Neha Patil (Editor)

Westcott House, Cambridge

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Established
  
1881

Phone
  
+44 1223 741000

Founded
  
1881

Named for
  
Brooke Foss Westcott

Website
  
www.westcott.cam.ac.uk

Founder
  
Brooke Foss Westcott

Principal
  
Chris Chivers

Westcott House, Cambridge

Location
  
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, UK

Address
  
Jesus Ln, Cambridge CB5 8BP, UK

Notable alumni
  
Jeremy Morris, John Robinson, Andrew Hunter, David Galliford, Stuart Hallam

Similar
  
Ridley Hall - Cambridge, Wesley House, Westminster College - Cambridge, University of Cambridge, College of the Resurrection

Profiles

Westcott House is a Church of England theological college based in Jesus Lane in the centre of the university city of Cambridge in the United Kingdom (though it is not part of the university). Its main activity is training people for ordained ministry in the Church of England and other Anglican churches. Westcott House is a founder member of the Cambridge Theological Federation. The college is considered by many to be modern catholic or Liberal Catholic in its tradition, but accepts ordinands from a range of traditions in the Church of England.

Contents

History

Westcott House began its life in 1881 as the Cambridge Clergy Training School. Brooke Foss Westcott, the then Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge was its first president. He later became the Bishop of Durham. A pioneering and respected New Testament scholar himself, the school was the product of Westcott's own passionate concern to raise the standard of clergy education and to equip clergy to meet the challenges of parish ministry. Westcott was also exercised by the way in which the Church of England was increasingly dominated by parties and factions. Westcott himself eschewed any party affiliation. The College has often been associated with a liberal catholic ethos, although its essential charism embraces the breadth of the Church of England and the wider church: 'As a scholar, educator, priest and prophet, Westcott's legacy to the Church of England challenges sectarianism, ignorance, complacency and empty faith. This is the spirit which Westcott House seeks to honour today, drawing students from all backgrounds to prepare them for ministry in this historic centre of Christian learning'.

In response to the Faith in the City report, published in 1985, the College has retained a firm commitment to develop expertise and capacity in the field of urban ministry and mission. Through its partnership with the Diocese of Manchester, the College has pioneered patterns of context-based learning and innovative approaches to contextual theology for over twenty years. These approaches have been widely imitated and developed by other theological education institutions. In recent years, the College has also developed a programme for continuing ministerial development through the Westcott Foundation.

The College provides training pathways in conjunction with the University of Cambridge and the University of Durham. It describes itself as 'the home of a diverse, inclusive and international community of people who share a vision of ministry to all society'. Drawing on the inspiration of B. F. Westcott and others, its ethos is expressed in a Rule of Life, which was adopted in 2014.

List of principals

The head of Westcott House is known as the principal. All the principals of the Clergy Training School and of Westcott House have thus far been ordained Anglican priests.

  • 1887–1901: Frederic Chase
  • 1901–1911: Henry Knight
  • 1911–1916: Charles Lambert
  • 1916–1919: Closed during World War I
  • 1919–1943: Bertram Cunningham
  • 1943–1947: William Greer
  • 1948–1961: Kenneth Carey
  • 1962–1972: Peter Walker
  • 1972–1981: Mark Santer
  • 1981–1993: Rupert Hoare
  • 1993–2006: Michael Roberts
  • 2006–2015: Martin Seeley
  • 2015–present: Chris Chivers
  • Notable staff

    Besides the aforementioned principals, notable staff have included:

  • Charles Freer Andrews, vice-principal; then missionary, educator and social reformer in India
  • Michael Beasley, chaplain, tutor and vice-principal; current Bishop suffragan of Hertford
  • Spencer Carpenter, vice-principal; later Dean of Exeter
  • John Collins, vice-principal: later Canon of St Paul's Cathedral
  • Don Cupitt, vice-principal; later Dean of Emmanuel College, Cambridge
  • Charles Garrad, vice-principal; then missionary and Bible translator in Burma
  • John Habgood, vice-principal; later Bishop of Durham and Archbishop of York
  • John Harmer, vice-principal: later Bishop of Adelaide and Bishop of Rochester
  • Hugh Montefiore, vice-principal; later Bishop of Birmingham
  • Jeremy Morris, tutor, director of studies and vice-principal; current Master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge
  • Robert Runcie, chaplain, tutor and vice-principal; later principle of Ripon College Cuddesdon, Bishop of St Albans and Archbishop of Canterbury
  • Mary Tanner, tutor; later European President of the World Council of Churches
  • Angela Tilby, tutor and vice-principal; current Canon of Christ Church, Oxford
  • Alan Webster, chaplain and vice-principal; later Dean of St Paul's
  • Harry Williams, chaplain and tutor: later Dean of Trinity College, Cambridge, theologian and monk of the Community of the Resurrection
  • Rowan Williams, chaplain, tutor and director of studies; later Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford and canon of Christ Church Bishop of Monmouth, Archbishop of Wales, Archbishop of Canterbury and Master of Magdalene
  • Edward Wynn, vice-principal; later Bishop of Ely
  • Notable alumni

    Notable alumni of Westcott House and of the Clergy Training School include:

    References

    Westcott House, Cambridge Wikipedia