Private halls of the University of Oxford

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The private halls of the University of Oxford were educational institutions within the University. They were introduced by the statute De aulis privatis ("On private halls") in 1855 to provide a less expensive alternative to the colleges and academic halls of the early nineteenth century. They survived until 1918, when the last two private halls were recognised as permanent private halls.

Contents

History

In the 19th century various factions at Oxford called for reform of the university. In 1850 the prime minister, Lord John Russell, asked a Royal Commission to investigate the University of Oxford; [1] however the Earl of Derby had taken over as prime minister by the time the commissioners published their report in 1852. [2] The commissioners' report found that potential students were deterred by the cost of living in one of the existing colleges or halls of the university as required by the university statutes of the time. It therefore recommended that the university should be allowed to expand by opening new halls of residence and by allowing students to live in lodgings not connected to the existing colleges or halls. [3] A proposal allowing Master of Arts of the University to open private halls was included in the Oxford University Act 1854, and the university accordingly issued its statute de aulis privatis in 1855. The statute allowed MAs of the university over the age of twenty-eight with the approval of the vice-chancellor to open private halls within one and a half miles of Carfax as “licensed masters”. [4] In the period 1855 to 1918 thirteen such halls were established, [5] but never recruited large numbers of students. [1] The longest lived was Charsley's Hall. [5]

Further reforms allowed the admission of non-collegiate students in 1868 and opening of Keble College in 1870, which both offered lower costs than the older colleges. [6] In 1871, the Universities Tests Act allowed Catholics and dissenters to take degrees at the university (apart from theology); however a papal decree forbidding Catholics studying at Oxford or Cambridge was not withdrawn until 1895. [7] Shortly afterwards, the Jesuits opened Clarke's Hall (1896) and the Benedictines Hunter-Blair's Hall (1899). In 1918 a university statute was issued to allow the opening of permanent private halls situated less than 2 1/2 miles from Carfax and not run for profit. The only two remaining private halls took the opportunity to become permanent as Campion Hall and St Benet's Hall. [5]

List of private halls

NameMasterDatesNotes
Addis's Hall [8] William Edward Addis 1900–1910attached to Manchester College
Benson's Hall [9] Richard Meux Benson c. 1868attached to the Society of St John the Evangelist
Butler's Hall [10] George Butler 1855–1858
Charsley's Hall [5] William Henry Charsley 1862–1891became Marcon's Hall
Clarke's Hall [11] Richard Clarke1896–1900became Pope's Hall
Grindle's Hall [12] Edmund Samuel Grindlefrom 1891
Hunter Blair's Hall [13] Oswald Hunter Blair1898–1909became Parker's Hall
Litton's Hall [14] Edward Arthur Litton1855–1860Evangelical
Marcon's Hall [15] Charles Abdy Marcon 1892–1918previously Charsley's Hall
Parker's Hall [13] Anselm Parker1909–1918previously Hunter Blair's Hall; became St Benet's Hall
Plater's Hall [11] Charles Plater1915–1918previously Popes Hall; became Campion Hall
Pope's Hall [13] O'Fallon Pope1900–1915previously Clarke's Hall; became Plater's Hall
Turrell's Hall [15] Henry Joseph Turrellfrom 1880

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Sources