Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I THE FOUNDATION OF DOWNING COLLEGE
- Chapter II A COLLEGE ELECTION
- Chapter III UNDERGRADUATES IN BONDS
- Chapter IV THE ATTACK ON HEADS OF HOUSES
- Chapter V CHRISTOPHER WORDSWORTH
- Chapter VI THE RELIGIOUS TESTS
- Chapter VII CHANCELLORS AND HIGH STEWARDS
- Chapter VIII TOWN AND GOWN
- Chapter IX TROUBLE AT THE FITZ WILLIAM
- Chapter X INTERNAL REFORM
- Chapter XI THE ROYAL COMMISSION
- Chapter XII BETWEEN THE TWO COMMISSIONS
- Chapter XIII STATUTE XLI AND THE THREE REGIUS PROFESSORSHIPS
- Chapter XIV THE STATUTORY COMMISSION AND THE UNIVERSITY
- Chapter XV THE STATUTORY COMMISSIONERS AND TRINITY COLLEGE
- Chapter XVI CAMBRIDGE AS IT WAS
- Appendices
- Index
Chapter I - THE FOUNDATION OF DOWNING COLLEGE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter I THE FOUNDATION OF DOWNING COLLEGE
- Chapter II A COLLEGE ELECTION
- Chapter III UNDERGRADUATES IN BONDS
- Chapter IV THE ATTACK ON HEADS OF HOUSES
- Chapter V CHRISTOPHER WORDSWORTH
- Chapter VI THE RELIGIOUS TESTS
- Chapter VII CHANCELLORS AND HIGH STEWARDS
- Chapter VIII TOWN AND GOWN
- Chapter IX TROUBLE AT THE FITZ WILLIAM
- Chapter X INTERNAL REFORM
- Chapter XI THE ROYAL COMMISSION
- Chapter XII BETWEEN THE TWO COMMISSIONS
- Chapter XIII STATUTE XLI AND THE THREE REGIUS PROFESSORSHIPS
- Chapter XIV THE STATUTORY COMMISSION AND THE UNIVERSITY
- Chapter XV THE STATUTORY COMMISSIONERS AND TRINITY COLLEGE
- Chapter XVI CAMBRIDGE AS IT WAS
- Appendices
- Index
Summary
On 22 September 1800 a royal charter for the incorporation of a new college at Cambridge, to be styled Downing College, passed the Great Seal, and as several of the colleges had far fewer undergraduates than they could easily accommodate, this addition to an overstocked market was probably considered by some persons as particularly inopportune. Yet however unwelcome the foundation of Downing was to such colleges as were ruefully examining their lists of annual admissions, there was a hope that it might mark a turning point in the history of the University. The youngest of the existing colleges had been founded more than two hundred years before, and all of them were living under statutes which belonged to a by-gone age and precluded them from meeting the needs and requirements of a changed world, even if they had desired to do so. The wish, indeed, was not there, but it might very well arise if they found themselves unsuccessfully competing with a rival institution which owed its prosperity to its more enlightened statutes. Thus the foundation of Downing gave an opportunity of pointing the way to reform, and, if the venture had prospered, that steep and stony road might have been taken.
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- Early Victorian Cambridge , pp. 1 - 7Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1940