THE MAGDALEN COLLEGE DEVELOPMENT TRUST
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Mission Statement
Magdalen College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford. It stands next to the River Cherwell and has within its grounds a deer park and Addison's Walk. The large, square Magdalen Tower is an Oxford landmark. Magdalen's prominence since the mid-20th century owes much to such famous Fellows as C.S. Lewis and A.J.P. Taylor, and its academic success to the work of such dons as Thomas Dewar Weldon. In 2015, Magdalen has topped Oxford's Norrington Table of college undergraduate examination results. There is a wide variety of clubs and societies at Magdalen College. The Atkin Society provides support for Magdalen law students, similarly the subject-specific Sherrington Society is a community for medicine students. The Florio Society is for the discussion of members' poetry, MCBC is the very successful Magdalen College Boat Club and the Magdalen College Trust which was set up with the aim of providing charitable help for the disadvantaged.
About This Cause
Magdalen College was founded in 1458 by William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, and Lord Chancellor. He wanted a College on the grandest scale, and his foundation was the largest in Oxford, with 40 Fellows, 30 scholars (known at Magdalen as Demies), and a large choir for his Chapel. Waynflete lived to a great age, dying in 1486, by which time Magdalen was equipped with a large income, splendid buildings, and a set of statutes. Magdalen quickly became one of Oxford’s most prominent Colleges. Kings and Princes visited us, including Edward IV, Richard III and James I. We soon produced alumni who achieved great things in later life, including Thomas Wolsey, Fellow here in the 1490s, and Henry VIII’s chief minister for two decades. The College survived the troubles of the Reformation in the 16th century. During the English Civil War of the 1640s, we were solidly Royalist, and had to endure a purge of our President and many of our Fellows after the victory of the Parliamentarians. The most dramatic period in Magdalen’s history came during the reign of James II. In 1687, our President died, and James tried twice to force the Fellows to accept a President of his choosing. The Fellows refused, and James, losing patience, demanded that all the Fellows who opposed him be expelled. This act caused national outrage: the courage of the Fellows was praised, and the King was much criticised. Late in 1688, James reinstated the expelled Fellows, but it was too late to save him: he was deposed a few weeks later. The 18th century was not Magdalen’s finest hour. The College grew slack and complacent, and Edward Gibbon notoriously hated his time here in the 1750s. For many, the symbol of Georgian Magdalen was Martin Routh, President for 63 years, who died in 1854 at the age of 99, and who wore a wig and knee-britches in the Georgian manner to the end of his days. Nevertheless, there were important scholars at Magdalen in the early 19th century, including Routh himself, Charles Daubeny, Magdalen’s first modern scientist, who successfully fought for the creation of an honours school in Natural Science at Oxford in 1850, and John Bloxam, the College’s first historian, who reinvented Magdalen’s May Morning in its current form. The College revived under Routh’s successors, Frederick Bulley and Sir Herbert Warren, especially the latter. Warren’s Magdalen became one of the most socially exclusive Colleges in Oxford: Edward VIII, when Prince of Wales, came up then. With the support of Bulley and Warren, the Chapel Choir also improved greatly, attaining the national reputation which it holds today. The 20th century has seen Magdalen’s academic reputation flourish. Two of our most famous Fellows from this period were the English scholar and theologian C. S. Lewis and the historian A. J. P. Taylor; in addition, nine Nobel Prize winners have been Fellows or students here. Women first came here in 1979, and the College today prides itself on being an inclusive institution, open to all.