MTh).
Former Principals of the college include Rev Prof Samuel Ifor Enoch (1963–1979), Rev Prof Rheinallt Nantlais Williams (1979–1980) and Rev Prof Dr John Tudno Williams (1998–2002). Other lecturers at the college included Prof E G Bowen and Prof Sir Glanmor Williams, the latter an occasional visiting lecturer. Professor Bruce M. Metzger, the American biblical scholar and textual critic of Princeton Theological Seminary gave a lecture at the college in 1981.[2]
The United Theological College in Aberystwyth closed in 2002, when the Presbyterian Church of Wales relocated its ministerial training to Bangor. The college's extensive library, which contained many rare and old theological books, is now mainly held at the University Library in Lampeter.
Notable staff and alumni
Principals
- Dr Owen Prys (1857–1934), Principal 1906–27, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Wales in 1910.[3]
- Howel Harris Hughes (1873–1956), Principal 1927–39, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Wales during World War II, 1939–41.[4]
- Rev Prof Gwilym Edwards, Principal 1939–49, and Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Wales.
- Rev Prof William Richard Williams, Principal 1949–62, and President of the Council of Churches of Wales, and Chairman of the British Committee of the Presbyterian Alliance.
- Rev Prof Samuel Ifor Enoch, Principal 1963–1978.
- Rev Prof Rheinallt Nantlais Williams, Principal 1978–1980.
- Rev Dr Elfed ap Nefydd Roberts, MA, DD, Principal 1980–1997.
- Rev Prof Dr John Tudno Williams, Principal 1998–2002, and Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Wales 2006-7.
Lecturers
- Prof E G Bowen lectured on Church History.
- William David Davies, Presbyterian minister and writer on theological topics.
- Gwynn ap Gwilym, Chaired Bard, and author of several works on Welsh literature and a commentary on Deuteronomy.
- Huw Owen, Welsh theologian, writer and academic, Professor of New Testament 1949–53.
- Prof Alan P. F. Sell, Professor of Christian Doctrine and Philosophy of Religion.[5]
- Rev Prof David Williams, Welsh Calvinistic Methodist minister and theological tutor.
- Prof Sir Glanmor Williams was an occasional lecturer on Church History.
- Prof Stephen Nantlais Williams, Professor of Theology 1980–91.
Alumni
- Glenn A. Christodoulou, Chairman of the Crimean War Research Society from 1983–95.
- Rev Prof J. E. Wynne Davies, graduated BD in 1963. Lectured periodically in Church History and Pastoral Studies at the Theological College and was editor of the Historical Journal of the Presbyterian Church of Wales from 1977 to 2000. He has been the Chairman of the History Committee since 1988 and was curator of the Calvinistic Methodist Archives deposited at the National Library of Wales between 1983 and 2007. He was Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Wales, 2000–2001.
- James Daniel Evans (1870–1936), Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Wales, 1935-6.
- John Harris Hughes, Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Wales in 1975
- David Evan Jones, missionary in India..
- H.E. The Mt Revd. Msgr Jerome Lloyd OSJV took a BD at the college.[6]
- Prof J. E. Caerwyn Williams, formerly Professor of Irish at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and the first Director of the University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies.[7]
References
- ↑ Cardiganshire County History Vol III (p502)
- ↑ Jacobus H. Petzer and Patrick J. Hartin (editors) A South African Perspective on the New Testament: Essays by South African New Testament Scholars presented to Bruce Manning Metzger during his Visit to South Africa in 1985 (1986) pg 3
- ↑ Owen Prys on Welsh Biography Online
- ↑ Bangor Civic Society – Welsh Biography Online
- ↑ Sell on Theopedia
- ↑ H.E. The Mt Revd. Msgr Jerome Lloyd OSJV – The Brighton Oratory website
- ↑ Professor JE Caerwyn Williams Scholar and polyglot who was a world authority on Celtic language and literature – The Guardian – 27 September 1999