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Girton College, Cambridge
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Girton College, Cambridge

Girton College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England. The College was established on October 16, 1869 by Emily Davies and Barbara Bodichon, as the first residential college for women in England. The college became mixed in 1977 with the arrival of the first male Fellows; male undergraduates have been admitted since 1979.

The main site for Girton is about 2.5 miles northwest of the city centre. There is also an accommodation annexe, Wolfson Court, situated next to the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences, in the western suburbs and within easy walking distance of the University Library and town centre.

Girtonians are known for their chant of "We are Girton - super Girton! No one likes us, but we don't care!", in imitation of the Millwall fans' famous song: "No One Likes Us - We Don't Care."[1] The reference to "no one likes us" is supposedly due to the relative distance of Girton in comparison to many of the other colleges. Anecdotes about the distance of Girton from other Cambridge colleges are plentiful - for example, by popular legend, more Cambridge students have visited Delhi than Girton College.

In the Gilbert and Sullivan opera Utopia, Limited, a principal character, Princess Zara, is returning from her studies at Girton, and her entrance is heralded by a song called "Oh, maiden rich in Girton lore." In an earlier G&S opera, Princess Ida, the princess founds a women's university, and the subject of women's education in the Victorian era is broadly explored and travestied.

The Girton Pioneers (tune of The British Grenadiers), 1871, honours the first three women to sit the Tripos exams
The Girton Pioneers (tune of The British Grenadiers), 1871, honours the first three women to sit the Tripos exams

Girton College Hall
Girton College Hall

Eliza Baker Court
Eliza Baker Court

The pool, before its recent refurbishment
The pool, before its recent refurbishment

Contents


History

The College was established on October 16, 1869 by Emily Davies and Barbara Bodichon, as the first residential college for women in England.

It was called the College for Women, and was located at Benslow House, Hitchin, a town in Hertfordshire, England. The first group of students were known as The Pioneers. In 1872 the present site, located about two and a half miles northwest of the centre of Cambridge, next to the village of Girton was purchased; the College was then renamed Girton College, and opened at the new location in October of 1873.

In 1921 a Committee was appointed to draft a Charter for the College. By the summer of 1923, under the conduct of the Master of Emmanuel College the Committee completed the task, and on 21 August, 1924 the King granted the Charter to ?the Mistress and Governors of Girton College? as a Body Corporate. Having received a Charter, the college applied for coat-of-arms that was derived from the arms of its founders and benefactors: Mr H.R. Tomkinson, Madame Bodichon (née Leigh Smith), Henriette Maria, Lady Stanley of Alderley (daughter of the 13th Viscount Dillon), ? and Miss Emily Davies who did not have arms and hence was represented by the Welsh colours, vert and argent. The Rev. E.E. Dorling submitted a great variety of designs to the Council, however the task was not easy. ?A patch-work of elaborate charges and many colours was to be avoided. Mr Tomkinson?s fascinating martlets and Lady Stanley?s lion had to be abandoned with regret, as was also a design of green and silver chequers which would have given more prominence to Miss Davies.? [2]

Finally in 1928 the design was accepted by all and the College was granted the following:

We ... grant and assign unto The Mistress and Governors of Girton College the Arms following that is to say: Quarterly Vert and Argent a cross flory countercharged a Roundel Ermine and in the second and third quarters a Crescent Gules, ... to be borne and used for ever, hereafter by the Mistress and Governors of Girton College and by their Successors upon Seals Shields or otherwise according to the Laws of Arms. [3]

The arms described are simple both in shape and colours, and represent the four major benefactors. It must be noted, however, that at this stage Girton was not a college yet, nor were its members members of the University. Women at Cambridge had to wait until after another war; eventually, on 8th December 1947 the long expected change came, and ?Girton & Newnham will no longer be ?recognised institutions for the higher education for women? but colleges of the university?[4]. As academic dress, gowns were adopted with little changes (the sleeves had to be closed so that even in the summer, when women wear short sleeved dresses their bare shoulders do not show), and the square caps were chosen as head-dress. The proper dress of the gown and cap was observed at the first honorary degree to a woman, given to the Queen, an LL.D. on 21 October 1948.

Over the years, many additions have considerably expanded the size of the college, most recently the award-winning library extension [5]. Numerically and geographically, Girton is now one of the largest Colleges in Cambridge. However, the geographical separation means that the majority of people socialise within the College to a greater extent than at most other Colleges, which is said to create a distinctive, even cosy, atmosphere that is well renowned throughout the University. Girton also proudly houses an Egyptian mummy named "Hermione", and is the only Cambridge college to have its own indoor heated swimming pool.

On April 27, 1948, women were admitted to full membership of the University of Cambridge, and Girton College received the status of a College of the University. However, to remember the time when women were not allowed to obtain degrees of the University of Cambridge, no gowns are worn during the college feast, when students in their final year are celebrated.

The college became mixed in 1977 with the arrival of the first male Fellows; male undergraduates have been admitted since 1979.

Notable alumni

Name Birth Death Career
Hertha Marks Ayrton 1854 1923 Electrical engineer
Margaret Canovan 1939 Professor of political theory
Isabel Cooper-Oakley 1853 1914 Theosophical writer
Delia Derbyshire 1937 2001 Musician, composer
Brenda Hale 1945 Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
Mary Arden 1947 Lord Justice of Appeal
Rosalyn Higgins 1937 President of the International Court of Justice
Arianna Huffington 1950 Political author and activist
Wendy Holden 1965 Novelist
Dorothy Jewson 1884 1964 British politician
Julie Kirkbride MP 1960 British politician
Rosamond Lehmann 1901 1990 Novelist
Rachel Lomax 1945 Deputy Governor of the Bank of England
Sheila Scott Macintyre 1910 1960 Mathematician
Ada Isabel Maddison Mathematician
Margrethe II of Denmark 1940 Queen Regnant of Denmark
Dorothy Marshall Historian, educator
Annie Maunder Astronomer
Anna Maxted 1969 Novelist
Constance Maynard British feminist, educator
Terry Murphy Co-founder of seminal lounge-tinged electro outfit Moogtastic
Margaret Mountford Former Herbert Smith Partner, now star of BBC's The Apprentice
Sarojini Naidu 1879 1949 Poet, politician
Joseph O'Neill 1964 Novelist, non-fiction writer
Sheila Pim Author
Audrey Price Chemist
Emily James Smith Putnam Educator, historian
Gisela Richter 1882 1972 Classical archaeologist, art historian
Joan Robinson 1903 1983 Economist
Diana Ross 1910 2000 Author
Clara Ruth Rouse Missionary, ecumenical leader
Ethel Sargant 1863 1918 Botanist
Charlotte Angas Scott 1858 1931 Mathematician
Irene Spry 1907 1998 Economic historian
Alice Stewart 1906 2002 Epidemiologist
Marilyn Strathern 1941 Social Anthropologist
Steph Swainston 1974 Writer
Bertha Swirles 1903 1999 Physicist
Princess Takamado 1953 Princess of Japan
Sandi Toksvig 1958 Comedian
Renee Winegarten Literary critic
Barbara Adam Wootton 1897 1988 Social scientist, economist
Dorothy Wrinch 1894 1976 Mathematical biologist
Grace Chisholm Young 1868 1944 Mathematician

For details of graduates in mathematics up to 1940 see

Institutions named after Girton College

See also

Notes

Further reading

  • Girton: Thirty Years in the Life of a Cambridge College. Third Millennium Publishing, 2006.

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