A Newnham Anthology
This anthology chronicles Newnham College from its struggling origins in 1871 to 1971 with vignettes and anecdotes.
Ann Phillips (Edited by)
9780521133951, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 March 2010
296 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.44 kg
In 1871, Newnham College (then nameless) began its life in a small house in Regent Street, Cambridge, with five students, a Principal and a small band of ardent well-wishers. It had no recognition, no status, no money and no official encouragement. The first students were vividly conscious of being in Cambridge on sufferance: they were not in any sense members of the university. By 1971, Newnham had 429 students, a range of collegiate buildings on a large site not far from the town centre, and the status of a college of the university. As a chronicle of the college's early struggle for existence and the gradual broadening of horizons as it achieved recognition, this book should int]
Price now:
A Newnham Anthology
This anthology chronicles Newnham College from its struggling origins in 1871 to 1971 with vignettes and anecdotes.
Ann Phillips (Edited by)
9780521133951, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 March 2010
296 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.44 kg
In 1871, Newnham College (then nameless) began its life in a small house in Regent Street, Cambridge, with five students, a Principal and a small band of ardent well-wishers. It had no recognition, no status, no money and no official encouragement. The first students were vividly conscious of being in Cambridge on sufferance: they were not in any sense members of the university. By 1971, Newnham had 429 students, a range of collegiate buildings on a large site not far from the town centre, and the status of a college of the university. As a chronicle of the college's early struggle for existence and the gradual broadening of horizons as it achieved recognition, this book should int]
Price now:
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£34.29
A Newnham Anthology
This anthology chronicles Newnham College from its struggling origins in 1871 to 1971 with vignettes and anecdotes.
Ann Phillips (Edited by)
9780521133951, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 March 2010
296 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.44 kg
In 1871, Newnham College (then nameless) began its life in a small house in Regent Street, Cambridge, with five students, a Principal and a small band of ardent well-wishers. It had no recognition, no status, no money and no official encouragement. The first students were vividly conscious of being in Cambridge on sufferance: they were not in any sense members of the university. By 1971, Newnham had 429 students, a range of collegiate buildings on a large site not far from the town centre, and the status of a college of the university. As a chronicle of the college's early struggle for existence and the gradual broadening of horizons as it achieved recognition, this book should int]
General | |
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Format | Paperback |
Language | English |
Type | Textbook |
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