Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Lincoln Theological College

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Type
  
Private, Christian

Location
  
Lincoln, England

Active
  
1874–1995

Founded
  
1874

Lincoln Theological College httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Campus
  
Drury Lane, Lincoln, LN1 3BP

Similar
  
Westcott House - Cambridge, Keble College - Oxford, Bishop Grosseteste University, The Queen's College

Lincoln Theological College was a theological college in Lincoln, United Kingdom.

Contents

History

The college opened on 25 January 1874. It was also known as Scholae Cancellarii. The building it occupied on Drury Lane, which was originally the county infirmary, closed in 1995 after having its permit as a college recognised for ordination training withdrawn by the Church of England owing to reduced numbers of residential ordination candidates nationally, with an increasing number training on part-time non-residential courses. The college had wanted to remain open, developing itself as a research institution, possibly affiliated to a nearby university. The buildings are now owned by the Lincoln Theological Institute for the Study of Religion and Society (a registered charity), based at the University of Manchester, established in 1997 by Martyn Percy.

Once Lincoln Theological College had closed, the only Anglican theological college in the East Midlands offering training for those entering stipendiary ministry was St John's College, Nottingham, in Bramcote.

Curriculum

At the time of closure the Scholae Cancellarii offered training leading to externally validated and conferred BTh and MA degrees.

Affiliations

Lincoln Theological College worked closely with the then-named Bishop Grossteste College, which at the time was a Church of England teacher training college, and shared courses. It also worked with the University of Nottingham, which validated the BEd degrees of BGC.

In 2009 a School of Theology and Ministry Studies was formed in following the signing, in Lincoln Cathedral, of an agreement between the University of Lincoln, Bishop Grosseteste University College, the Diocese of Lincoln and Lincoln Cathedral on 14 November 2009.

Current situation

The college's former building on Drury Lane was renamed Chad Varah House, in honour of the Samaritans' founder, who was educated at the college and served his title in Lincoln. The building itself is a Grade II Listed building. The original County Hospital was built 1776–77, designed by John Carr of York and William Lumby. The Chapel was added in 1906, by architect Temple Moore. At some point in the late 19th century a large house and water tower were added, and in 1962 the building was extended at the rear.

Notable alumni

  • Hugh Edward Ashdown
  • Henry R.T. Brandreth
  • Antony Bridge
  • Edwin Boston
  • Richard Chartres – current Bishop of London
  • John Dudley Davies
  • Patrick Evans
  • John Frewer
  • John Gibbs (bishop)
  • John Green (Royal Navy chaplain)
  • John Grindrod
  • Lemprière Durell Hammond
  • Alfred Jowett
  • Charles John Klyberg
  • John Moses (dean)
  • Edward Norman
  • Michael John Nott
  • Regin Prenter
  • Gerald Sharp
  • John Shone
  • Ulrich Ernst Simon
  • Mark Strange – current Bishop of Moray, Ross and Caithness
  • Richard Henry McPhail Third
  • Kenneth George Thompson
  • Mark Tully – later BBC correspondent
  • Chad Varah – founder of Samaritans
  • Jeremy Walsh (Bishop)
  • Ambrose Walter Marcus Weekes
  • Alan Peter Winton – current Bishop of Thetford
  • John Yates (bishop)
  • Former Sub-Wardens

  • Michael Ramsey from 1930–6 – later Archbishop of Canterbury from 1961–74
  • Eric Lionel Mascall from 1937–45
  • Basil Stanley Moss from 1946–51
  • Thomas George Adames Baker from 1954–60
  • David Lunn from 1966–70 - later Bishop of Sheffield
  • Former Wardens

  • Walter Julius Carey from 1919–21
  • Eric Symes Abbott from 1936–45
  • Cyril Kenneth Sansbury from 1945–52
  • Oliver Stratford Tomkins from 1953–9
  • Alan Brunskill Webster from 1959–70
  • Andrew Graham (Bishop of Newcastle) from 1970–77
  • References

    Lincoln Theological College Wikipedia