|
|
Information about Churchill College
Churchill College, which received its Royal Charter in 1960, is the
national and Commonwealth memorial to Sir Winston Churchill. It is the
embodiment of his vision of how higher education can benefit society in the
modern age. Like the thirty other colleges in Cambridge University, it is
committed to outstanding academic achievement — twenty of its members,
like Sir Winston himself, have won the Nobel Prize. But it focuses especially
on teaching and research in the fields of science, engineering and technology,
building bridges between these subjects and the arts and humanities, business
and the professions.
Open, friendly, progressive and outward-looking, Churchill also builds
bridges to the wider community. It pioneered the entry of women to all-male
colleges. It seeks and welcomes able students who might not otherwise aspire
to come to Cambridge. It gives bursaries to those in need. And it draws a
rich variety of scholars from abroad, some through Overseas Fellowships and
others through schemes such as the Winston Churchill Scholarships, which
enable outstanding graduate students from the USA to study in Cambridge. In
short, Churchill College provides a most attractive and inspiring environment,
as its founder wished, for new generations keen to learn and to meet the
challenges of the future.
Churchill occupies one of the largest sites of any Cambridge college, over
forty acres close to the University's expanding science, engineering and
mathematics departments. Playing fields adjoin the spacious lawns and quiet
courts of the College, whose buildings, faithful to the traditional collegiate
pattern, were the first major work of modern architecture in the University
— deemed by Pevsner "the best of the new". Churchill has generous
facilities for social, cultural and recreational life — a vital part of
the educational experience. Among these are a splendid theatre, a superb music
centre, elegant halls and galleries, a fitness suite, and tennis and squash
courts. Other amenities include the Sheppard and Wolfson Flats for family
accommodation and the Møller Centre, which provides first-class
residential and conference facilities for academic and business leaders from
around the globe.
The Churchill Archives Centre houses the papers of Sir Winston, Baroness
Thatcher and over 600 of their contemporaries — politicians, diplomats,
civil servants, military figures, scientists and engineers. It is one of the
most important repositories in the world for research into recent history and
a unique resource for studying the art of leadership in diverse spheres. As
well as acting as a magnet to scholars, the Centre is developing an extensive
outreach programme based on digital technology.
Churchill College has some 450 undergraduates, 280 postgraduates, 150
Fellows and 140 staff, and it is sustained by links with over 7000 alumni
throughout the world. Members of the College have achieved distinction in many
fields, advancing knowledge and transforming understanding. They are united by
a dedication to excellence and an authentic sense of community.
|