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Trevelyan College, Durham

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Trevelyan College, Durham
HeadProfessor Martyn Evans
JCROllie Bartlett

Trevelyan College, often abbreviated to Trevs, is a college of the University of Durham in North Eastern England. Founded in 1966, the college takes its name from social historian George Macaulay Trevelyan, Chancellor of the University from 1950 to 1957. Originally an all-female college (the last to open in England), the college became fully mixed in 1992. Trevelyan College is noted in Durham for its friendly atmosphere and degree results[1]; it currently heads the collegiate academic league with 87.2% of those who graduated in 2006 doing so with first or upper second class degrees. It is also known for the display of daffodils that surrounds it every year.

Although Trevelyan is a separately registered higher educational institution (HEI)[2], it is different from Oxbridge colleges in that it is owned (and for the most part run) by the University. Again, unlike Oxbridge, all academic tutoring takes place in the University's departments, though every student has a college tutor who acts in a pastoral capacity.

History

Prelude

During the early 1960s, the British Government commissioned the Robbins Report, to look into the future of higher education in the UK. When published, the report recommended the expansion of universities and the student population. This was accepted as Government policy. In 1963, the University of Newcastle was officially established as a separate entity from the University of Durham, which meant that new colleges within Durham were required to meet the new university places that the Government wished to create. As a result, the University planned for three new colleges on Elvet Hill, these went on to become Collingwood, Trevelyan and Van Mildert[3].

A new women's college

Trevelyan was planned to become an all women's college, similar to St. Mary's and St. Aidan's, so as to increase the female population of the student body. The college was built on farmland south of St. Mary's off Elvet Hill Road, which was owned by a local family; the Carpenters[3]. Originally, this land was designed to not only accommodate the new college, but also a 1,500 person capacity University Assembly Hall, however, the site was too small to accommodate both buildings[3]. After much delay the college was opened in October 1966 with 78 students[3]. The official opening took place on Tuesday 12 March 1968 by Lord Butler, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, who was invited in view of the connection G.M. Trevelyan also held with Trinity. During the opening, a serenade in three movements composed by Sir Malcolm Arnold, whose daughter was in the first intake of students, called "The Trevelyan Suite" was played. Other people at the opening include the Chancellor, the Vice-Chancellor, two Pro-Vice-Chancellors, the Bishops of Durham and Ripon (whose wife, Mary Moorman was a relative of Trevelyan and also present) and the Mayor and Mayoress of Durham[3].

Since opening

In 1973, a 300 person capacity hall, the Sir James Knott Hall, was opened in the presence of the Duke of Northumberland[3]. The purpose of the hall was to provide more facilities for Trevelyan students, such as a badminton court and extra music rooms, as well as to create a conference facility for the purpose of wealth creation for the college. In 1988 an extension to the hall; "The Dowrick Suite" was added, named after a Professor of the Law Department, Frank Dowrick, who was a longtime member of the Senior Common Room[3]. Inside the Dowrick suite sits a bust of Mo Mowlam, arguably Trevs most famous alumnus. In 1981, the bar, which had previously been located within the small area now hosting the buttery was moved to its present location in the former cloisters of the college. In order to make this a practical bar environment, the cloisters were roofed over. The area above this new roof is nicknamed "The Goldfish Bowl" by students, due to the proximity of the windows looking into other rooms. It is not unknown for students to hang washing across this space, use it as a sunning spot, or to catch glimpses of fellow students in rooms opposite. In 1991 a new accommodation block was added to the main building, this block, the K block is entirely en-suite and now reserved for finalists[4]. The college became fully mixed in 1992. In 1993 the bar underwent refurbishment and was reopened by Rolf Harris. In 2000, a tennis court was added to the grounds at the back of the college[3].

The college

Building design

Trevelyan college

The internal construction of Trevelyan is very unusual, comprising a string of hexagon-shaped blocks resulting in most rooms containing somewhat unusual angles. At the opening of the college the architect, John Eastwick-Field, said of the design of the college:

"the building had been irregularly planned in outline but close together in complex. The aim had been to create study bedrooms with individulity, a sense of light and space and overall the effort to foster community sense by grouping the rooms into small units of hexagonal shape onto individual landings."[3]

The original blocks are labelled A-J, though there is no "I Block" to be found and there is also a modern block of ensuite bedrooms, K Block, also called the Macaulay Suite, named after Lord Macaulay, G.M. Trevelyan's great-uncle[3].

The layout features rooms based around staircases, landings and courtyards. The entrance hall is referred to as "the Cobbles", although said cobbles are no longer there having been removed during a recent modern refit. A third of the college was fully refurbished in 2005[4].

Approximately 320 fully caterered students can be housed in the building, and around 600 are members of the college, making Trevelyan the third smallest of Durham's seventeen colleges, and the smallest of those maintained by the university council.

The building's unique design has won it a Civic Design Award[5].

Facilities

Trevs has its own comprehensive library, which is open 24 hours a day, music practice room, recording studio, cinema room, computer rooms, bar, buttery and fitness suite; it also possesses a chapel, the Barn, which is used for prayer, talks and musical/dramatic rehearsals.

The Undercroft, a relaxing seating area, links the bar with the rear of the college. The college also has a central quad, although it is actually an irregular icosagon, a setting for the college's musical events and formal ball. To the rear of the college there are landscaped lawns[6] and a tennis court.

The Sir James Knott Hall, catering for sports, theatrical and conference events is situated just across the college main entrance[6].

Student life

Common rooms

All members of college are members of a common room. Undergratuates are members of the Junior Common Room (JCR), although they may opt out of the common room if they wish, although if they do so they are not allowed to attend JCR events, such as the informal and formal ball, or Formal Hall. Postgraduate students are members of the Middle Common Room (MCR), which hosts its own event. Administrative, academic and other members of college are members of the Senior Common Room (SCR).

Arts

The college has a strong history of music, art, and the performing arts. The college has hosted[3], and continues to host art viewings[7], both of local and international artists, as well as boasting a large art collection of its own, including six specially commissioned John Walker paintings which hang in the dining hall[8]. The college hosts an annual musical, with recent years productions being Guys and Dolls, Funny Girl, Return to the Forbidden Planet and High Society. The college has an orchestral society[7], a choir[7], a flute choir[7], and a jazz band[7]; Trevs Jazz, who are regular performers at jazz evenings at the DSU. The college also has a theatre company, the Hill College Theatre Company[9], who put on productions several times a year, recently performing the Canterbury Tales and Translations, The Vagina Monologues and A Midsummer Night's Dream to much critical acclaim[10][11][12].

Sport

The college also has a strong sporting profile, finishing 5th in the college league table in 2008/9[13]. The college has also in recent years been college champions of women's hockey, Women's astro football and basketball (both men's and women's)[13]. Trevelyan College Boat Club is one of the few college rowing teams to qualify for Henley Royal Regatta[14].

Other

Student societies play an important role in college life, with active film and LGBT societies. Trevski organises a college ski trip each year.[15] The college monthly magazine is called Hex magazine[7], named in tribute to the colleges interesting hexagonal shape.

Traditions

The college holds Formal Hall once a fortnight, in which students enter the dining hall in their academic gowns, which must remain worn until the end of silent grace. The formal is signalled over when the JCR president bows out formally to the Principal and student body[3]. JCR events are held every year, with an informal ball and sportman's ball being held at the end of michaelmas term, and a summer ball being held after exams in easter term. Academic gowns are also worn at university matriculation and college matriculation and also at graduation.

The annual Trevs Day takes place after exams in easter term and is a focus of much celebration and revelry for students. Each year it receives a different theme, with the theme for 2009 being Pimm's. The college also hosts TrevStock, an annual music festival for college and university bands which takes place in the quad.

The college regulations state that "any student found picking the daffodils shall be hanged, drawn and quartered at dawn on Palace Green."[16]

Coat of arms

The college arms are modelled closely on the arms of the Trevelyan family, whose crest features a swimming horse, commemorating the legend of the first Trevelyan, who swum his horse from St Michael's Mount to the mainland of Cornwall for a wager, the other knights of Arthur's court having drowned.

The arms of Trevelyan College are blazoned as follows[3]:
Shield:
Gules issuant from water in base barry wavy of four Argent and Azure a demi horse forcene Or, in chief three Saint Cuthbert's crosses Argent
Crest:
Out of a coronet composed of sixteen fleurs de lis set upon a rim alternately large and small a lyre Or, mantled Gules doubled Argent

In the early eighties, a competition was held to name the horse. Its eventual name, Vera, stems from a student innocently assuming that the college motto "Vera Fictis Libentius" was referring to the horse[3].

The College motto "Vera Fictis Libentius" was taken from the inscription of the 1875 statue of Lord Macaulay in the antechamber of the chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge[3].

Connections with the Trevelyan family

Trevelyan College boasts a number of connections with the greater Trevelyan family, some of these include[3]:

Mary Moorman, daughter of G.M. Trevelyan was a member of the Senior Common Room and was awarded an honorary doctor of letters from Durham
Lord Trevelyan, Humphrey Trevelyan, Baron of St Veep, a member of the Trevelyan Governing Body from 1970 until 1977. Lord Trevelyan arranged the grant from the Sir James Knott Trust that provided funding for the Sir James Knott Hall.
The artists Julian Trevelyan and Mary Fedden OBE (his second wife), some of whose work is owned by the college. Mrs Fedden provided significant donations for prizes for original works of art by college members.
Jon and Karen Trevelyan, who are both college tutors.

College officers and fellows

The principal

Professor H. Martyn Evans is the current Principal of Trevelyan College, having previously been principal of John Snow College. He is Professor of Humanities in Medicine and co-Director of the Centre for Medical Humanities. He has been a visiting fellow at the University of Sydney. He is currently a visiting Professor at the University of Otago and joint editor of the Medical Humanities journal. He is an Honorary Fellow of Royal College of General Practitioners.[17]

Former principals

Fellowships

The college has a tradition of visiting fellows, who typically stay for a term, giving a Trevelyan Lecture based upon their research areas[3]. Trevs also hosts the Sir William Luce Fellowship, in a joint project with the Institute of Islamic and Middle-Eastern Studies. Past fellows have included academics from the UK based Universities of Reading and Exeter, as well as the international Universities of Brown, Harvard, Khartoum, Tehran and Sultan Qaboos University in Oman[18][19]

Honorary fellows

Honorary fellowships were awarded between 1996-98 to those people who have greatly aided or have a close association with the college. Normally such people are made members of the SCR.

Trevelyan Society and Trust

The Trevelyan Society is the alumni organisation of the college, whose aims are to inform alumni of goings on in college as well as to keep alumni in touch with each other[3]. It produces an annual magazine: "Hippocampus", a play on the arms of the college. The Trevelyan Trust is a charitable fund aimed at providing prizes and bursaries for Trevelyan students[3].

Scholarships and prizes

Trevs has several scholarships and prizes that are awards to members of the college, some founded by the Trevelyan Trust, others from private donors. A partial list of scholarships and bursaries is included below[3][21]:

  • The Helena Margaret Biss Scholarship
  • The Greenwood Merit Scholarship
  • The Deborah Lavin Scholarship
  • The Ove Arup Scholarship for the Built Environment
  • The Bruhl Scholarship for Modern Languages
  • The G.M. Trevelyan Scholarship
  • The Marion Zunz Travel Bursary

In addition to this the Boat Club also award the Dyfrig Williams Trophy to a member of college who has significantly contributed to college sport.

Notable alumni

See also

Trevelyan College Boat Club

Further reading

Martin, Susan TREVS A Celebration of 40 years of Trevelyan College Durham

References

  1. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevelyan.college/
  2. ^ http://www.eduers.com/University/accredited/uk.html
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Martin, Susan TREVS A Celebration of 40 years of Trevelyan College Durham
  4. ^ a b http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevelyan.college/accommodation/rooms/
  5. ^ http://www.civictrustawards.org.uk/winners/1968/CTA002236/
  6. ^ a b http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevelyan.college/aboutcollege/building/
  7. ^ a b c d e f http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevelyan.college/studentlife/studentactivities/
  8. ^ http://www.artnet.com/artist/17449/john-walker.html
  9. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/DST/document.php?DocumentID=57
  10. ^ http://www.durham21.co.uk/index.php/2009/06/the-many-lives-of-vaginas/
  11. ^ http://www.durham21.co.uk/index.php/2009/06/it-seemed-a-dream/
  12. ^ http://www.durham21.co.uk/index.php/2009/02/the-canterbury-tales-brings-medieval-england-to-modern-day-durham/
  13. ^ a b http://www.teamdurham.com/collegesport/college_champions/
  14. ^ http://www.hrr.co.uk/pdisp.php?pid=84
  15. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevelyan.jcr/JCR/Societies/
  16. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/resources/trevelyan.college/accommodation/CollegeRegulations2009.doc
  17. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/school.health/staff/?username=dhs0hme
  18. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/sgia/imeis/lucefund/fellowship/
  19. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/sgia/imeis/lucefund/visiting/
  20. ^ a b c d http://www.dur.ac.uk/resources/university.calendar/volumei/current/college.trevelyan.pdf
  21. ^ http://www.dur.ac.uk/trevs.alumni/newsletters/index.php?newsletter-show=7
  22. ^ Voice for the People, Durham University, retrieved 2009-12-13