Trinity Hall College
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Trinity Hall (formally The College or Hall of the Holy Trinity in the University of Cambridge, colloquially "Tit Hall" ) is a Colleges of the University of Cambridge, constituent college of the University of Cambridge. Founded in 1350, it is the fifth-oldest surviving college of the university, having been established by William Bateman (bishop), William Bateman, Bishop of Norwich, to train clergymen in canon law after the Black Death. The college has two sister colleges at the University of Oxford: All Souls College, Oxford, All Souls and University College, Oxford, University College. Notable alumni include theoretical physicists Stephen Hawking and Nobel Prize winner David Thouless, Australian Prime Minister Stanley Bruce, Pakistani Prime Minister Khawaja Nazimuddin, Canadian Governor General David Johnston (governor general), David Johnston, philosophers Marshall McLuhan and Galen Strawson, Conservative cabinet minister Geoffrey Howe, Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, writer J. B. Priestley, and Academy Award-winning actress Rachel Weisz.


History

The devastation caused by the Black Death in England of the 1340s included the loss of perhaps half of the population; William Bateman (bishop), Bishop Bateman himself lost nearly 700 of his parish priests, and so his decision to found a college was probably centred on a need to rebuild the priesthood. The site that Bateman chose was the original site of Gonville Hall, which had been founded three years earlier, but was financially struggling. Bateman's clerical aim for the Hall is reflected in the foundation of 1350, when he stated that the college's aim was "the promotion of divine worship and of canon law, canon and civil science and direction of the commonwealth and especially of our church and diocese of Norwich." This led the college to be particularly strong in legal studies, a tradition that has continued over the centuries. At first all colleges in Cambridge were known as "Halls" or "Houses" and then later changed their names from "Hall" to "College". However, when Henry VIII of England, Henry VIII founded Trinity College, Cambridge, Trinity College next door, it became clear that Trinity Hall would continue being known as a Hall. The new foundation's name may have been a punishment for the college's master, Stephen Gardiner, who had opposed the king's remarriage and had endured much of the college's land being removed. It is incorrect to call it Trinity Hall College, although Trinity Hall college (lower case) is, strictly speaking, accurate. A similar situation had existed once before when Henry VI of England, Henry VI founded King's College (in 1441) despite the existence of King's Hall, Cambridge, King's Hall (founded in 1317). King's Hall was later incorporated in the foundation of Trinity College in 1546. Trinity Hall, in addition to having a chapel, also had joint usage of the Church of St John Zacharias with Clare College, Cambridge, Clare Hall, until the church was demolished to enable the construction of King's College, Cambridge, King's College in the 15th century. After this, the college was granted usage of the nearby St Edward King and Martyr, Cambridge, Church of St Edward, King and Martyr on Peas Hill, a connection which remains to this day.


Buildings

The College site on the River Cam, Cam was originally obtained from Bateman's purchase of a house from John de Crauden, Prior of Ely, to house the monks during their study, with Front Court being built within the college's first few decades. The medieval structures remain unaltered, but with their façade altered to a more baroque style during the Mastership of Nathaniel Lloyd, Sir Nathaniel Lloyd in 1710-45.


Chapel

The Chapel was licensed in 1352 and was built by August 1366, when Blessed Urban V, Pope Urban V granted the College permission to celebrate Holy Mass there. Its present decor stems from its 1729–30 renovation; Lloyd had pre-existing graves removed to the Ante-Chapel, and the walls decorated with Panelling#Wainscot panelling, wainscotting and the ceiling with past Masters' Escutcheon (heraldry), crests. The Chapel was extended east in 1864, during which the original piscina was discovered and hidden behind a secret door. The painting behind the communion table is Maso da San Friano's ''Salutation'', loaned from the Fitzwilliam Museum in 1957, replacing an earlier painting by Giacomo Stella.


Dining Hall

The Dining Hall was rebuilt under Lloyd along similar lines to the Chapel, with rendered walls replaced by wainscotting and medieval beams by baroque carvings. A large portrait of Lloyd dominates the wall behind high table; Lloyd supposedly made it irremovable from its wainscot surroundings, so that his representation can never be erased from the College.


Libraries

The college library was built in the late 16th century, with the permission of Elizabeth I and probably during the mastership of Thomas Preston (writer), Thomas Preston, and is now principally used for the storage of the college's manuscripts and rare books; it is one of the few remaining chained library, chained libraries left in the country. The new Jerwood Library overlooking the river was opened by Geoffrey Howe, Lord Howe of Aberavon in 1999, and stores the college's modern book collection.


Other

The college owns properties in the centre of Cambridge, on Bateman Street and Thompson's Lane, and on its Wychfield site next to Fitzwilliam College, where most of the college's sporting activity takes place. Mary Hockaday was appointed Master in May 2022 and took up the post in September that year.


Historical allegations of misconduct


2015–2020 allegations of sexual misconduct

In 2019 and 2020, the College experienced unwelcome publicity after the reporting of allegations of sexual misconduct scandals involving Dr William O’Reilly, the former Acting Senior Tutor, and Dr Peter Hutchinson, a former fellow. In 2015, 10 students submitted formal complaints of verbal sexual harassment by Dr Peter Hutchinson, a college fellow. Hutchinson was asked, and agreed, to withdraw permanently from further teaching and from attending social events at which students might be present. However, due to an alleged error by the College in 2017, Hutchinson was invited to a college event, which was also open to students. His attendance was in breach of the prior agreement and resulted in an outcry among students and alumni. Thereafter, in 2019, a formal agreement as to what events Hutchinson could attend was approved by the Governing Body. He remained an Emeritus, Emeritus Fellow of the College. This resulted in further protest from students and alumni as well as more widespread coverage. ''The Guardian'' called it "a gross betrayal to (sic) the students" and "a dangerous environment for women students to study". It was reported in November 2019 that Hutchinson had resigned. In February 2020, a ''Tortoise Media'' investigation alleged that William O’Reilly, the Acting Senior Tutor, had seriously mishandled a disciplinary process of a student he had a "close relationship" with, who was the subject of multiple allegations of sexual assault. ''Tortoise'' reported that O’Reilly himself had given witness testimony on behalf of the student at the disciplinary hearings into the assaults. Moreover, during this disciplinary process O'Reilly was himself the subject of a further allegation of sexual assault, which he denied. ''Tortoise'' reported that the College's Master, Jeremy Morris, had been made aware of the allegations against O'Reilly, but had allowed him to continue teaching for a further five months and oversee the student disciplinary process until the complaints were investigated by police. ''Tortoise'' alleged that as of the date of publication, no formal investigation had been made into this complaint, and no safeguarding measures had been put in place. In February 2020, Morris and O’Reilly agreed to "step back" from their roles in college pending investigation. In March 2020, the Governing Body authorised an immediate independent external inquiry into the College’s handling of all allegations raised and matters referred to in the ''Tortoise'' article, to be led by Gemma White QC. The inquiry recommended Trinity Hall consider disciplinary action against Morris in relation to his handling of one allegation. Morris resigned as Master in August 2021. In September 2022 the College published White's report alongside a response document that indicated the actions it had taken to make improvements to the structures and culture of the institution.


2018–2023 allegations of plagiarism

In June 2023, allegations of plagiarism by O'Reilly publicly emerged, having been first reported to the university in 2021. Documents shown to the ''Financial Times'' showed how nearly half of O'Reilly's published article 'Fredrick Jackson Turner’s Frontier Thesis, Orientalism, and the Austrian Militärgrenze' in a 2018 volume of the ''Journal of Austrian-American History'' had been plagiarised from the work of a third-year undergraduate. O'Reilly had been responsible for marking the student's work and had commented that it "coined an original narrative." After a two-year investigation by the University, the plagiarism was found by a tribunal to be “the product of negligent acts but was not deliberate”. O'Reilly remained in post but Penn State University Press, the journal's publisher, retracted the paper concerned saying that it presented "material without credit." O'Reilly did not contest or dispute the retraction.


Student life


Combination Rooms

Trinity Hall has active Junior, Middle and Senior Combination Rooms for undergraduate, postgraduate and senior members of the college community respectively. The Middle Combination Room is located in Front Court, while the Junior Combination Room is adjacent to the college bar in North Court. Both the MCR and JCR have highly active committees and organize popular socials for their members across the term.


Societies


Trinity Hall Boat Club

Trinity Hall's oldest and largest society, the Trinity Hall Boat Club, Boat Club was founded in 1827, and has had a long and distinguished history; notably from 1890 until 1898, when the college stayed Head of the Mays for 33 consecutive days of rowing, which remains to this day the longest continuous defence by a single club of the bumps headship. The college won all but one of the events in the 1887 Henley Royal Regatta, making it the most successful Cambridge college in Henley's history. The current boathouse, built in 1905 in memory of Henry Latham, is on the River Cam, a short walk from the college.


Trinity Hall Christian Union

Trinity Hall's Christian Union was founded in 1877, making it the second oldest JCR-listed society. It is part of the broader Cambridge Inter-Collegiate Christian Union.


Hesperides

Trinity Hall's literary society, the Hesperides, was founded in 1923 by Neil McLeod Innes with the intention of discussing literary and artistic subjects. Named after the seminal work of the 17th-century poet Robert Herrick (poet), Robert Herrick, in its early years the society hosted T. S. Eliot, J. B. Priestley and Nikolaus Pevsner at its various dinners and functions. Old Hesperideans have gone on to some notoriety, none more so than Donald Maclean (spy), Donald Maclean, a spy and member of the Cambridge Five. The Hesperides disbanded in 1976, but was re-founded in 2020 to encourage literary activity after the COVID-19 pandemic; speakers have included Trinity Hall alumni Nicholas Hytner and Sophie Winkleman.


Gallery

File:Trinity Hall, Cambridge by Loggan 1690 - sanders 6178.jpg, Trinity Hall in 1690 File:Cambridge University, Trinity Hall.jpg, The original entrance File:Cambridge University, Trinity Hall Demolished.jpg, The demolition of the original entrance File:Trinity Hall, Cambridge University.jpg, Front Court File:TrinityHallWall.jpg, Armorial Detail in Front Court File:Cambridge University, Trinity Hall Master's Garden.jpg, The Master's Garden File:Cambridge University, Trinity Hall Chapel View.jpg, South Court File:Cambridge University, Trinity Hall Library.jpg, The Elizabethan Library File:Trinity hall old library.JPG , The Elizabethan Library File:Trinity Hall Library - geograph.org.uk - 678201.jpg, The Jerwood Library File:Wychfield, Storey's Way - geograph.org.uk - 614413.jpg, Wychfield Site File:Trinity Hall College Cricket Ground - geograph.org.uk - 1422827.jpg, College cricket ground File:Cambridge boathouses - Trinity Hall.jpg, Trinity Hall Boat Club, T.H.B.C. Club-House on the River Cam


People associated with Trinity Hall


Masters

On 31 May 2022, Mary Hockaday was announced as the next Master.


Deans

The current Dean is the Revd Dr Stephen Plant. The role of Dean incorporates that of Chaplain in other colleges.


Fellows


Notable alumni

File:Charles Howard (1536-1624), by Daniel Mytens.jpg, Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral of the United Kingdom, Lord High Admiral File:Prime Minister Stanley Bruce (Retouched).png, Stanley Bruce, Stanley Bruce, 1st Viscount of Melbourne, Prime Minister of Australia File:Khawaja Nazimuddin of Pakistan.JPG, Khawaja Nazimuddin, Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin, Prime Minister of Pakistan File:J B Priestley at work in his study, 1940. (7893553148).jpg, J. B. Priestley, novelist, playwright and broadcaster File:Marshall McLuhan.jpg, Marshall McLuhan, Canadian philosopher File:Lord Geoffrey Howe (cropped).jpg, Geoffrey Howe, Geoffrey Howe, Baron Howe of Aberavon, Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Deputy Prime Minister File:Hans Blix in Vienna 2002.jpg, Hans Blix, Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs (Sweden), Minister for Foreign Affairs File:David Lloyd Johnston(Brubacher House).jpg, David Johnston (governor general), David Johnston, Governor General of Canada File:Stephen Hawking.StarChild.jpg, Stephen Hawking, Lucasian Professor of Mathematics File:Guy Scott.png, Guy Scott, President of Zambia File:Andrew Marr - Vladimir Putin's interview about Olympics in Sochi (2014-01-17) 09.jpg, Andrew Marr, journalist and broadcaster File:CarolineSHill.jpg, Caroline S. Hill, head of the Developmental Signalling Laboratory at the Francis Crick Institute File:Rachel Weisz Cannes 2015.jpg, Rachel Weisz, Academy Awards, Oscar-winning actress File:Pooley PodiumF Ventouxman 2017.jpg, Emma Pooley, Olympic Games, Olympic silver-medallist cyclist and presenter File:Tom James MBE.jpg, Tom James (rower), Tom James, double Olympic Games, Olympic gold-medallist rower File:Official portrait of Rt Hon Oliver Dowden MP crop 2.jpg, Oliver Dowden, Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom * Robert McNeill Alexander – zoologist * Zafar Ansari – Surrey County Cricket Club, Surrey and England cricket team, England cricketer * Waheed Arian – physician and radiologist, founder of telemedicine charity Arian Teleheal * Thomas Bilney – Protestant reformer and martyr * Hans Blix – Former UN Chief Weapons Inspector * Stanley Bruce – Prime Minister of Australia, 1923–29 * Richard Boyle (rower), Richard Boyle – rower. Bronze medal in 1908 Olympics * Edward Carpenter – socialist poet and homosexual activist * John Cockett – Hockey player. Bronze medal in 1952 Olympics * William Cooke (priest, born 1821), William Cooke – Hymn writer * Archibald Craig – Fencer. Competed in the 1924 and 1948 Olympics * Felix Creutzig – Physicist and Climate Change Economists * Don Cupitt – Philosopher of Religion and scholar of Christian theology * Sir Charles Dilke – Victorian politician * Laurence Doherty – Tennis player, Olympic gold medalist and Wimbledon Champion * Reginald Doherty – Tennis player, Olympic gold medalist and Wimbledon Champion * Lionel Elvin – Educationist * Ronald Firbank – Novelist * Billy Fiske – Bobsleigh Olympian and first American fatality of WWII * Norman Fowler – Politician * Aubrey de Grey – Anti-ageing theorist * Frances Harrison – journalist * Stephen Hawking – Physicist * Arthur Henderson, Baron Rowley - Labour politician; Secretary of State for Air, 1947–51 * Robert Herrick (poet), Robert Herrick – poet * Matthew Holness – Perrier Comedy Award-winning creator of Garth Marenghi * Andy Hopper – Computer scientist * Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham – admiral * Geoffrey Howe – Former MP and Chancellor of the Exchequer * Nicholas Hytner – Theatre and film director * Robin Legge – music critic * Magnus Linklater – Journalist * Tom James (rower), Tom James – Rower, double Olympian and Olympic Gold medallist * Greville Janner – Former Labour MP and Peer * David Johnston (governor general), David Johnston – The Governor General of Canada * Vladimir Kara-Murza – Russian author and political prisoner * Harold Kitching – Rower. Bronze medal in 1908 Olympics * Donald Duart Maclean, Donald Maclean – Soviet spy * Andrew Marr – Political journalist and broadcaster * Adam Mars-Jones – British novelist and critic * Brett Mason – Australian Senator * Alfred Maudslay – Archaeologist, explorer, and diplomat * Alan Nunn May – Physicist and Soviet spy * Reginald McKenna – Chancellor of the Exchequer during World War I * Marshall McLuhan – Media theorist * John Meyrick, Sir John Meyrick – Rower. Silver medal in 1948 Olympics * Peter Millett, Baron Millett – Law Lord * John Monckton, 1st Viscount Galway – politician * Khawaja Nazimuddin – Pakistan's second Prime Minister * Donald Nicholls, Baron Nicholls of Birkenhead – Law Lord * David Oliver (doctor), David Oliver – Geriatrician, President of the British Geriatrics Society * Tony Palmer (director), Tony Palmer – Film screenwriter and director * Michael Peppiatt – Art historian * Jean Christophe Iseux von Pfetten, Baron von Pfetten – Professor, Ambassador and Senator * Emma Pooley – Olympic silver medalist * Alistair Potts – British World Champion coxswain * J.B. Priestley – Writer * William Barnard Rhodes-Moorhouse – First airman to be awarded the Victoria Cross * Abigail Rokison – Shakespeare academic * David Sheppard – Bishop and cricketer * John Silkin – Former Government minister * Samuel Silkin – Baron Silkin of Dulwich, of North Leigh in the County of Oxfordshire – former MP and Attorney-General * William Smith (field hockey), William Smith – Hockey player. Gold medal in 1920 Olympics * Tony Slattery – Perrier Comedy Award-winning comedian * Douglas Stuart (rower), Douglas Stuart – Rower. Bronze medal in 1908 Olympics * Leslie Stephen – Victorian writer and critic * Galen Strawson – Philosopher * Sidney Swann, Sidney Earnest Swann – Rower, gold medalist in 1912 Olympics * Cyril Julian Hebden Taylor, Sir Cyril Taylor - Businessman and social entrepreneur * John Paskin Taylor, John Taylor – Hockey player. Bronze medal in 1952 Olympics * John Thomas, Baron Thomas of Cwmgiedd – Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales * David J. Thouless – theoretical physicist, Nobel Prize and Wolf Prize winner * Nicholas Tomalin – Journalist and reporter * Mark Tully – BBC radio broadcaster * Edmund de Waal – Ceramic artist and author * Terry Waite – Fellow Commoner of Trinity Hall * Rachel Weisz – Academy Award-winning actress * Sophie Winkleman – Actress * John Wodehouse, 3rd Earl of Kimberley – Polo player, Olympics gold medalist


See also

* June Event * Trinity Hall Boat Club


Notes


References


Bibliography

* ''The Hidden Hall: Portrait of a Cambridge College'', Peter Pagnamenta, * ''Trinity Hall: The History of a Cambridge College, 1350-1975'', Charles Crawley, * ''Warren's Book'' (Ed. 1911 by A.W.W.Dale) * ''Trinity Hall or, The college of scholars of the Holy Trinity of Norwich, in the University of Cambridge'', Henry Elliot Malden. (1902). London: F.E. Robinson.


External links


Trinity Hall web page

Trinity Hall June Event

Trinity Hall Boat Club
{{Authority control Trinity Hall, Cambridge, 1350 establishments in England Educational institutions established in the 14th century Colleges of the University of Cambridge Grade I listed buildings in Cambridge Grade I listed educational buildings