Report for Donors 2022-23

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2 Cover image: Sanctuary Scholar Andrianna Bashar in the Somerville College MCR - see feature, p8. Photo: Oxford Atelier Editorial: Matt Phipps Design: Laura Hart Contact: communications@some.ox.ac.uk Woodstock Road OX2 6HD Telephone +44 (0)1865 270600 www.some.ox.ac.uk Charity Registration number: 1139440 REPORTS Principal’s Welcome 3 Development Director’s Report 4 Treasurer’s Report 6 FEATURES A Sanctuary Story: Sharing Hope Across 8 the Generations Two Sides of a Telethon Call 10 Challenging India's Rape-Adjucation Laws 12 Thanks from the JCR 14 Mason Wakley: A Catalyst for Support 15 Out of the Archives, Into the Light 16 Three New Scholarships for the OICSD 18 Meet Milton Lee, the Fiftieth Thatcher Scholar 19 Somerville's Partnership with an Oxford 20 Primary School The Rachel Bladon Travel Grant 21 Access All Areas: A New Lift for the MCR 22 The Somerville College Family Day 2023 24 The Annual Fund 25 THE GIFT OF A LEGACY 26 LIST OF DONORS 28

Principal’s Welcome

Over the course of my career, I have worked for many different organisations. And yet, in all those different places, I have never once encountered the same loyalty and generosity as that which Somervillians display towards their college, year after year.

I believe I know the reason for this extraordinary loyalty. It is the consequence of a deep trust. Our Honorary Fellow Ruth Thompson put it well when she said, ‘I give to Somerville because I trust them to do the right thing.’

As you’ll see in the following pages, we have managed that trust diligently this year. Careful financial management has enabled us to maintain Somerville’s position in a grim financial climate, with the College’s endowment impacted yet still faring better than many. This has enabled us to fulfil our core academic mission of teaching and research, as well as allocating money to areas of urgent need. One particularly important adjustment has been keeping student rents and living costs as low as possible, to ensure our students’ time here remains as free from worry as we can make it.

And yet, doing the right thing for Somervillians like Ruth also implies a responsibility that goes beyond maintaining the status quo. It means that we should look to the future with vision, and fulfil the high expectations you have of your College based on its past.

During the last year, we have sought to deliver on that trust and do the right thing in several ways. We have secured crucial funding to support our tutorial system, including the teaching of French and the partial funding of the Lord and Lady MacNair Early Career Fellowship in Law. We also celebrated the tenth anniversaries of the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development (OICSD) and the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust (MTST) through a significant expansion of scholarships for our brightest students and future change-makers.

Finally, in a world tragically divided by war and deepening inequality, we have sought to deliver on our founding promise to include the excluded. The work of our Sanctuary Programme has attracted a phenomenal groundswell of support this year, including the transformative gift of Peggie Rimmer (see p8). Through such interventions, we will next year accommodate eight fully-funded Sanctuary Scholars at Somerville, bringing us to ten scholars in all since 2021.

Next year will see us mark a number of significant milestones, including five years until our 150th anniversary. It is therefore a timely moment to commit ourselves unequivocally to the next 150 years of this wonderful institution, with you at our side. To that end, 2024 will see the launch of RISE, the largest campaign in our college’s history and a project tailor-made to secure Somerville’s strategic objectives for the future.

I look forward to embarking on that journey with you very soon.

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Meeting Somervillians of every generation in Paris, Spring 2023

Development Director’s Report

There is a real power in Somervillians coming together, whether by generation, subject or common cause.

I was reminded of this power at our annual Supporters’ Lunch this February, following a speech by Andrianna Bashar. Andrianna is a Somerville Sanctuary Scholar receiving the Ingrid Starritt Award established by Alex Starritt (2004, History and Modern Languages) in memory of his mother. Andrianna spoke about her experiences as a refugee in Ukraine, and what it meant to be supported

by Somerville. Unbeknownst to Andrianna, Dr Peggie Rimmer, was so moved by her story that she decided to establish a fund to help others in similar situations. You can read the full story of how Andrianna was a catalyst for Peggie’s inspirational act of philanthropy on page 8.

Sanctuary is clearly a cause that unites our entire community. But you have also shown your unswerving belief in what a Somerville education represents in many other ways. Thanks to you, we received an overwhelming three and a half million pounds in donations this year. These were for projects such as improving accessibility to the MCR, supporting the teaching of French at Somerville and funding our vital outreach work. Two of our major initiatives, the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development and the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust, celebrated their ten-year anniversaries this year. Together, they have transformed student life for our postgraduate body in a landscape where graduate scholarships are rare as hen’s teeth. This year alone, we have added three new scholarships to the Oxford India Centre, about which you can read on page 18. The OICSD’s anniversary year will end with a flourish as we take the

You have once again shown your unswerving belief in what a Somerville education represents

In the MTST, we thank two of our most loyal donors for generously expanding their support. Lord Glendonbrook has now funded eight Somervillians through their undergraduate studies, while ST Telemedia in Singapore will have funded five outstanding students from backgrounds of financial disadvantage through the Lee Kuan Yew - Thatcher Scholarships. The 10th anniversary of the MTST was also marked by the awarding of the 50th Thatcher Scholarship to Milton Lee, whose story you can read on page 19. Between the OICSD, the MTST, the Sanctuary Scholarships and all the other funding opportunities you make possible, Somerville is among the top Oxford Colleges for the financial support we give our students.

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Somerville Choir on a tour of India where we will be joined by Oxford’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof Irene Tracey. Andrianna Bashar

We are fortunate that our community supports us in so many different ways. Thank you to everyone who so generously offered lots for our 2023 auction, and all those who bid for these once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Thank you, also, to everyone who attended our panoply of alumni events this year. These have included touring a Queen Anne house near Bristol with Development Board Co-Chair, Sybella Stanley (1979, Ancient and Modern History), a chamber recital in Berlin courtesy of Development Board member Dr Niels Kroner, a Seine river cruise with alumni of all ages, and a sky-scraping soirée in the New York apartment of Cindy Gallop (1977, English).

Back in Somerville, it’s been a joy to welcome five new colleagues to the Development and Alumni team. Alex, Becca, Amelia, Jackie Watson (1986, English) and Jackie Yip join a hugely committed and professional team, and I thank all of them for their magnificent efforts this year, as well as our Development Board of distinguished Somervillians co-chaired by Ayla Busch and Sybella Stanley.

For all that this Report celebrates, we must also acknowledge the incalculable loss of the inimitable Liz Cooke, a loss that we know is deeply felt throughout our community. Liz loved Somerville and Somervillians, and established one of the bestregarded alumni programmes at

Oxford over her lifetime of service. Honorary Fellow, Clara Freeman (1971, Modern History) put it perfectly when she said that, while it is difficult to adjust to her absence, we have a priceless legacy in her example. You can read the countless tributes to Liz in the online book of condolence on the College website.

We will remember Liz at a Memorial Service on April 27th 2024. We have also thought hard about how to create an enduring legacy for Liz at Somerville, one that enshrines her belief in Somerville as first and foremost an academically excellent institution. We have plans to raise funds to endow a History Fellowship in her name.

While it is difficult to adjust to Liz's absence, we have a priceless legacy in her example

In true Liz fashion, we continue to look ahead. 2024 brings with it a number of opportunities to celebrate what is special about Somerville. From the 60th anniversary of Dorothy Hodgkin’s Nobel Prize, which will be marked by a lecture from our Vice-Chancellor, to 30 years since we became a coeducational institution, there is much to look forward to. We continue to develop ambitious capital projects to help us deliver the most outstanding educational experience for current and future generations, and to do so sustainably.

I look forward to welcoming you at our next Supporters’ Lunch on February 3rd, or to our Spring Meeting with the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser, Professor Dame Angela McLean, in March. For now I hope you enjoy reading these stories of how you are helping shape Somerville for the better.

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Berlin Reunion 1992-1999 Gaudy Penrose Society Lunch, May 2023 Liz Cooke speaking at the Spring Meeting 2023

Treasurer’s Report

As College returns to its customary routines, Somerville College Treasurer Andrew Parker delves into the complicated management required behind the scenes.

Operationally, 2022-23 has represented a return to pre-pandemic levels of activity. College social events are back to full swing, with weekly guest nights during termtime in particular proving very popular, fuelled by the quality of our catering. Our conference business and commercial events have also returned to pre-Covid levels, and the rental income from our seventeen shops has recovered, with pandemic related arrears being steadily cleared.

Financially, 2022-23 has been quite tight. As anticipated our costs, most notably utility costs, have risen quite sharply as the cost-of-living crisis continues to bite. Our income has not risen commensurately, partly because we took a very deliberate decision to support our students by only increasing college rents by 5.5% and college catering costs by 2%, and partly because the external macroeconomic climate, dominated as it is by the cost-of-living crisis, the war in Ukraine and the ongoing impact of Brexit, has put paid to any growth in our endowment.

As a result of these external pressures, we have had to draw down more than we normally would from our endowment this year to make ends meet. Although we have increased student rents and catering costs in line with inflation for the coming year (8%), we expect 2023-24 to be very similar with the pressure on our endowment continuing. Consequently, the theme for 2023-24 will necessarily be one of very careful cost-control and cutting our cloth according to our means.

In the longer term, the challenge of decarbonising our estate continues to loom large. Fortunately, an excellent bid was submitted to the government’s Salix scheme by our

Estates Manager Steve Johnson earlier this year. As a result, the college received £123,000 to produce a road map to net zero on a building-bybuilding basis. This is only one stage in a long journey, but it is a solid and constructive one, reflecting our resolve to become a sustainable College on behalf of the entire Somerville community.

Finally, after 11½ years in post, I will be retiring in June 2024. I would like to thank all of you who have supported Somerville over my time so energetically. Somerville is blessed to have such an engaged and generous alumni base and we could not have achieved what we have over my time without your support. Thank you.

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Photo by John Cairns.

The Year in Numbers

Here are the numbers for 2022-23 at a glance.

Number of alumni who donated:

1,031

Tuition fees

Student rental income

Legacies & donations

Trading income

Investment income

Percentage of alumni who donated: 14%

INCOME

AMOUNT RAISED: £3,513,874

Number of friends who donated: 102

Revenue from legacies last year:

£712,670

2022-2023 EXPENDITURE 2022-2023

Total income £15,500,000

Total expenditure £17, 200,000

Teaching & research costs

College operating costs

Depreciation

Fundraising, comms and alumni relations costs

Capital loss on unrestricted investments

During the year we spend £0.7m on fundraising costs and raised £3.3m as a result. Of this £0.6m went into the endowment to provide ongoing income for future years and £2.7m was taken directly to revenue income in the year.

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£3.8m £3.2m £2.7m £4.7m £1.1m £4.2m £9.8m £0.7m £2.4m £0.1m

Sharing Hope Across the Generations

The pioneering CERN physicist Dr Peggie Rimmer explains how a speech by Sanctuary Scholar Andrianna Bashar inspired her to establish the Dr Peggie Rimmer Sanctuary Fund.

Peggie's Story

I was born in 1940 into a coal mining community in the north of England, in a country at war. Thanks to the 1944 Education Act, I benefited almost beyond measure from an excellent UK education, free of charge. I was the first in my family to go to university, namely Liverpool, where I got the top degree in mathematics and physics, followed by a first class Honours degree in physics. In 1961 I came to Oxford, matriculated at Lady Margaret Hall, and obtained a DPhil in nuclear physics. I joined

Somerville in 1964 as a Junior Research Fellow, since when I've had unbreakable ties with the College, my kind of place. In 1967 I moved to Geneva and spent my research career at CERN, the European laboratory established in 1954 with the declared aim of avoiding the horror and strife that war had brought upon the continent and the world.

Unfortunately, higher education in the UK is now an expensive commodity, barely affordable for many, entirely out of reach for some. That, combined with the noticeable shortage of women in STEM subjects, led me to support a Bursary for Women in Science several years ago, hoping to redress in some small way the class/ gender imbalance.

Sadly, much of the world is now overflowing with hate, danger and fear on an epic scale. I'm dismayed by the prejudice and cruelty that lead one group of people to inflict deprivation and suffering on another.

Living in Switzerland, traditionally a neutral country of political asylum, for over half a century has deeply impressed me. From my sitting room, I see Europe’s highest mountain in the background, the Mont Blanc, with the flags of the world's largest humanitarian network in the foreground, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies – the majesty of nature versus the misery of harm.

I recently attended lunch in College at which a young student from Ukraine spoke about the tragedy overtaking her country, and how a Sanctuary Scholarship at Somerville is opening her way to a safer and brighter future. I immediately decided that by setting up a Fund within Somerville’s framework I might be able to help some of those who aren’t nearly as lucky as I have been. I’m confident that College will provide beneficiaries with the refuge, welcome and academic opportunities to make the world a more just, peaceful and happy place for everyone.

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Daily reminder: the IFRC headquarters with Mont Blanc behind

Andrianna's Story

I never dreamt that my speech at this year’s Supporters’ Lunch would contribute towards Peggie Rimmer’s incredible support of the Somerville Sanctuary Programme. In fact, right up until I started speaking, I wasn’t sure what I was going to say.

In the end, I decided to speak from the heart.

I began with a little background, sharing that I come from Donetsk, in the less affluent region of Eastern Ukraine. I remember the dining hall grew silent as I reflected that it wasn’t common for people from my region to aspire towards a place like Oxford. I then shed some light on the effects of the war in Donbass in 2015, and how my mother and I had been on the move ever since.

What happens from the years of hardship, I explained, is that you begin to lose hope; your goal becomes

survival. I told everyone that’s why this opportunity meant more than words could express. For sanctuary scholars like me, the support of donors like Peggie or my own sponsor, Alexander Starritt (2004, History and Modern Languages), signals that someone, somewhere believes in us. It encourages us to believe in the possibility of peace, safety and a new beginning.

I never expected to find a second home - but at Somerville, I did

I also wanted to tell everyone how scholarships, especially sanctuary scholarships, represent more than just money. They are a gift of time: time to focus on our studies, to volunteer in our communities, to pursue professional opportunities and think about real world problems. I know that I would not be where I am today if I had not received this scholarship. More than that, I would not have the hope of one day building a safe home for my mum, ensuring all our horrendous experiences are behind us.

Being a displaced person can make life almost impossible at times. But the kindness shown by everyone from Jan onwards has helped me to cope and even flourish at Somerville. I’ll never forget the happy times I’ve had this year, such as open mic nights, Bonfire Night and the wonderful themed formals. I’ll also treasure the quiet moments when I felt so safe, like those uneventful afternoons when everyone sat together in the MCR, finishing off a puzzle or a boardgame.

As a Sanctuary Scholar who lost her home, I never expected to find a second one. But at Somerville, I did, and I shall never forget what that meant for me.

The Peggie Rimmer Sanctuary Fund is the largest single expansion to Somerville's Sanctuary programme since its creation in 2021, and will offer vital support to current and future scholars.

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Two Sides of a Telethon Call

In this year's Telethon, 13 Somerville students spent 835 hours calling our alumni, raising a phenomenal £223,000 in unrestricted funds.

This vital financial support depends on two things: the passion of our callers and the sympathetic ear lent by you, the Somerville community. To convey a little of this special dynamic, we invited one of our callers and the Somervillian with whom she spoke to share their reflections on the Telethon.

THE CALLER: Ursula White (2021, English)

However many calls you make, dialling a stranger's number and sitting silently while the telephone rings always comes with a twinge of nerves. But every now and then you make a call that is so genuinely lovely, it makes the nerves go away (at least for the next couple of calls).

In this year’s campaign, after a long stretch of no-answers, I was lucky enough to speak to Faimon Roberts,

whose cheery, yet insightful chat about his work in journalism immediately put me at ease.

Faimon was in the car, driving back from researching a story with his photojournalist friend, when he picked up my call. He seemed delighted to hear from the college and we went on to have an interesting discussion about working as a writer and his memories of the college. I think my favourite bit of the call was when he began to tell his friend about how great Somerville is, saying roughly half the talking points I had planned for our conversation!

After the initial chat came the bit of the call every student caller dreads… making the ask. But even this felt easy due to Faimon’s friendly demeanour and genuine interest in the college's fundraising goals. When he offered to give such a generous donation to the

college, I was in shock. I actually had to ask Faimon to repeat himself, feigning a bad connection to make sure I hadn't misheard him! I was so embarrassed about being caught off guard, but Jackie [Yip, Somerville’s Regular Giving Executive] reassured me that the conversation had gone really well.

When Faimon offered such a generous donation, I was in shock!

The Telethon is a fascinating way to get involved with Somerville’s fundraising work and gain a better understanding of how the college is funded. Perhaps even more importantly, it’s a way to build connections, expand horizons and learn something new. Admittedly, it’s not always easy, especially when you end up saying, “Hi, I’m calling from Somerville College” to a few too many answering machines. But that’s why the good calls mean so much!

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THE ALUMNUS:

Faimon Roberts III (2003, Cuneiform Studies)

There is little to connect Oxford and Pointe à La Hache, Louisiana.

Oxford is, well, Oxford and Pointe à La Hache is a smattering of houses, government buildings, churches, and a store laid along the Mississippi River’s east bank near its mouth. Its residents are mostly fishermen or oil workers.

Recently a photojournalist friend and I went to Pointe à La Hache to investigate a drinking water crisis. We had to interview residents, many of them poor, to gauge the impact of the crisis. This reporting can be hard. People are stressed and press-wary. Even with a good approach, rejections can be harsh.

As we drove home, Ursula called. Now, instead of being the approacher, I was the one being approached.

Ursula’s upbeat tone was delightful. She asked us about our work as journalists – a smart question, because journalists love talking

about journalism. Through our conversation, I was able to reflect on how Somerville helped shape where I am today.

When I arrived at the college in 2003, I was different from many of my Middle Common Room peers.

I was older, married and studying a relatively obscure subject: Cuneiform Studies. Yet immediately, I was able to make connections, especially through sports. I played Cuppers basketball, and learned to play rugby with the Somerville-Corpus team.

I formed friendships I still have today.

Academically, I spent plenty of time with Somerville Fellow Stephanie Dalley, who taught basic Akkadian and other subjects. It was a time of unparalleled intellectual and personal growth.

15 years later, those tutes were a long way from my mind. But in talking with Ursula, it reminded me that I couldn’t do the work that I do – and love – without the lessons and growth that happened because of the college on Woodstock Road.

I take heart in knowing that I’m helping students who, like me, might arrive feeling a little out of place

Then Ursula told us about the Somerville hardship fund for students. How it helps students who might not otherwise have the chance to take advantage of all that Oxford has to offer. How it helps Somerville attract and retain a diverse student body including students who, like Ursula, come from state schools.

It was a compelling pitch.

My contribution wasn’t much. But I take heart in knowing that it will help students who, like me, might arrive in Oxford feeling a little out of place. At Somerville, they will find a true welcome. I am very happy to play a small part in continuing that tradition.

To make a regular gift to Somerville, please contact Jackie Yip, our Regular Giving and Alumni Relations Executive.

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Left: Faimon Roberts III. Credit: Chris Granger
Ursula with her fellow Telethon callers

Rewriting the Script for India's Rape Adjudication Laws

In 2023, Dr Aradhana Cherupara Vadekkethil won the SLS’ Best Doctoral Paper prize for her thesis on rape adjudication in India, and was appointed Somerville’s Lord and Lady McNair Early Career Fellow in Law. Here she reflects on her academic journey, and how Somerville empowered it.

‘The constable told me that the law is like a spider's web: the small creatures get caught while the big ones break through. But he forgot to say how the spider itself never gets caught in its web.’

This haunting verdict on the criminal justice system was shared with me ten years ago by a death-row prisoner.

In the decade since, my research has sought to answer one overarching

question inspired by those words. That is, how can we challenge the lacunae within the criminal justice system and hold the ‘spider’ of India’s police and judiciary to greater account?

To begin answering this question, I worked as a senior field researcher for the Death Penalty Research Project during my undergraduate studies in Delhi. Through interviews with prisoners, I saw first-hand the wide disjunction between the law in theory and the treatment meted out to those sentenced to death in practice. There was, in fact, an ‘ideal accused’ whom the criminal justice system clearly perceived to be deserving of the harshest sentence. This prompted me to wonder whether there might also be an ‘ideal victim’ – someone who implicitly merits the sympathy of the courts and system.

To answer this question, I needed to do more research. I had previously applied to Oxford to read for a BCL (Masters in Law). My joy on being accepted was swiftly replaced with crushing disappointment when I grasped that I could never take up my place without scholarship funding. That was the first time Somerville changed my life, by awarding me the Cornelia Sorabji Scholarship that enabled my journey to Oxford.

FROM THE SCR
Left: Dr Aradhana Cherupara Vadekkethil. Credit: Jack Evans

It was during the BCL that I first realised I could pursue my new line of enquiry on the ‘ideal victim’ by examining how rape adjudication takes place in India. This focus was informed by the fact that, in 2013, the laws relating to sex offences had undergone a transformation in India, including the adoption of a new formal definition of sexual consent. The changes were introduced in an effort to discard the paternalistic and misogynistic attitudes of pre-2013 judicial discourse and deconstruct the paradigm of shamehonour in connection with rape.

total 1,664 trial court decisions and 246 high court decisions on rape law to examine if the post-2013 judicial discourse reflects the new laws. Was there a consideration of the updated definition of consent, grounded in respecting female sexual autonomy as envisaged by the 2013 amendment, or did the judicial discourse reflect the continuation of atavistic cultural stereotypes about rape?

thesis by calling for improved judicial training around laws relating to sexual offences; a circle was complete.

In all this work, Somerville’s support has been crucial. Without my Cornelia Sorabji and Gopal Subramanium Scholarships, studying for my BCL, MPhil and doctorate would have remained a dream locked behind financial barriers. Today, Somerville is helping me again as I make the transition from student to academic as the Lord and Lady McNair Early Career Fellow. I hope to make the College proud in this position. Alongside teaching Somerville undergraduates, I plan to publish my work and use the evidence I have gathered to make a case for judicial policy changes in laws related to sex offences in India, as well as launching two further projects in this field.

It became more and more clear that the attitudes of judges were frequently overriding the new laws.

I duly embarked on an MPhil, once again as a Cornelia Sorabji Scholar, and then a PhD, this time as a scholar of Gopal Subramanium, the former Solicitor General of India. I studied in

The judgments made for distressing reading. It became more and more clear that the attitudes of judges were frequently overriding the new laws. Whenever I became too exasperated by their sexist and stereotypical language, I drew strength from the welfare services at Somerville and my community of friends. I also gained inspiration from a familiar face. A large part of my doctoral thesis was written in the Law Room of the College Library, directly beneath a portrait of Cornelia Sorabji, the first woman to practice law in Britain and India. I took great comfort from that stern, unflinching gaze and from reminding myself that, over a century ago, Sorabji had foreseen that it is possible for laws to be ignored or not properly applied. Indeed, as early as 1889, she was calling for ‘education before legislation’. In 2023, I made almost exactly the same recommendation when I ended my

As I embark on this new academic journey, I hope to maintain Somerville’s supportive ethos for others. I hope especially that I will be able to encourage and empower my students to work on issues of criminal justice and human rights, just as Somerville’s Tutorial Fellows in Law, Professors Julie Dickson and Chris Hare, once encouraged and empowered me.

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Cornelia Sorabji's portrait in the Somerville College Law Room. Credit: Jack Evans Aradhana with Gopal Subramanium, sponsor of her PhD and India's former Solicitor General

Thanks FROM THE JCR

Awelcome return to normality presented the Somerville JCR with many new opportunities and plenty to be grateful for in 2022-23, explains outgoing JCR President Mei Whattam (2021, Classical Archaeology and Ancient History).

The year 2022-23 was one of positive change and enthusiasm for the JCR, underpinned by a welcome return to normality after the complex challenges posed by the pandemic. Our committee worked collaboratively, both internally and alongside senior management, to implement numerous improvements that will benefit the Somervillians of today and tomorrow alike.

Highlights include the creation of a Prescription Fund to provide economic relief for students requiring purchased medications, the election of a JCR

Working Class Officer, and securing over £5,000 for a refurbishment of the college gym.

Our creation of a distinct Arts Fund within the JCR budget enabled us to subsidise the creative endeavours of our community, leading to notable successes in drama and journalism plus a thrilling Arts Week. Somerville also continued to excel in sport, with numerous Blues players among the undergraduate population and a brilliant victory in the Women's Hockey Cuppers. For many, our

acquisition of the BT Sport channel in Terrace and a new college punt hire scheme proved to be two of the most popular additions to life during Trinity!

One of the major milestones this year was the return of the Somerville BAME formal. This inspiring night brought together over 200 BAME students from across the university in a celebration of diversity at Oxford. Thanks to the efforts of several committee members, that celebration is now joined by several new intersectional events at Somerville, including QPOC and BAME X Working Class forums.

Finally, I am proud to say that the JCR has also looked beyond college in its work this year. Having successfully reestablished our relationship with Molly's Library in Ghana, several students visited the charity this summer to help refurbish the library. Back in Oxford, students continued to volunteer with our linked primary school, St Frideswide’s, and other local charities. We also made a significant contribution to the Shoeboxes for Ukraine, reflecting our support for all those tragically impacted by war.

In all these changes, I remain grateful to the Somerville community for its support. From your creation of lifechanging bursaries and scholarships to supporting our clubs and social initiatives, we feel your influence at every turn. I hope you will feel that we are living up to your expectations, and making Somerville the community you remember.

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JCR President 2022-23 Mei Whattam. Photo: Jack Evans

A CATALYST FOR OPPORTUNITY

From running ‘Chemistry Cafés’ for first years in the Terrace bar, to lacing up his skates for Alternative Ice Hockey, fourth year Chemistry student Mason Wakley might be Somerville’s busiest man. Here, he shares how Somerville’s support helped him during the applications process and created new possibilities in his life.

I couldn’t believe my luck when I discovered Somerville during a UNIQ summer school. The scheme gives students from state schools where no or very few people have gone to Oxbridge a chance to live and learn in this environment. While you’re based at one college, you visit a number of others during the week, which for me included Somerville. I’m not sure what I expected when we finally reached Woodstock Road and the glass doors of the Porters’ Lodge… but by the time our student guide told us we could walk on the grass it was beginning to dawn on me that I’d found my college. It felt immediately like somewhere I could be at home. When my mum and I came to an open day the following summer, there was no other college we needed to visit: after a quick double-check that this was indeed the place for me, we enjoyed a nice day of sightseeing instead!

Of course, there were more than a few steps between that visit and arriving here as a fully-fledged undergraduate. Somerville were brilliant from start to finish. The Demystifying Oxford day gave me a chance to find out more about the interview process, which proved particularly helpful as the only teacher at my school with enough Oxbridge experience to do a mock interview was a History teacher – not extremely useful for a Chemistry applicant! The offer holders’ day was also a huge help in making sure I felt confident, academically and socially, when I arrived.

The financial support Somerville has given me has also made a huge difference. I received a bursary for students from low-income backgrounds, and was also awarded more specific help with my travel costs during a summer internship studying antimicrobial resistance at the Crick Institute in London. Funding at Somerville isn’t just tied to your course and your circumstances, though – anyone can apply for support to develop new skills and experiences. I was able to take French classes for a year at the University’s Language Centre for example, and even made a trip to France over the summer to learn and practise in the field.

The opportunities Somerville provides can certainly level playing fields or reduce disadvantages, but I think that the biggest thing that it achieves is that it creates possibilities. With the confidence, skills and experiences I’ve gained here, there are so many new doors open to me now – and more grass to walk on…

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Mason with Somerville friends Bobby, Sam and Serafina Mason helping to film some new Access films for Somerville during Trinity 2023

Out of the Archives, INTO THE LIGHT

The Somerville Archives are a safehouse of records and institutional memory. But they also have another role: as a repository of fascinating objects with stories to tell.

These objects were never made to sit in cupboards, and this is the last thing their curators, our Librarian Sarah Butler and Archivist Kate O’Donnell, want for them. Rather, the pair are constantly searching for new and inventive ways to give these items a new life. So when they received an invitation to loan one of Somerville’s paintings

to a Royal Academy exhibition in 2022, they promptly set the wheels in motion.

The painting in question is ‘Landscape with windblown trees’ by the German expressionist Paula ModersohnBecker (1876-1907). It was bequeathed to Somerville by our Additional Fellow and former Librarian, Lotte Labowsky (1905-91). Labowsky first came to Somerville as one of several Jewish academics to whom the College offered sanctuary in the 1930s after they fled Nazi oppression. This small, minimalistic landscape once hung on the wall of Lotte’s parents’ Hamburg apartment, and was one of the few possessions the Labowskys brought with them to England.

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Speaking of the painting, Somerville’s Tutorial Fellow in German Professor Almut Suerbaum said, “This work gives an insight into Modersohn-Becker’s power with landscape. She painted it while living at the artists’ colony at Worpswede – yet she does not offer us an idyll. Instead, the picture reminds us that Worpswede was a remote village where peat was almost the only source of income and life was hard. Her painting shows the windswept bleakness, the struggle of the human figure framed by birch trees, but also a restlessness and energy. It may be that this is why the painting was important to Lotte Labowsky: it carries an echo of a northern landscape which spoke to her in the gentler surroundings of Oxford.”

Now this important painting is gaining a new life following its appearance in the ‘Making Modernism’ exhibition. The RA suggested the painting

would benefit from being restored, which Somerville was able to do relatively inexpensively. The fantastic transformation professional restorer Georgie Dennis achieved in removing decades of dirt can be seen in the detail of restoration shown above.

‘Landscape with windblown trees’ has now been re-hung in the New Council Room, a popular space for piano practice and meetings. With its rejuvenated colours and fascinating story, the painting will undoubtedly inspire future generations.

“The Somerville College Archives are actively seeking to restore selected paintings from the collection. Currently on our wish-list are the collection of Mary Somerville’s oils and ‘The Devil Sowing Tares’ attributed to Abraham Bloemaert, 1566–1651 (pictured).”

This important painting shows the windswept bleakness of life in Worpswede, but also a restlessness and energy
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Restored to its original vibrancy: Modersohn-Becker's 'Landscape with windblown trees' Restorer Georgie Dennis at work (top) and a detail showing restoration in progress Left: 'Landscape with windblown trees' in the New Council Room, 2023

The Power of Three

The Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development this year founded three new scholarships at Somerville. Each is a product of unique philanthropy, yet all three embody the OICSD’s unique approach to development and India.

Ten years ago, the OICSD was established to support bright Indian applicants wishing to pursue an Oxford education. It started with just three postgraduate scholarships. This year, the OICSD welcomed its largest ever cohort of ten new scholars, and celebrated appointing fifty scholars since 2013. It remains the only research centre in the UK focused explicitly on challenges around sustainability in India.

The three new scholarships established in 2023 symbolise the OICSD’s pioneering approach to development. The first is the Savitribai Phule Graduate Scholarship – a first of its kind scholarship to support students from historically marginalised communities and first-generation learners from India. Named after the social reformer who spearheaded women’s educational rights in India, it embodies Somerville’s impulse to include the excluded. Its first holder is the environmental justice campaigner Niharika Singh.

The second scholarship symbolises the OICSD’s commitment to shift the needle on India’s development policy. Founded by Mr Cyril Shroff, a senior Indian lawyer and Managing Partner of Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, the Cyril Schroff Scholarships will empower the next generation of India’s

leaders in law and public policy. The first Cyril Shroff Scholar, Reema Sathe, is a social activist and entrepreneur who will read for a Master’s in Public Policy starting in 2023.

Finally, the Elizabeth Moir Scholarship at Somerville was established by Mr Rajan Anandan. In a touching reference to the transformative potential of education, Mr Anandan chose to name his scholarship after his own teacher, the well-known Sri Lankan educator Elizabeth Moir.

This scholarship is my way of saying thank you to my former teacher

Of his decision to fund this scholarship, Mr Anandan said, “I attribute a lot of what I have been able to achieve to the extraordinary education and support that Mrs. Moir's school gave me during my formative years in Sri Lanka. This scholarship is my way of saying thank you to her for the extraordinary impact she had on many of us over many decades.”

The first Elizabeth Moir scholar at Somerville will be Aanchal Saxena

(2023, MPP). On receiving the news of her scholarship, Aanchal said: “I have been working in India’s sustainability space for several years. For me, the main learning during this time has been the need for a productive publicprivate partnership, which the Blavatnik School of Government is well-placed to enable through its global network of policymakers and shapers.”

She continued, “I could not have afforded to embark on this next chapter of my life without financial aid, and am grateful to the OICSD for the Elizabeth Moir Scholarship. Knowing the inspiration behind this scholarship makes it all the more meaningful.”

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Meet Milton Lee,

THE FIFTIETH THATCHER SCHOLAR

In 2013, the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust was established to create a living legacy to one of Somerville’s most eminent alumnae. It pledged to bring the brightest minds to Somerville and empower them in forging a better future for all. Ten years later, Milton Lee (2023, Physics) has achieved the historic milestone of becoming the 50th Thatcher Scholar – a journey he recounts for us here.

My family’s financial future was wholly derailed in 2005. Our savings, which had been invested into a joint venture, were siphoned out by a business partner. An enterprise which should have provided for our future became a $200,000 black hole, triggering a legal battle that took five years to resolve.

Squeezed by solicitors’ fees, even the school bus became an expense my parents had to plan around. Luxuries were out of the question. All this – plus the insecurity of not knowing if it would be made right – led to a lot of tension during my childhood.

It was against this stressful backdrop that I went through school. Instead of resorting to private tuition whenever my grades flagged (extremely common

in Singapore for those aspiring to university), I fell in love with learning on my own terms. I discovered the fascinating possibilities of maths through YouTube videos, and lost myself in Wikipedia rabbit holes on astronomy. I learned from my peers, too, persuading the Seniors at my college to teach me calculus so I could pull my weight in astronomy competitions. I was also lucky to receive academic support from many wonderful and dedicated teachers.

something I can ill-afford, as I will soon need to support my parents in their retirement.

The life of being an Oxford student seemed very far away

My passion for learning drew me inexorably towards Oxford. I applied in 2020 and was made an offer to study Physics at Jesus College. My joy at winning a place was soon tempered by the reality of tuition fees. Government scholarships for Physics degrees are few and far between, and getting a huge private loan is

Discovering the Lee Kuan YewThatcher Scholarship changed things; it was a simple choice to decline my offer and re-apply for Somerville to chase the glimmer of hope it represented. Preparing for admissions tests and interviews at the same time as military service was physically and mentally gruelling. I had to make the best use of every scrap of time and energy available to me (even sneaking in revision during military exercises). The life of being an Oxford student seemed very far away.

But then the news arrived. It is hard to describe the jubilation I felt when I learned that my efforts had paid off and some fortune had finally come our way. I am so grateful to ST Telemedia and the Margaret Thatcher Trust for giving me this opportunity and making it possible for me to study at Somerville — this scholarship has rekindled my hopes and dreams. With it, I aim to contribute towards the fight against climate change to the best of my ability.

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Milton Lee with fellow Lee Kuan Yew - Thatcher Scholars Ming Song Oh and Isaac Tay alongside Principal Jan Royall during the MTST's 10th anniversary celebrations in the Lords.

Somerville’s Partnership with St Frideswide’s School, One Year On

At the end of our first year working with St Frideswide Primary School, we can safely say it’s delivered everything we hoped – and more.

In 2022, five Oxford colleges were twinned with local primary schools. The initiative, pioneered by our Principal Jan, hoped to support pupils and teachers both within the classroom and without, raising aspirations and forging new links between the university and local community.

We were lucky enough to be paired with the wonderful St Frideswide’s Primary School. St Frideswide’s is located by Florence Park in East Oxford and has a diverse student body with a variety of educational needs.

Our amazing student volunteers led the way. From helping with 1:1 tutoring in lessons to adding biodiversity to the school garden, they took a hands-on approach to expanding the horizons of our young associates. Ming Song Oh (2022, Law, Lee Kuan Yew – Thatcher Scholar) headed our team of volunteer student tutors.

“It has been wonderfully satisfying to see the children improve over time – I think I can speak on behalf of all of the volunteer tutors when I say that this project has been really meaningful in our lives this year.”

The partnership hasn’t just been about Somerville visiting St Frideswide –we brought them to Somerville, too. Groups of year 5 and 6 pupils have enjoyed scavenger hunts, tours, talks and delicious lunches in our hall. Ten years old might seem like an early point to gently introduce children to university, but raising aspirations at such a young age can have a genuine positive impact, one we could already see clearly by the end of the sessions.

“This partnership has had a significant impact on many of the children here,” said Deputy Headteacher Victoria Nelson.

“Their interactions with students and visits to the college have opened their eyes to different opportunities and paths in life, and 1:1 tutoring has not only supported academic achievement but supported the self-esteem and resilience of children who needed an extra boost for their mental health and wellbeing.”

Our next project will be hosting the school nativity play in Somerville chapel. We look forward to welcoming Mary, Joseph, the wise men and the baby Jesus in due course – although we’re not sure the sheep and donkeys will enjoy the stone floor. Maybe it’s time to invest in some straw…

20 REACHING OUT TO THE LOCAL COMMUNITY:
Somerville students creating a willow-weave fence at St Frideswide's

THE RACHEL BLADON TRAVEL GRANT

Following the unexpected death of their friend Rachel Bladon (1987, History), three Somervillians came together to create a travel grant in her memory. Here Sarah Wyles (1987, History), Katharine Cook (1987, Chemistry) and Alysoun Owen (Glasspool; 1987, English) explain the motivation behind their distinctive memorial.

Everybody’s recollections of Rachel include her incredible smile, her ability to draw people together, and how very many people loved her then and now.

Why a travel grant? Because it represents much that mattered to Rachel, including Somerville itself.

The daughter of a motoring journalist and a Foreign Office administrative secretary, Rachel came to Somerville from North London Collegiate School in 1987. She was truly gifted at academics, sports and art. One

of the most diligent historians in her cohort, she also played lacrosse for Oxford and joined The Cherwell student newspaper, where she became news editor. She enjoyed her fair share of parties and was at the centre of a Venn diagram of different social circles, though never seeking limelight for herself.

Rachel’s strong moral code and modest outlook came across to her friends as an inner assurance. Funny and independent-minded, she challenged all ideas, fashionable or not, and she had her own, classic style. Her tastes ranged from Robert Doisneau to Elvis. She wore her achievements so lightly that she didn’t appear to accept them as such. This was a constant theme, it turns out.

Rachel travelled widely. She worked in France and then in Hong Kong, having married Andrew, a teacher and the brother of a close school friend. She built a career as a writer and editor of educational books. Her 80plus books reached students of English of all ages worldwide and included award-winning re-tellings such as The Life and Diaries of Anne Frank (2018). She was series editor of the Oxford Bookworms Library.

Much of this was freelance, as Rachel and Andrew raised Grace, Anna and Frank. She added developing and sharing knowledge of severe epilepsy management to the more usual elements of loving parenthood. During the Covid-19 pandemic, she established a ‘Help your neighbour’ scheme, and volunteered as a vaccinator. She stood as a Labour candidate for her town council, surprising nobody but herself when she was elected. In the year before Rachel’s death, she became deputy mayor, produced the council newsletter and was a volunteer teacher to Ukrainian families. To her delight, Grace won a place at Manchester, there was a drama course to match Anna’s passion for acting, and Frank was taking A-levels and playing ice-hockey. We shared Covid-compliant, long walks. She had discovered a love and talent for sailing.

There’s a gap where our extraordinary friend existed. This travel award for undergraduate historians at Somerville symbolises the education, optimistic exploration and cross-boundary connections that mattered to Rachel.

To discuss establishing a fund or travel grant at Somerville, please contact Becca Coker –rebecca.coker@some.ox.ac.uk

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Alice Donato (Maths, 1987) punts while Vicky Loh (Jurisprudence, 1987) and Rachel set the world to rights

Access All Areas

Somerville’s graduate common room is now open to all, thanks to the addition of a new lift to the terrace supported by a successful crowdfunding campaign.

When our Margery Fry building was opened in 1966, it was ahead of its time as the first purpose-built graduate accommodation in the city. We hope to have returned the building to the head of the historical pack this autumn with the official opening of our new lift.

The completion of the £45,000 project means that wheelchair users will now be able to access the upper level of the terrace, which has become increasingly popular as a spot for working and socialising during the warmer and drier months since its renovation during the pandemic. Graduate students in particular will benefit from being able to take a bigger role in MCR social events and meetings hosted in the common room.

In November 2023, the MCR hosted a celebratory tea following the lift’s formal opening, with Virginia Ross (1966, International Studies), a significant supporter of the crowdfunding project and one of the building’s first ever student residents, attending as guest of honour.

“It’s simply marvellous to see how the college is evolving and adapting to the needs of its students,” said Virginia.

“Living in Graduate House as part of the close-knit MCR community was a rewarding and memorable time in my life. Being able to play a small part in making that experience more open to future generations of Somervillians is most gratifying.”

From all of us at Somerville, we wish to say an enormous thank you to everyone who gave money to support this project, which will make such a difference to the lives of Somervillians over the years to come.

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Current MCR members visit the new lift with Virginia Ross (1966, International Studies) and Somerville College Principal Jan Royall. Credit: Oxford Atelier

Thanks from the Somerville MCR

Meghmala Mukherjee (Disabled Students Representative MCR, 2022-23) and Ishani Mookherjee (Disabled Students Representative MCR, 2023-24).

"We would like to thank everyone who responded to our fundraising initiative for a new lift this year. Your support has made Somerville College one of the most accessible colleges in Oxford, something all Somervillians can take pride in. For members who have been unable to access the Common Room in the past, we hope you can visit the College again, and take pride and joy in enjoying this space."

Pratishtha Deveshwar (2020, Masters in Public Policy and Accessibility Campaigner)

"To everyone who has supported this campaign: your generosity has transformed our precious common room into a place where students with disabilities can fully engage in the college experience, fostering a sense of belonging and promoting diversity within our community. Thanks to you, there is now an inclusive and welcoming environment for all students like myself at Somerville. I, for one, am extremely excited to return to our College and try the lift out to access the MCR hassle-free, all thanks to you!"

Ebenezer Agatiba Abdul-Hakim (2022, MSc African Studies)

"This project has been long overdue. Its successful completion auspiciously sets loose wheelchair-using MCR members from mobility constraints. It must be celebrated as a partial fulfilment of the very inspiring founding values of Somerville and an affirmation of the belief that accessibility is an imperative and not a choice for persons with physical impairments. In my home country, Ghana, accessibility and inclusion for folks with physical impairments can unfortunately seem like a mirage. The awesome experience I had at Somerville and Oxford has inspired me to reorient my career to advocate for meaningful inclusion for folks in Ghana. It is fair and just to make society accommodative of diversity, a process which this new lift symbolises."

Your support has made Somerville one of the most accessible Colleges at Oxford
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MCR Officers Ishani Mookherjee (Disability), Misbah Reshi and Sana Shah (both Welfare) Pratishtha Deveshwar Ebenezer Agatiba Abdul-Hakim Celebrating the opening of the new lift with a welcome cup of tea in the MCR, November 2023

FAMILY DAY

SEPTEMBER 9TH 2023

It was such a pleasure to welcome Somervillians of all ages and their families back to Somerville for the 2023 edition of our Family Day.

Under blazing September skies, guests enjoyed masterclasses from our academics on topics ranging from Old English riddles to insoluble mathematical puzzles to plankton. There was also a cornucopia of activities for children and young people of all ages, including chocolate making, tug of war, water balloon fights, climbing walls, an inflatable helter skelter, live folk music, and more. We hope you enjoy these snapshots of an event that brought us together as a community and reminded us what makes Somerville so special to us all.

With warm gratitude to Emma Haight (1999, Psychology, Philosophy and Physiology), whose generosity allowed this beautiful afternoon to take place.

FAMILY DAY VIDEO WATCH THE

A year in the SOMERVILLE FUND

Jackie Yip this year took on the role of Regular Giving and Alumni Relations Executive, following the departure of Niamh Walshe (2015, English and Italian). She joins us from Cardiff University, where she was SU President and Major Gifts Executive.

One of the biggest misconceptions people have when it comes to regular giving is thinking that their gift won’t make a difference. They assume that, in the grand scheme of things, £5 or £10 a month is too little to have an impact.

In my new role as Regular Giving and Alumni Relations Executive, I have come to realise that regular giving is,

in fact, one of the most transformative ways to support Somerville. The forward-thinking nature of regular giving enables us to plan for the future and move swiftly, allocating your donations to the areas of greatest need. Just £5 a month, from enough Somervillian supporters, can go a long way in supporting our most vital projects in access and outreach, hardship relief and academic enrichment.

Nothing captures the spirit of regular giving better than this year’s Telethon. Over two weeks in September, our 13 student callers clocked up 835 hours hearing all your latest news and explaining how your support can make a difference. In fourteen days, they raised an incredible £204,830 for the Somerville Fund, with an additional £19,000 in matched funding. Thank you to our callers for being such wonderful ambassadors, and everyone who gave for their transformative generosity.

THE CEDAR CIRCLE

Established in 2022, the Cedar Circle is our new group created to recognise and thank those Somervillians who make regular gifts to their College. It celebrates the loyal commitment of donors whose support enables us to plan effectively for the future, invest in student support and respond decisively to urgent need.

This year, members of the Cedar Circle have enabled us to:

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Raise £200k + in our annual telethon Distribute £50,429 in Hardship grants Reach over 1,900 pupils with our Access & Outreach work TO BECOME A CEDAR CIRCLE DONOR
SCAN HERE
THE SOMERVILLE TELETHON

The Gift of a Legacy

Within every legacy to Somerville is the story of a unique bond between Somervillians and their College. We are privileged to share here three such stories, and the transformative impact their gifts will have on future generations.

A DIPLOMATIC MISSION

Lady Heath’s globetrotting existence as an ambassador’s wife belied an inner life of quiet devotion to others that is typified by her generous bequest to Somerville.

Margaret Bragg was born into an elite academic world as the daughter of Sir Lawrence Bragg, the youngest ever Nobel laureate in Physics, and Alice

Bragg, a future Mayor of Cambridge. Eager to forge her own path, she switched Cambridge for Oxford in 1950, where she read History at Somerville and made many lifelong friends.

In 1954, her desire to explore other ways of life was answered when she married Mark Heath, a newly minted diplomat. The couple’s early postings took them to Djakarta, Denmark and Bulgaria at the height of the Cold War, with the result that Margaret's home-schooling of their young family was extensively bugged. Subsequent postings included Paris and Rome, where Mark became Britain's first Ambassador to the Holy See since the Reformation. A final role for Mark as Head of Protocol for the Hong Kong Government ended the family’s travels, and in 1988 they retired to Bath.

Alongside her outward journeys, Lady Heath maintained a vital inner journey throughout her life. She was deeply involved in the life of Christ Church, Bath, contributing

to inter-faith projects and running a bookstall that reflected her own voracious reading appetites. A loving mother, grandmother and greatgrandmother, Lady Heath retained her intellectual curiosity, love of family and mischievous sense of humour until the end.

Friends and family remember her lifelong struggle with depression and a sense of unworthiness, but also note how these struggles only deepened her compassion for others. It is perhaps from this concern to help others that we receive this legacy, as well in recognition of Lady Heath’s fond memories of the College she attended all those years ago.

Her letters were as copious as the leaves of autumn; her emails as copious, if more legible
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Mark and Margaret Heath on their wedding day

A LIFE OF QUIET GOOD WORKS

Dorothy Newton (née Casley) was a woman of many talents, lifelong friendships and deep kindness, who remembered Somerville with a gift we shall treasure.

Born in Devon in 1932, Dorothy attended Bishop Blackall School in Exeter, where her academic brilliance was rewarded with a state scholarship to read Modern Languages at Somerville in 1951.

Dorothy treasured her time at Somerville, continuing to thrive academically and making friendships that would be important for the rest of her life. On graduating from Oxford, Dorothy went to work for London County Council in the audit department. It wasn’t a thrilling job for a linguist, but it was here that Dorothy met John Newton. Three years later, Dorothy left work to start a family with her new husband.

The couple had two sons, Richard and David. Once the boys became

teenagers, Dorothy returned to work. Dorothy's favourite role in her subsequent career was transcribing committee tapes in the House of Commons; she loved the challenge of transcribing the various select committee meetings, accurately and at speed, so Hansard could publish the day's proceedings that evening. Outside work, Dorothy was a mean pitch and putt player with her sons and a keen amateur dramatist with her local theatre group. Volunteering was a huge part of her life: she undertook a plethora of roles for her local church, and was an active member of the Townswomen's Guild and the WI.

Although exceptionally bright and driven, Dorothy remained unassuming and modest all her life, even during her final illness. She was naturally selfless and reached out to others in a totally instinctive way. It is typical of her modesty and goodness that she remembered Somerville in her will, and we are deeply grateful that she did.

THE LEGACY THAT WAS A LOVE LETTER

Bill Leeming was a stranger to Somerville, but his wife knew the College well and their shared love prompted this extraordinary gift. Quite often, Somerville is not informed about a bequest by the legator’s family for understandable reasons of grief and fatigue. Even more rarely, we sometimes receive a legacy gift from someone we know nothing about.

This was the case with the extremely generous bequest of Bill Leeming. Despite our best efforts, we have been able to discover no new information about Mr Leeming other than that he was the husband of the Somervillian Isabel Leeming, née Forsyth (1955, Biology).

Isabel, who died last year, was a noted research scientist in endocrinology and lactation. Janet Vaughan described her

Not a day went by when we didn't find something to laugh about

in 1962 as “an interesting person and one of the outstanding people in her generation in the University.”

All that we know about Mr Leeming, meanwhile, is contained in the note he wrote for an online memorial to his wife. It reads simply, “Not a day went by when we didn’t find something to laugh about.” It is presumably in recognition of this deep love for one another, and Isabel’s deep affection for her College, that this gift was made.

Legacy gifts have played a transformative role throughout the history of our College. Today, we recognise the tremendous significance of planned giving through membership of the Penrose Society. If you would like more information about leaving a gift to Somerville in your will, please contact Becca Coker –rebecca.coker@some.ox.ac.uk

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Dorothy Newton Isabel Leeming, wife of Bill Leeming

THE PENROSE SOCIETY

Legacy gifts have played a transformative role throughout the history of the College, and continue to do so.

The Penrose Society honours the special effort and commitment made by alumni and friends who have pledged a legacy or planned gift to Somerville.

If you would like more information about including the College in your estate planning, please contact Becca Coker - rebecca.coker@some.ox.ac.uk

Names ordered by surname

EF

F

FF

HF

HRF

JRF

SRF ǂ Emeritus Fellow Fellow Foundation Fellow

Honorary Fellow

Honorary Research Fellow

Junior Research Fellow

Senior Research Fellow

Deceased

Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF

Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984

Dr Gina Alexander (Pirani) 1953

Ms Susan Allard 1962

Ms Pauline Ashall 1978

Mrs Rosemary Baker (Holdich) 1962

Sir Christopher Ball

Mrs Laura Barnett (Weidenfeld) 1972

Dr Jennifer Barraclough (Collins) 1967

Dr Sarah Beaver (Wilks) 1970

Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957

Mrs Carol Bird (McColl) 1990

Mr Czeslaw Birukowski

Mrs Clare Bonney (Penny Tillett) 1964

Mrs Karin Bosanquet (Lund) 1951

Mrs Jill Bowman (Watkins) 1971

Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF

Mrs Anne Bradley (Greasley) 1966

Dr Jill Brock (Lewis) 1956 JRF

Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972

Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964

Professor Edwina Brown 1967

Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954

Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF

Mrs Glynne Butt (Merrick) 1962

Lady Cilla Butterfield

Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988

Mrs Ann Buxton (Boggis-Rolfe) 1971

Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974

Ms Charlotte Caplan 1967

Mrs Sheena Carmichael (Inglis) 1960

Dr Christian Carritt 1946 ǂ

Dr Margaret Clark (Sidebottom) 1967

Ms Marieke Clarke 1959

Mrs Anne Clements

Miss Fiona Clements 1990

Professor Jennifer Coates (Black) 1962

Dr Claire Cockcroft 1990

Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981

Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950

Miss Beth Coll 1976

Mrs Miranda Corben (McCormick) 1968

Dr Anne Coulson (Rowley) 1965

Ms Caroline Cracraft (Pinder) 1961

Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953

Mrs Janet Davies (Welburn) 1958

Mrs Patricia Davies (Owtram) 1951

Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964

Dr Daphne Drabble (Fielding) 1961

Mrs Nicola Ellard (Pugh) 1976

Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952

Miss Rosalind Erskine 1967

Miss Rosemary FitzGibbon 1967

Dr Barbara Gabrys 1998

Mrs Penelope Gaine (Dornan) 1959

Dr Barbara Goodwin 1966

Mrs Sharon Gould (Rowland) 1989

Miss Charlotte Graves Taylor 1958

Dr Andrew Graydon 1988

Mrs Jane Hands (Smart) 1981

Ms Holly Hanratty (Brown) 2006

Dr Luke Hanratty 2006

Dr Janet Harland (Draper) 1952

Professor Pauline Harrison (Cowan) 1944

Mrs Anna Hart

Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF

Miss Diana Havenhand 1986

Dr Deborah Healey (Smith) 1971

Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959

Professor Dame Julia Higgins (Stretton Downes) 1961

Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973

Ms Mary Honeyball 1972

Mr John Horsman

Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF

Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965

Mr David Hughes 2009

Ms Penny Hunt 1975

Mrs Nicola Hyman (Tomlinson) 1993

Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964

Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958

Miss Carol Jackson 1982

Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966

Mrs Lynette Jeggo (Wilkie) 1966

Mrs Emily Johnson (Cooke) 1996

Mr Ian Johnson 1996

Dr Daphne Johnston 1969

Dr Barbara Jones 1973

Mrs Clare Joy (Jwala) 1989

Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953

Mrs Ann Kennedy (Cullis) 1947

Dr Racha Kirakosian 2010

Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968

Miss Bridget Knight 1955

Ms Madeleine Knight

Ms Elizabeth Knowles 1970

Dr Loeske Kruuk (Kruck) 1988

Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966

Dr Kate Lay 1979

Professor Laura Lepschy (Momigliano) 1952 HF

Dr Louise Levene 1979

Dr Ruth Lister 1944 ǂ

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Miss Pat Lucas 1949 ǂ

Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF

Dr Aaron Maniam 1998

Professor Judith Marquand (Reed) 1954

Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF

Mrs Sheila Mawby (Roxburgh) 1962

Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957 ǂ

Dr Penny McCarthy (Gee) 1962

Mrs Jenny McKeown (Chancellor) 1961

Dr Elizabeth McLean (Hunter) 1950 ǂ

Professor Kate McLoughlin 1988

Dr Minnie McMillan 1960

Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF

Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967

Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966

Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969

Miss Helen Morton EF

Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958

Dr Fahera Musaji (Sindhu) 1990

Ms Hilary Newiss 1974

Ms Amelia Nguyen 2014

Dr Susan Owens 1990

Mrs Sue Pappas (Dennler) 1962

Ms Neeta Patel 1980

Mrs Kristin Payne (Maule) 1959

Dr Hilary Pearson 1962

Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950

Dr Alison Pilgrim 1974

Ms Sally Prentice 1987

Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968

Ms Jane Robinson 1978

Ms Joy Rodger 1976

Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954

Miss Linda Salt 1976

Professor Shelley Sazer 1988

Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF

Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961

Ms Jane Sender (Nothmann) 1974

Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF

Mr George Shea

Mrs Susan Sinagola (Livingstone) 1976

Mrs Sandra Skemp (Burns) 1957 JRF

Mrs Alison Sloan (Goodall) 1978

Mrs Wendy Smith (Arnold) 1965

Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952

Mrs Ann Squires (Florence) 1962

Ms Sybella Stanley 1979

Mrs Felicity Staveley-Taylor (Roberts) 1986

Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988

Ms Jocelyn Stoddard 1976

Dr Vicky Tagart 1967

Mrs Jayne Thomas (Harvey) 1977

Lady Thomas (Valerie Little) 1955

Mrs Joan Townsend (Davies) 1955

Professor Meg Twycross (Pattison) 1954

Ms Judith Unwin 1973

Mrs Kate Varney (Leavis) 1958

Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965

Mrs Rhiannon Wakefield (Hogg) 1984

Ms Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951

Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF

Ms Jacqueline Watts 1979

Mrs Jenny Welsh (Husband) 1952

Miss Pauline Wickham 1950

Dr Joan Wilkinson 1955

Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956

Mrs Margaret Willis (Andrews) 1940

Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957

Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974

Miss Celia Wrighton 1992

Dr Sarah Young (Gbedemah) 1980

56 Anonymous Donors

Legacies received during the period 01.08.2022-31.07.2023

Professor Sarah Broadie (Waterlow) HF ǂ

Miss Beryl Davies 1941 ǂ

Dr Bridget Davies 1950 ǂ

Miss Ann Hall 1954 ǂ

Lady Heath (Margaret Bragg, 1950) ǂ

Mr William Leeming ǂ

Miss Mary Low 1945 ǂ

Mr Haroutune Matossian ǂ

Ms Jane-Kerin Moffat 1949 ǂ

Ms Lynden Moore (Briscoe) JRF ǂ

Mrs Dorothy Newton (Casley) ǂ

Mrs Olga Olver (Robb) ǂ

Mrs Jean Seglow (Moncrieff) ǂ

Mr Hugh Stewart ǂ

LIST OF DONORS

During the financial period 1st August 2022-31st July 2023

Alumni ordered by matriculation year

EF

F

FF

HF

HRF

JRF

SRF

ǂ Emeritus Fellow

Fellow

Foundation Fellow

Honorary Fellow

Honorary Research Fellow

Junior Research Fellow

Senior Research Fellow

Deceased

1940-1949

Dr Mary Ede (Turner) 1944

Mrs Joyce Molyneux (Ormerod) 1945

Mrs Patricia Clough (Brown) 1946

Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF

Dr Patience Barnes (Wade) 1947

Dr Dorothy Collin (Halstead) 1947

Mrs Mary Brettell (Bennett) 1948

Mrs Helen Sackett (Phillips) 1948

Miss April Symons 1948

Miss Marian Brown 1949

Professor Jenny Glusker (Pickworth) 1949 HF

Dr Ruth Roberts (Greenhow) 1949

1950-1959

Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950

Mrs Penny Lee (Hooper) 1950

Dr Rosemary Moore (Filmer) 1950

Mrs Jo Murphy (Cummins) 1950

Mrs Renate Olins (Steinert) 1950

Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950

Mrs Maureen Scurlock (Oliver) 1950

Dr Marie Surridge (Thomas) 1950

Mrs Patricia Davies (Owtram) 1951

Mrs Dorothy Newton (Casley) 1951ǂ

Mrs Ann Paddick (Dolby) 1951

Mrs Corinne Petford (Chambers) 1951

Mrs Margaret Porter (Wallace) 1951

Mrs Judy Ward (McVittie) 1951

Ms Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951

Mrs Cynthia Coldham-Jones (Coldham) 1952

Mrs Shirley Cordeaux Wilde (Legge) 1952

Mrs Pamela Egan (Brooks) 1952

Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952

Mrs Isabel Heaman (Garner) 1952

Ms Shirley Hermitage (King) 1952

Mrs Jennifer Hindell (Thomas) 1952

Dr Hilary Maitland (White) 1952

Mrs Isabel Roberts (Ferguson) 1952

Mrs Ann Schlee (Cumming) 1952

Mrs Jenny Welsh (Husband) 1952

Mrs Daphne Williamson (Gloag) 1952

Dr Gina Alexander (Pirani) 1953

Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF

Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF

Ms Nadine Brummer 1953

Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953

Miss Ann Gray 1953ǂ

Dr Marjorie Harding (Aitken) 1953

Mrs Felicity Hindson (Lambert) 1953

Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953

Mrs Katharine Makower (Chadburn) 1953

Anonymous 1953

Mrs Marion Yass (Leighton) 1953

Mrs Ena Blyth (Franey) 1954

Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954

Dr Nori Graham (Burawoy) 1954

Mrs Daphne Green (Fenner) 1954ǂ

Miss Ann Hall 1954ǂ

Dr Birgit Harley (Capps) 1954

Mrs Sheila Harrison (Ashcroft) 1954

Dr Gillian Lewis (Morton) 1954

Dr Gill Milner (Sutton) 1954

Ms Lynden Moore (Briscoe) 1954 JRFǂ

Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954

Dr Molly Scopes (Bryant) 1954

Mrs Anne Weizmann (Owen) 1954

Mrs Sally Marler (Turton) 1955

Anonymous 1955

Mrs Elizabeth Rogers (Telfer) 1955

Dr Mary Seed (Selwyn-Clarke) 1955

Lady Thomas (Valerie Little) 1955

Mrs Sally Wheeler (Hilton) 1955

Anonymous 1955

Mrs Helen Brock (Hughes) 1956 JRF

Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956

Mrs Shelagh Eltis (Owen) 1956

Mrs Carola Emms (Wayne) 1956

Her Honour Judge Sander 1956

The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm) 1956 HF

Mrs Christine Parker (Gregory) 1956

Mrs Ann Rice (Creer) 1956

Mrs Sheila Shield (Bateman) 1956

Mrs Margaret Thornton (Way) 1956

Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956

Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956

Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957

Mrs Hyacinthe Harford (Hoare) 1957

Mrs Reziya Harrison (Ahmad) 1957

Mrs Alison Heath (Graham) 1957

Dr Hilary Heltay (Nicholson) 1957

Mrs Susan Hilken (Davies) 1957

Mrs Mary Howard (Maries) 1957

Mrs Helen Keating (Caisley) 1957

Mrs Elizabeth Leach (Goddard) 1957

Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957 ǂ

Dr Mary McAuley (Harris) 1957

Mrs Margaret southern (Browning) 1957

Mrs Shelagh Suett (Hartharn) 1957

Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957

Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF F

Ms Fran Barker (Flint) 1958

Dr Jane Biers (Chitty) 1958

Mrs Mary Bromley (Richer) 1958

Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF

Professor Dame Averil Millicent Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF

Mrs Eileen Denza (Young) 1958

Mrs Margaret Goddard (Alston) 1958

Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958

Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958

Mrs Gillian Phillips (Hallett) 1958

Ms Judith Rattenbury 1958

Mrs Carol Rikker (Roberts) 1958

Mrs Christine Shuttleworth (de Mendelssohn) 1958

Ms Auriol Stevens 1958

Mrs Kate Varney (Leavis) 1958

Mrs Jennifer Wiggins (Walkden) 1958

Mrs Tessa Wilson (Seton) 1958

Dr Beryl Bowen (Lodge) 1959

30

Mrs Angela Costen (Lawrence) 1959

Mrs Maureen Douglas (Bowler) 1959

Mrs Jane Gordon (Mackintosh) 1959

Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959

Dr Hazel Jones (Lewis) 1959

Dr Liselotte Kastner (Adler) 1959

Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF

Mrs Sylvia Neumann (Bull) 1959

Mrs Kristin Payne (Maule) 1959

Mrs Cassandra Phillips (Hubback) 1959

Mrs Anne Seaton (Vernon) 1959

1960-1969

Mrs Jenny Bagnall (Davey) 1960

Miss Priscilla Baines 1960

Dr Liz Berry (Brown) 1960

Dr Jennifer Bottomley (Smith) 1960

The Hon Mrs Helen Jean Brown (Todd) 1960

Mrs Margaret Davies (Thomas) 1960

Mrs Janet Howarth (Ross) 1960

Dr Carol Huber (Saunderson) 1960

Anonymous 1960

Dr Catherine Oppenheimer (Pasternak Slater) 1960

Mrs Margaret Panter (Daughtrey) 1960

Miss Anne Pope 1960 JRF

Dr Rosemary Raza (Cargill) 1960

Mrs Elizabeth Smith (Shearer) 1960

Dr Pamela Tarin (Wray) 1960

Mrs Carol Woollard (Hearnshaw) 1960

Mrs Ellinor Angel (Goonan) 1961

Ms Jane Belshaw 1961

Miss Gladys Bland 1961

Ms Jennifer Bray 1961

Ms Anne Charvet 1961

Mrs Margaret Clements (Hirst) 1961

Mrs Nike de Bellaigue (Kent Taylor) 1961

Miss Diana Handford 1961

Mrs Helen Lowell (Krebs) 1961

Mrs Jenny McKeown (Chancellor) 1961

Dr Vivien Morris (Evans) 1961

Mrs Alison Neil (Williams) 1961

Miss Hilary Parkes 1961

Dr Hazel Richardson (Lyons) 1961

Mrs Susan Richardson (Holmes) 1961

Dr Irene Ridge (Haydock) 1961

Dr Peggie Rimmer 1961 JRF

Ms Lyn Robertson 1961

Mrs Catherine Salaman (Lea) 1961

Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961

Mrs Sanneke Sole (Pull) 1961

Mrs Jane Staples (Green) 1961

Ms Susan Allard 1962

Mrs Kath Boothman (Scott) 1962

Mrs Margaret Brecknell (Dick) 1962

Dr Gillian Butler (Dawnay) 1962

Mrs Glynne Butt (Merrick) 1962

Mrs Elizabeth Campbell (Nowell-Smith) 1962

Ms Rosemary Dunhill 1962

Mrs Angela Gillon (Spear) 1962

Ms Cynthia Graae (Norris) 1962

Ms Eve Jackson 1962

Professor Christine Lee (Pounder) 1962

Mrs Bernice Littman (Fingerhut) 1962

Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF

Dr Penny McCarthy (Gee) 1962

Mrs Lin Merrick (Stephens) 1962

Mrs Jane Peretz (Wildman) 1962

Mrs Arlene Polonsky (Glickman) 1962

Mrs Stephanie Reynard (Ward) 1962

Miss Janet Richards 1962

Mrs Alice Sharp (Gilson) 1962

Miss Della Shirley 1962

The Revd Vera Sinton 1962

Dr Ginny Stacey (Sharpey-Schafer) 1962

Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace) 1963 EF F

Mrs Ursula Gregory (Raeburn) 1963

Mrs Helen Haddon (Parry) 1963

Dr Carola Haigh (Pickering) 1963

Dr Anna Hardman 1963

Ms Jennifer Hurstfield 1963

The Revd Margaret Jones (Cook) 1963

Ms Gill Linscott 1963

Dr Margaret Price (Millen) 1963

Dr Judy Ricks (Coles) 1963

Ms Clare Roskill 1963

Dr Kirsty Shipton (Lund) 1963

Mrs Jean Ward (Salisbury) 1963

Dr Jilly Aarvold (Stanley-Jones) 1964

Miss Corinna Balfour 1964

Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964

Mrs Deryn Chatwin (Price) 1964

Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964

Dr Judy Goldfinch (Oldham) 1964

Ms Sue Griffin (Watson) 1964

Mrs Jill Hamblin (Barnes) 1964

Ms Susan Hoyle 1964

Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964

Ms Penelope Jamrack 1964

Mrs Mary Keen (Keegan) 1964

Ms Christine O'Brien (Hauch) 1964

Dr Cilla Price (Pantin) 1964

Mrs Jenny Rambridge (Pares) 1964

Mrs Ruth Rostron (Treloar) 1964

Mrs Rosamund Salisbury (Wright) 1964

Dr Katherine Simmonds 1964

Ms Alison Skilbeck 1964

The Revd Canon Ann Slater (Hollowell) 1964

Lady Strathnaver (Eileen Baker) 1964

Dr Mary Walmsley 1964

Ms Jill Winter 1964

Mrs Linda Wyllie (Akeroyd) 1964

The Revd Professor Loveday Alexander (Earl) 1965

Dr Kate Badcock (Skerratt) 1965

Ms Sarah Bell (Radley) 1965

Dr Sarah Cemlyn (Garstang) 1965

Ms Margaret Clare (Baldwin) 1965

Mrs Alison Corley (Downes) 1965

Dr Anne Coulson (Rowley) 1965

Dr Gillian Cross (Arnold) 1965

Mrs Christine Eagle (Burnside) 1965

Mrs Erika Fairhead (Morrison) 1965

Mrs Debbie Forbes (White) 1965

Mrs Sue Hastings (Edge) 1965

Mrs Caroline Higgitt (Besley) 1965

Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965

Ms Natalia Jimenez 1965

Dr Mary Jones (Tyrer) 1965

Mrs Hilary King (Presswood) 1965ǂ

Dr Helen Lewis (Goodman) 1965

Anonymous 1965

Mrs Jane Loveridge (Hoggett) 1965

Lady Morgan (Angela Rathbone) 1965

Mrs Maggie Pringle (Griffin) 1965

Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF

Professor Tessa Rajak (Goldsmith) 1965 SRF

Dr Tessa Sadler (Halstead) 1965

Mrs Tricia Savours (Jones) 1965

Mrs Wendy Smith (Arnold) 1965

Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965

Professor Fenella Wojnarowska 1965 HRF

Dr Marylee Bomboy 1966

Ms Anne-Marie Braun (Kelly) 1966

Mrs Carole Anne Brown (Leigh) 1966

Mrs Jill Crofton (Wright) 1966

Professor Gail Cunningham (Pennington) 1966

Ms Suzanne Elcoat 1966

Ms Lynn Haight 1966

Ms Kathy Henderson 1966

Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF

Miss Ann Humphries (Tross) 1966

Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966

31

Mrs Lynette Jeggo (Wilkie) 1966

Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 HF

Ms Felicity Luke (Crowther) 1966

Mrs Caroline Macpherson (Bacon) 1966

Ms Margaret Newens 1966

Mrs Alexandra Nicol (Marr) 1966

Mrs Kate Nightingale (Wilson) 1966

Miss Madeleine Poulin 1966

Dr Kate Richenburg (Frank) 1966

Miss Viv Robins 1966

Mrs Sue Robson (Bodger) 1966

Ms Virginia Ross 1966

Dr Ilona Roth 1966

Mrs Helen Stammers (Tritton) 1966

Mrs Judy Staples (Bennett) 1966

Professor Dame Stephens (Roberts) 1966 HF

Dr Mary Warren (Fay) 1966 JRF

Dr Judy Wigfield (Knights) 1966

Ms Helen Wise 1966

Mrs Rosemary Wolfson (Reynolds) 1966

Anonymous 1966

Mrs Vanessa Allen (Lampard) 1967

Miss Carolyn Beckingham 1967

Ms Rachel Berger 1967

Mrs Miggy Biller (Minio) 1967

Mrs Frances Brindley (Hammersley) 1967

Dr Jill Challener 1967

Dr Freddie Crane (Williams) 1967

Dr Liz Danbury 1967

Mrs Angela Davies (Holdich) 1967

Mrs Sue Dawes (Cooper) 1967

Miss Rosalind Erskine 1967

Ms Sarah Hale (Watkins) 1967

Dr Helen Hammond (Heywood) 1967

Ms Anne Kern (Merdinger) 1967

Ms Maria McKay 1967

Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967

Lady Scarlett (Gwenda Stilliard) 1967

Mrs Rosamund Skinner (Forrest) 1967

Mrs Pam Somerset (Morgan) 1967

Dr Vicky Tagart 1967

Dr Penny Wilson 1967

Mrs Susie Worthington (Middleditch) 1967

Mrs Helen Barnard (Ratcliffe) 1968

Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller)

1968

Mrs Olwen Bell (Lloyd) 1968

Ms Moira Black 1968

Mrs Freda Chaloner (White) 1968

Mrs Miranda Corben (McCormick) 1968

Mrs Angela Gillibrand (Parry) 1968

Dr Susanna Graham-Jones 1968

Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF

Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968

Dr Bridget Long (Lymbery) 1968

Dr Terry Macdonald (Bowe) 1968

Mrs Clare Matthews (Davies) 1968

Dr Elaine Merrylees (Barrie) 1968

Ms Jo Moffett-Levy (Moffett) 1968

Professor Leslie O'Bell (Claff) 1968

Mrs Alison Petch (Dunn) 1968

Mrs Margaret Phipps (D'Alquen) 1968

Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968

Dr Ann Rolinson 1968

Ms Sonja Ruehl 1968

Professor Ruth Schwertfeger 1968

Dr Sara Turner (Greenbury) 1968

Mrs Jackie Andrew (Turner) 1969

Mrs Julia Baddeley (Weston) 1969

Mrs Patricia Baskerville (Lawrence-Wilson) 1969

Ms Gill Bennett (Randerson) 1969

Mrs Jacky Clements 1969

Dr Anne Davies 1969

Ms Penny Deacon 1969

Mrs Caroline Delbaere 1969

Miss Christine Denwood 1969

Mrs Annie Dobell (Champagne) 1969

Mrs Rachel Fletcher (Toynbee) 1969

Dr Sophia Hartland (Storr) 1969

Dr Jana Howlett (Dorrell) 1969

Dr Janet Kennedy (Harrison) 1969

Dr Sophie McCormick (Williams) 1969

Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969

Dr Jill Pipe (Pritchard) 1969

Mrs Yolanda Powell (Radcliffe-Genge) 1969

Dr Judith Sear (Partington) 1969

Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF

Mrs Elizabeth Thorne (Westbrook) 1969

1970-1979

Ms Maggie Ainsley 1970

Mrs Helen Anderson (Thumpston) 1970

Mrs Ann Barlow (Jones) 1970

Dr Sarah Beaver (Wilks) 1970

Anonymous 1970

Dr Eleanor Broomhead (Harries) 1970

Dr Alison Callaway 1970

Mrs Judy Curry (Wilkinson) 1970

Mrs Sarah Danby (Sherrard) 1970

Miss Judith Fell 1970

Mrs Wendy Holmes (Beswick) 1970

Ms Patricia Kearney 1970

Dr Rowena Loverance 1970

Dr Sabina Lovibond 1970 JRF

Anonymous 1970

Mrs Janet Matcham (Milligan) 1970

Dr Hannah Mortimer (Robinson) 1970

Mrs Grania Phillips (De Laszlo) 1970

Ms Hilary Puxley 1970

Dr Sharon Seltzer 1970

Professor Susan Senior (Nello) 1970

Dr Cathy Sinclair (Higham) 1970

Professor Christine Slingsby 1970

Dr Jenny Spurgeon (Paul) 1970

Ms Carolyn White 1970

Mrs Jill Bowman (Watkins) 1971

Mrs Jeanne Carrington (Flood) 1971

Ms Sue Dixson 1971

Dr Chris Fletcher (Moerder) 1971

Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF

Mrs Elizabeth Harbord (Harris) 1971

Anonymous 1971

Mrs Stephanie Martin (King) 1971 ǂ

Mrs Sally Patmore (Wiseman) 1971

Dame June Raine (Harris) 1971 HF

Dr Penelope Rapson (Eltis) 1971

Mrs Manya Romano-Wayne (Romano) 1971

Ms Mary Saunders (Dauman) 1971

Mrs Pat Sellers (Burns) 1971

Ms Robyn Spencer (Gee) 1971

Lady Stanhope (Jan Flynn) 1971

Dr Dilys Wadman 1971

Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF

Anonymous 1972

Mrs Laura Barnett (Weidenfeld) 1972

Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972

Dr Chi Davies (Mbanugo) 1972

Dr Gillie Evans 1972

Mrs Alison Evens (Brown) 1972

Dr Susan Farnsworth 1972

Mrs Eleanor Fuller (Breedon) 1972

Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF

Ms Mary Honeyball 1972

Mrs Val James (Jacobs) 1972

Dr Scarlet La Rue (La Rue Edber) 1972

Ms Jane Lethem 1972

Mrs Cathy Marriott (Long) 1972

Dr Liz McDougall (Webster) 1972

Ms Dot Metcalf (Metcalfe) 1972

Mrs Nicky Ormerod (Callander) 1972

Anonymous 1972

Mrs Deborah Rohan (Hickenlooper) 1972

Miss Ruth Sillar 1972

Dr Carole Souza-Okpofabri 1972

Mrs Liz Watson (Jones) 1972

Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972

32

Ms Louise Whitaker 1972

Ms Jill Barelli 1973

Anonymous 1973

Mrs Jane Clarke (Morgan) 1973

Dr Pauline Davies (Hodkinson) 1973

Ms Helen Demuth 1973

Mrs Karen Dixon 1973

Mrs Jane Foster (Morris) 1973

Dr Alison Furnham (Green) 1973

Professor Penelope Gardner-Chloros (Chloros) 1973

Dr Elizabeth Grayson (Thomas) 1973

Ms Barbara Habberjam 1973

Mrs Isabella Harding (Wallace) 1973

Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973

Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973

Mrs Elly Pearce (Hartwell) 1973

Ms Anne Redston 1973

Ms Susan Scholefield 1973

Mrs Celia Stuart-Lee (Hogarth) 1973

Dr Hazel Thomas 1973

Miss Ruth Thomas 1973

Ms Judith Unwin 1973

Ms Hilary Walters 1973

Ms Victoria Younghusband 1973

Ms Sophie Balhetchet 1974

Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974

Miss Ruth Crocket 1974

Mrs Linda Garvin (Clews) 1974

Dr Tina Green 1974

Mrs Ruth Harris (Lodge) 1974

Mrs Clare Hatcher (Lawrence) 1974

Ms Olwyn Hocking 1974

Mrs Alison Jones (Emmett) 1974

Mrs Rachel Kent (Paterson) 1974

Dr Agnes Kocsis 1974

Miss Margaret Macdonald 1974

Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF

Ms Alison Mathias 1974

Miss Madeleine Melvin 1974

Her Honour Judge Moir (Edwardson) 1974

Ms Susan Morris 1974

Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF

Mrs Janie Smallridge (Wright) 1974

Mrs Gail Sperrin (Kyle) 1974

Dr Elizabeth Theokritoff (de La Briere) 1974

Mrs Janice Tibble (Fidler) 1974

Ms Bridget Townsend 1974

Mrs Erica Wildgoose (Budgen) 1974

Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974

Ms Nazee Batmanghelidj 1975

Mrs Romy Briant (Frampton) 1975

Ms Vicky Carnegy-Arbuthnott (Carlstrand) 1975

Dr Judith Collier 1975

Ms Judy Corstjens (Gilchrist) 1975

Mrs Sarah Elliott (Nicholls) 1975

Dr Jo Glover (Chilton) 1975

Mrs Alyson Gregory (Roberts) 1975

Mrs Suzan Griffiths (Green) 1975

Ms Eleanor Harre 1975

Ms Joanna Haxby 1975

Ms Marcy Kahan 1975

Mrs Richenda Milton-Daws (MiltonThompson) 1975

Mrs Jane Nicholson (Wilkinson) 1975

Professor Robyn Owens 1975

Dr Sarah Parish (Williams) 1975

Mrs Val Rahmani (Sackwild) 1975

Mrs Fiona Sewell (Torrington) 1975

Mrs Jane Shepherd (Booth) 1975

Miss Sian Skerratt-Williams (Williams) 1975

Mrs Ruth Slesiona (Gainford) 1975

Ms Catherine Sullivan (McEniry) 1975

Dr Philippa Tudor 1975

Ms Kate Williams 1975

Ms Leila Abu-Sharr 1976

Mrs Penelope Baines (Lord) 1976

Ms Hilary Bates 1976

Mrs Clare Colacicchi (Clutterbuck) 1976

Ms Vanessa Couchman 1976

Mrs Anne Cowan (MacKay) 1976

Ms Catherine Darcy 1976

Mrs Angela Dean (Britton) 1976

Ms Frances Dewhurst 1976

Ms Lesley Fidler 1976

Mrs Gaynor Fryers (Smith) 1976

Ms Victoria Gibson 1976

Mrs Fin Gowers (Clarke) 1976

Dr Jane Gravells (Schroder) 1976

Dr Ann Lorek 1976

Dr Jane Macintyre 1976

Mrs Jenny Meader (Heseltine) 1976

Dr Latha Menon 1976

Mrs Jane Millinchip (Davenport) 1976

Mrs Rosie Oliver (Rogers) 1976

Mrs Eleanor Orr (Brown) 1976

Mrs Robin Reeves Zorthian (Reeves) 1976

Miss Linda Salt 1976

Mrs Philippa Schofield (Cash) 1976

Dr Julia Smith 1976

Ms Jocelyn Stoddard 1976

Dr Jasmine Tickle (Hussain) 1976

Mrs Jane Trewhella (Carpenter) 1976

Ms Dominique Vaughan Williams 1976

Mrs Anne Williams (Kenyon) 1976

Mrs Annabelle Woolf (Spooner) 1976

Anonymous 1977

Mrs Jane Bell (Gilman) 1977

Mrs Sheila Bulpett (Thomson) 1977

Ms Cortina Butler 1977

Miss Sally Davenport 1977

Ms Cindy Gallop 1977

Mrs Caroline Jarrett (Sankey) 1977

Mrs Merryn Kent (Wills) 1977

Dr Kate Lack (Taylor) 1977ǂ

Miss Catherine Lorigan 1977

Miss Hilary Manning 1977

Mrs Anne Marriott (Clarence-Smith) 1977

Mrs Mary McConnell (Norton) 1977

Dr Julia Nehring 1977

Mrs Susan Ott (Congdon) 1977

Ms Susan Reigler 1977

Miss Margaret Robertson 1977

Mrs Julie Skipworth (Deegan) 1977

Miss Frances Truscott 1977

Mrs Lesley Watts (King) 1977

Ms Kati Whitaker 1977

Ms Sarah Whitley 1977

Professor Jane Aaron 1978

Ms Libby Ancrum 1978

Miss Kim Anderson 1978

Ms Pauline Ashall 1978

Mrs Joanna Bell (Priest) 1978

Mrs Liz Brockmann (Madell) 1978

Professor Helen Dolk 1978

Dr Jane Doorly (Hargreaves) 1978

Ms Anna Economides 1978

Ms Fiona Freckleton 1978

Dr Elizabeth Gladstone (Hare) 1978

Mrs Helen Harkness (Lyon) 1978

Mrs Ruth Hazel (Grieves) 1978

Ms Elisabeth Jones 1978

Ms Jill Longmate 1978ǂ

Professor Michele Moody-Adams (Moody) 1978 HF

Dr Ruth Paynter 1978

Dr Jacqueline Phillipson (Williams) 1978

Dr Rebecca Pope 1978

Ms Annette Rathmell 1978

Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF

Ms Kim Severson 1978

Mrs Alison Sloan (Goodall) 1978

Mrs Diane Smith (Lightowler) 1978

Professor Teresa Webber (Russill) 1978

Mrs Clare Whittaker (Potter) 1978

Mrs Alexa Beale (Little) 1979

33

Mrs Jenny Bennet (Caldwell) 1979

Ms Dona Cady (Millheim) 1979

Miss Penny Chapman 1979

Mrs Judith Dingle (Martin) 1979

Mrs Chrissie Ellis (Tooze) 1979

Mrs Julie Fox (Allison) 1979

Dr Diane Gray (Paterson) 1979

Ms Jennifer Haverkamp 1979

Mrs Brigitte Hetherington (Bryant) 1979

Mrs Gail Higgins (Hudson) 1979

Ms Mary Kirk 1979

Dr Kate Lay 1979

Professor Dame Angela McLean 1979 HF

Mrs Joy Morris (Lecky-Thompson) 1979

Mrs Rachel Parker (Nicholls) 1979

Mrs Margaret Robertson 1979

Ms Hazel Ryan (Smith) 1979

Ms Sybella Stanley 1979

Dr Elaine Tudor 1979

Mrs Elizabeth Waggott (Webster) 1979

Mrs Karen Willis (Harley) 1979

1980-1989

Ms Anna Barber 1980

Ms Debbie Beckerman 1980

Mrs Jane Bluemel (Boorman) 1980

Ms Nancy Brown (Freeman) 1980

Dr Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 HF

Ms Ruth Crawford 1980

Ms Andrea Davison 1980

Miss Sara Fletcher 1980

Mrs Elizabeth Freedman (Allsopp) 1980

Mrs Claire Hayes (Lines) 1980

Ms Anne Heal 1980

Mrs Ruth Irons (Harris) 1980

Miss Dinah Jones 1980

Professor Susan Karamanian 1980

Ms Betsy Kendall 1980

Mrs Daphne Leck (Bigmore) 1980

Mrs Anne Locke (Hill) 1980

Mrs Debbie Megone (Barker) 1980

Mrs Jill Moulton (Ford) 1980

Ms Neeta Patel 1980

Mrs Jacky Rattue (Roynon) 1980

Mrs Carole Rumsey (Austin) 1980

Mrs Ruth Savage (Cutts) 1980

Mrs Judith Shepherd (Bos) 1980

Dr Fiona Somerville 1980

Mrs Jackie Stopyra (Oliver) 1980

Mrs Veronica Tregidgo (Innes) 1980

Mrs Sharon White (Duckworth) 1980

Mrs Jane Wickenden (Stemp) 1980

Dr Anasuya Aruliah 1981

Ms Hazel Barton 1981

Dr Sally Browne (Mellor) 1981

Ms Jennifer Bruce-Mitford 1981

Ms Sara Burnell 1981

Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981

Dr Ursula Cox (Nicholls) 1981

Mrs Heather Cunningham (Sharp) 1981

Dr Ramona Doyle 1981

Miss Sue Elliott 1981

Dr Fiona Gatty 1981

Mrs Jane Hands (Smart) 1981

Ms Mary Kiely (Cleary) 1981

Ms Jenny Ladbury 1981

Ms Catherine McLoughlin 1981

Mrs Rachael Nichols (Warner) 1981

Miss Cambria Tortorelli (Smith) 1981

Professor Ruth Webb 1981

Dr Louise Wilkinson (Thurston) 1981

Dr Sonia Wilson 1981

Ms Kathryn Bourke 1982

Mrs Judith Crosbie-Chen (Crosbie) 1982

Mrs Victoria de Csillery (Hinton) 1982

Mrs Kate Ferguson (Banner) 1982

Ms Nina Formby 1982

Dr Christine Franzen 1982 JRF

Dr Catherine Higham (Clarke) 1982

Miss Carol Jackson 1982

Ms Anneli Mclachlan (Harvey) 1982

The Revd Frances Nestor (Benn) 1982

Ms Alannah Osborough (Seaward) 1982

Anonymous 1982

Mrs Wendy Seago (Lucas) 1982

Mrs Julia Walsh (Hope) 1982

Ms Laura Wilson 1982

Mrs Jennifer Chobor (Landsman) 1983

Ms Sue Coote (Challans) 1983

Miss Karen Eldred 1983

Ms Susan Hyland 1983

Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF

Mrs Julia Nisbet-Fahy (Nisbet) 1983

Mrs Jane Toogood (Bradley) 1983

Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984

Mrs Christina Bayly (Hindson) 1984

Professor Farah Bhatti 1984

Miss Susan Bright 1984

Ms Robyn Field 1984

Miss Fiona Forsyth 1984

Mrs Jennifer Goosenberg (Bollinger) 1984

Ms Antoinette Jackson 1984

Mrs Henrietta Kitto (Tait) 1984

Ms Andrea Lyons 1984

Mrs Jo Magan (Ward) 1984

Mrs Cathy Reid-Jones (Reid) 1984

Mrs Clare Roberts (Austen) 1984

Dr Jane Rowley 1984

Professor Claire Shepherd-Themistocleous (Shepherd) 1984

Miss Elizabeth Stubbs 1984

Mrs Rhiannon Wakefield (Hogg) 1984

Professor Shan Wareing 1984

Dr Alison Warry 1984

Mrs Susanna Winter (Ellis) 1984

Dr Susan Allen 1985

Mrs Yvette Bannister (Darraugh) 1985

Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985

Ms Beverly Cox 1985

Mrs Fiona Freely (Say) 1985

Dr Julia Griffin 1985

Ms Jennifer Kay 1985

Mrs Emma Knight (Giles) 1985

Mrs Anna McGowan (Heselden) 1985

Ms Nina Molyneux 1985

Ms Jane Willis 1985

Mrs Robyn Wright (Payne) 1985

Dr Fiona Andrewartha (Haworth) 1986

Miss Rachel Belsham 1986

Mrs Katharine Finn (Morgan) 1986

Mrs Beccy Johnson (Wallace) 1986

Professor Joan Loughrey 1986

Ms Lucy Morrison (Duncan) 1986

Dr Jackie Watson 1986

Mrs Emma Wattam (Goddard) 1986

Mrs Jo Donnachie (Featherstone) 1987

Miss Luisa Edwards 1987

Mrs Elenore Falshaw (Lawson) 1987

Mrs Jane Follows (Hughesdon) 1987

Mrs Alysoun Glasspool (Owen) 1987

Ms Lisa Gygax 1987

Ms Sally Hayes 1987

Ms Yi-Fun Hsueh 1987

Dr Jennifer Mathers (Jenkins) 1987

Mrs Victoria Maxwell (Wakely) 1987

Ms Jackie Orme 1987

Mrs Vicky Outen (Loh) 1987

Ms Maria Pavlopoulos 1987

Dr Thuy Phung 1987

Mrs Rachel Renshaw (Perella) 1987

Anonymous 1987

Dr Liane Saunders 1987

Dr Clara Seeger 1987

Mrs Rachel Tothill (Burns) 1987

Miss Philippa Wright 1987

Mrs Julia Aglionby 1988

Ms Talya Baker (Cohen) 1988

Dr Jaine Blayney (Bell) 1988

34

Miss Judith Buttigieg 1988

Dr Andrew Graydon 1988

Ms Lucinda Hallan 1988

Mrs Alex Hems (Bailey) 1988

Mrs Alexandra Lawrence (Haywood) 1988

Dr Jane Meaden (Willoughby) 1988

Ms Andrea Minton Beddoes 1988

Mrs Sara Nix (Field) 1988

Mrs Rachel Owens (Fox) 1988

Lady Poole (Anna Poole) 1988

Ms Kate Ryle 1988

Professor Emma Smith 1988

Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988

Miss Helen Thomas 1988

Mrs Claire Wansbury (Sketch) 1988

Mrs Rachel Wintour (Sylvester) 1988

Miss Jo Ball 1989

Ms Ayla Busch 1989

Mrs Rachel Byford (Leach) 1989

Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989

Mrs Sharon Gould (Rowland) 1989

Mrs Clare Joy (Jwala) 1989

Mrs Claire Long (Jameson) 1989

Mrs Fiona Mayhew (McCallum) 1989

Ms Auriol Miller 1989

Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989

Mrs Helen Thomson (Ruse) 1989

Mrs Sarah von Schmidt (Fatchen) 1989

Dr Kathryn Walters 1989

1990-1999

Dr Shahnaz Ahmad 1990

Dr Nilanjana Banerji (Roy) 1990

Dr Alice Carter (Drewery) 1990

Dr Claire Cockcroft 1990

Mrs Emma Cross (Rich) 1990

Mrs Abigail Gayer (Macve) 1990

Mrs Jo Greenslade (Harford) 1990

Ms Amy Halliday (Linenthal) 1990

Mrs Sara Hannan (Maynard) 1990

Miss Eugenie Hunsicker 1990

Mrs Sara Kalim 1990 F

Mrs Kasia Kilvington (Johns) 1990

Ms Samantha Knights 1990

Mrs Angela Kotlarczyk (Quigley) 1990

Ms Sally Mitcham 1990

Miss Rachael Pallas-Brown 1990

Dr Sophie Pilkington 1990

Mrs Christine Riddington (McLean) 1990

Ms Cath Shaw 1990

Miss Rebecca Stubbs 1990

Professor Sophie Thomas 1990

Ms Nicola Williams 1990

Professor Kirsten Boyd 1991

Ms Zoe Cross 1991

Dr Jo Freeman (White) 1991

Ms Antonia Hardy 1991

Ms Julie Hopkins 1991

Mrs Jo Hughes (Riley) 1991

Mrs Emma Ingall (Gordon) 1991

Ms Katie Jackson 1991

Mrs Miranda Jollie (Oakley) 1991

Mrs Kay Kiggell (Adam) 1991

Mrs Barbi Mileham (Cecchet) 1991

Ms Janita Tan (Patel) 1991

Ms Alex Bigland 1992

Dr Anne Bishop 1992

Mrs Clare Bone (Swinburn) 1992

Mrs Julia Hall (Fitzhugh) 1992

Dr Joanna Hart (Edmonds) 1992

Anonymous 1992

Professor Anne Lofaso 1992

Mrs Sarah Newman (Goddard) 1992

Ms Natasha Phillips 1992

Mrs Linda Scott (Love) 1992

Mrs Elaine Waterhouse (Carter) 1992

Ms Barbary Cook 1993

Mrs Cathy Godfrey (Lewis) 1993

Mrs Alexandra Hatchman 1993

Mrs Helen Jolliffe (Archer) 1993

Miss Vickie le Masurier 1993

Mrs Joanna May (Froggatt) 1993

Mrs Esther Moffett (Schutzer-Weissmann) 1993

Mrs Helen O'Sullivan (Hunter) 1993

Dr Becky Parker (Green) 1993

Mrs Vicky Price (Snell) 1993

Mrs Louise Rouch (Williams) 1993

Ms Ee-Ching Tay 1993

Ms Sarah Watson 1993

Dr Kate Williams 1993

Mrs Rosamund Akayan (Brown) 1994

Mrs Daphne Alexander (Chrysostomides) 1994

Dr Christian Bottomley 1994

Mr Trevor Bradbury 1994

Mrs Jo-Anne Breckon (Swales) 1994

Mr Phil Collington 1994

Ms Winnie Man 1994

Mr Dan Mobley 1994

Mr Ian Pickett 1994

Dr Luke Pitcher 1994 F

Mr Kallol Sen 1994

Mr George Spiliopoulos 1994

Mr Andrew Whitworth 1994

Dr Jane Aspell 1995

Mr Chris Bland 1995

Professor Christopher Bruner 1995

Dr David Buttle 1995

The Revd Tim Carter 1995

Mrs Florence Collier (Coupaud) 1995

Mr Jason Gray 1995

Mr Sam Gyimah 1995

Mrs Emily Hammer (Carlisle) 1995

Mr Richard Hartshorn 1995

Mrs Jo Howard (Cooper) 1995

Professor Rachel Isba 1995

Ms Leonore Petruch 1995

Dr Sarah Pickett (Campbell) 1995

Ms Anna Tweedale 1995

Anonymous 1995

Mrs Elena Goswell (Darkovska) 1996

Mr Karim Ladbon 1996

Mr David Lewsey 1996

Mrs Vanessa Luedecke (Kelly) 1996

Mrs Catherine Marke (Wren) 1996

Ms Kirsty McShannon 1996

Mrs Masha Neplechovitsj 1996

Mrs Victoria Noble (Dugdale) 1996

Dr Lynette Nusbacher (Aryeh) 1996

Mr Peter Robertson 1996

Mr Eduard Ruijs 1996

Mr Alan Saunders 1996

Mrs Eleanor Smith (Reid) 1996

Mr Terry Stickland 1996

Dr Xand Van Tulleken 1996

Mr Stephen Abletshauser 1997

Mr Chris Barron 1997

Dr Gemma Bramley 1997

Mr David Brooks 1997

Mr Omar Davis 1997

Mr Daniel Harris 1997

Mr Tim Knipe 1997

Mr Dan Lester 1997

Miss Victoria Mance 1997

Mr Alex Miller 1997

Mr Sam Newhouse 1997

Mr Raj Nihalani 1997

Miss Kate Rennoldson 1997

Dr Claire Rosten (Popper) 1997

Dr Oliver Rosten 1997

Miss Rosie Sudol (Jenkins) 1997

Mr Michael Sweeney 1997

Mrs Lorraine Antypova (Perry Williams) 1998

Ms Kathryn Bonnici 1998

Mr Peter Gibb 1998

Mr Peter Jolly 1998

Mr Daniel Levy 1998

35

Ms Louisa Radice 1998

Mrs Nicola Avery-Gee (Ingber) 1999

Mrs Hannah Capgras (Gold) 1999

Mr Tim Cheung 1999

Dr Kate Good (Cooper) 1999

Ms Emma Haight 1999

Mr Ferdy Lovett 1999

Mr Max Luedecke 1999

Mrs Caroline Lytton (Smith) 1999

Mrs Anna Mayadeen (Ryan) 1999

Ms Laura McMaster 1999

Mr Ben Salter 1999

Dr Dorjana Sirola 1999

2000-2009

Mr James Ballinger 2000

Mrs Tara Ballinger (Reeves) 2000

Dr Alistair Fair 2000

Mrs Jennifer Goldsack 2000

Mrs Emily Harvey (Wentz) 2000

Miss Isabelle Hung 2000

Mr Tony Marsden 2000

Mr Mark Pearson 2000

Mr Richard Stedman 2000

Dr Josh Yiu 2000

Mrs Aimee Donnison 2001

Ms Alice Mckay Hill 2001

Ms Rachel Sales 2001

Mr Matthew Scaife 2001

Mrs Antonia Stirling (Lee) 2001

Mrs Sarah Thomas (Lumsden) 2001

Mr Kaj Thuraaisingam 2001

Mr Christopher Vessey 2001

Mr Alexander Webb 2001

Mr Frank Clarke 2002

Dr Clary Evans 2002

Mr James Forsyth 2002

Ms Annabel Gaba 2002

Dr Kezia Gaitskell 2002

Mr Tom Jenkins 2002

Mr Neil McKnight 2002

Mrs Sophie O'Shaughnessy (Penny) 2002

Anonymous 2002

Mr Lei Chen 2003

Mr Thomas Hodson 2003

Mrs Stacey Quaye 2003

Mr Kai Yang 2003

Miss Eleanor Broughton 2004

Dr Rachel Brown 2004

Ms JJ Chen 2004

Dr Phil Gemmell 2004

Ms Karin Lai 2004

Ms Beth Seaman 2004

Ms Zoe Sprigings 2004

Mr Mark Torok (Török) 2004

Mr Mark Wassouf 2004

Dr Helen Ashdown (Davis) 2005

Dr David Broadbent 2005

Mr Edward Fuller 2005

Mr Dave Marshall 2005

Miss Catherine Miller 2005

Dr Beth Pearson 2005

Miss Kathryn Skelton 2005

Mr Sean Smith 2005

Ms Heather Storey 2005

Ms Katie Williams 2005

Ms Gabriela da Costa 2006

Ms Sarah Glenister 2006

Mr Ben Gough 2006

Mr Simon Hodge 2006

Mr Philip Kemp 2006

Miss Fiona Lyle 2006

Mr Alex Parker 2006

Miss Rebecca Scanlon 2006

Ms Rosie Shakespear-Reeve (Shakespear) 2006

Mr Robert Sturgeon 2006

Ms Cordelia Witton 2006

Ms Wei Xu 2006

Ms Alex Baxter 2007

Mr Wojciech Chrobak 2007

Mr Dexter Harries 2007

Mr Ian Lister 2007

Ms Samantha Miller 2007

Dr Jacques Schuhmacher 2007

Mr Philip Sellar 2007

Dr Sheridan Taylor 2007

Mr Harry Thomas 2007

Mr David Blagbrough 2008

Mr Constantin Calavrezos 2008

Dr Nick Cooper 2008

Dr Edward Cope 2008

Ms Sally Dickinson 2008

Mr Alex Gunn 2008

Mr Mike Johnson 2008

Mr Iain Moss 2008

Dr Andreas Neufeld 2008

Miss Clara Williams 2008

Mr Almat Zhantikin 2008

Dr Simi Bansal 2009

Miss Katherine Corkum 2009

Ms Anusha Couttigane 2009

Mrs Manuela Galan 2009

Anonymous 2009

Miss Pria Ghosh 2009

Mrs Philippa Gunn (Smithson) 2009

Mr Matthew Isard 2009

Mrs Anna Matei 2009

Miss Damilola Oshowo 2009

Mr Kumaran Perinpanathan 2009

Mr Alexander Portz 2009

Mr David Railton 2009

Anonymous 2009

2010-2019

Mr Tom Allsup 2010

Mr Charlie Chichester 2010

Ms Alex Dutson 2010

Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010

Mr Benedict Hardy 2010

Mx Cato Hastings 2010

Mrs Sally Kennedy (Stevenson) 2010

Dr Douglas Knight 2010

Miss Martha Mends 2010

Dr Vikram Nagarajan 2010

Mr Nicholas Shinder 2010

Mr Alim Thawer 2010

Mr Tim Williams 2010

Miss April Zhang 2010

Dr Adiya Belgibayeva 2011

Anonymous 2011

Ms Alice Broughton 2011

Dr Ian Buchanan 2011

Miss Rosie Carpenter 2011

Mr Jolyon Coates 2011

Miss Linda Perkio 2011

Mr Martin Phipps 2011

Mr Henry Robinson 2011

Miss Jenny Scrine 2011

Mr Zhan Ming Yap 2011

Mr Gabriel Asman 2012

Miss Amelia Hamer 2012

Mr Fredrik Hellstrom 2012

Mr Richard Higson 2012

Mr Jonas Hoersch 2012

Mrs Marina Holden 2012

Ms Alice Jamison 2012

Ms Xiaofan Ji 2012

Mr Peter Johnstone 2012

Mr Di Wei Lee 2012

Miss Colette Lewis 2012

Miss Anna Nosalik 2012

Ms Anu Oyefesobi 2012

Mr George Pearson 2012

Mr Gonçalo Pereira Simoes Matos 2012

Miss Tooba Qadri 2012

Mr Frederick-Christoph Richters 2012

Ms Georgie Salzedo 2012

Mr Harry Staight 2012

36

Dr Brigitte Stenhouse 2012

Dr Fergus Cooper 2013

Miss Holly Freeborn 2013

Mr Oliver Johnston-Watt 2013

Miss Olivia Murray 2013

Ms Maia Perraudeau 2013

Mr Joe Smith 2013

Mr Harry Travis 2013

Mr Chris Broughton 2014

Mr Alex Fraser 2014

Miss Sondos Shalaby 2014

Mr Konrad Strack 2014

Mr Jonathan Wu-Khor 2014

Mr Hazim Azghari 2015

Miss Jess Bollands 2015

Miss Lizzie Bosson 2015

Mr Rowan Nicholls 2015

Miss Zsofia Palasik 2015

Miss Niamh Walshe 2015

Mr Stratton Hibbs 2016

Mr Fin Kavanagh 2016

Miss Hannah Patrick 2016

Mr Edwin Silverthorne 2016

Miss Ilona Clayton 2017

Miss Safa Fanaian 2017

Mr David Cao 2018

Miss Shelley Castle 2018

Mr Philip Sadler 2018

Mr Gaurav Dubey 2019

2020 Onward

Miss Valeria Atik 2020

Mr Ollie Gnodde 2020

Mr Simon Koopmann 2020

Miss Eden Kilgour 2022

Ms Devi Satarkar 2022

Fellows

Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF F

Dr Daniel Anthony F

Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF

Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace) 1963 EF F

Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF

Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF

Professor Dame Averil Millicent Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF

Dr Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 HF

Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones EF F JRFǂ

Professor Philippa Foot (Bosanquet) 1939 HFǂ

Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF

The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm) 1956 HF

Professor Jenny Glusker (Pickworth) 1949 HF

Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF

Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF

Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF

Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF

Mrs Catherine Hughes (Pestell) HFǂ

Professor Joanna Innes EF F SRF

Mrs Sara Kalim 1990 F

Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF

Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 HF

Mr James Kirkpatrick F

Professor Aditi Lahiri F SRF

Ms Norma MacManaway EF F

Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF

Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF

Professor Dame Angela McLean 1979 HF

Professor Michele Moody-Adams (Moody) 1978 HF

Dr Hilary Ockendon (Mason) EF F

Dr Luke Pitcher 1994 F

Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF

Dame June Raine (Harris) 1971 HF

Professor Tessa Rajak (Goldsmith) 1965 SRF

Mr Gavin Ralston FF

Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF Baroness Royall of Blaisdon EF F

Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF

Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF

Professor Dame Stephens (Roberts) 1966 HF

Mr Gopal Subramanium FF

Professor Almut Suerbaum F

Professor Angela Vincent EF F

Professor Fenella Wojnarowska 1965 HRF

JRFs

Mrs Helen Brock (Hughes) 1956 JRF

Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones EF F JRF

Dr Christine Franzen 1982 JRF

Dr Sabina Lovibond 1970 JRF

Dr Yvonne Huiqi Lu JRF

Anonymous 1970

Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF

Ms Lynden Moore (Briscoe) 1954 JRF ǂ

Miss Anne Pope 1960 JRF

Dr Peggie Rimmer 1961 JRF

Dr Nicholas Shea JRF

Dr Mary Warren (Fay) 1966 JRF

Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF

Friends of Somerville

Professor Paul Brand

Dr Susanne Brand (Jenks)

Mr Bob Carnell

Dr David Carter

Mrs Janet Clayton

Dr Les Clyne

Mrs Toni Coffee

Mrs Yvonne Conroy

Mr Gregory Conti

Mr Toby Cook

Sir Ivor Martin Crewe

Mr William D'Arcy

Ms Ann Dowker

Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones EF

F JRF

Mr Peter Evans

Mrs Clare Finch

Mr Arthur Fleiss

Professor Peter Frankopan

Ms Melissa Gemmer-Johnson

Dr Pheroza Godrej

Anonymous

Mr John Grundy

Mr John Havard

Ms Robin Heller

Mr Julian Hemming

Mr Billy Hibbs

Mrs Tisa Hibbs

Anonymous

Mrs Nicola Hogan

Dr Trevor Hughes

Professor Joanna Innes EF F SRF

Mr Tim Jolly

Dr Kalyani Katz

Mr Christopher Kenyon

Mr James Kirkpatrick F

Professor Aditi Lahiri F SRF

Mr Damon Lamrick & Ms Claire Lamrick

Mrs Nicky Levy

Mrs Maro Limnios (Papathamos)

Mr Robert Lister

Dr Yvonne Huiqi Lu JRF

Mr Bill MacKeith

Ms Norma MacManaway EF F

Mr David Macpherson

Mrs Isobel Magee (Smith-Gordon)

Mrs Jessica Mannix

Mr Laurence Mate

Professor Andre McLean

Mrs Debbie Megone

Mrs Julia Mount

Mrs Minal Mukhi

37
ǂ
ǂ

Mr John Nicoll

Baroness Nye of Lambeth

Ms Yoko Odawara

Professor Dr Heidi Olzscha

Professor Peter Oppenheimer

Dr Colin Phillips

Mr Matt Phipps

Mr Robert Pidgeon

Mr Antony Poppleton

Ms Maggie Pringle

Lord Puttnam

Mrs Bernie Quinn

Mr Harin Raval

Mr Glyn Robertsǂ

Mr Robin Roberts

Mr Russell & Mrs Penny Roberts

Baroness Royall of Blaisdon EF F

Mr Hemant Sahai

Mr Allan Scott

Mr Richard & Mrs Heather Scourse

Mr Adam Seaward

Dr Elizabeth Sharp

Dr Nicholas Shea JRF

Mr Samuel Shirleyǂ

Mr Cyril & Ms Vandana Shroff

Professor Steven Simon

Mr Jonathan Smith

Miss Isobel Smith-Gordon

Mr John & Mrs Deborah Southwell

Mr Gopal Subramanium FF

Professor Almut Suerbaum F

Mr Emre Timurkan

Mr Raj Tulsiani

Dr Linus Ubl

Mr John Upton

Mr David Van Oss

Mr Robert Watson

Dr Andy Welsh

Ms P Whitehead

Mr Chris Wiscarson

Mrs Patricia Wyndham

Mr Sarosh Zaiwalla

Dr Faridah Zaman

Companies and Trusts

Aberdeen Asset Management Plc

Americans for Oxford Credits

Anonymous via Fidelity Charitable Fund

Bank of America - London, UK

Barclays Plc (Global Headquarters)London, UK

Busch Holding GmbH

Charities Trust Anonymous Donor

Charities Trust Anonymous Donor

DONOR IN MEMORY OF

Dr Marylee Bomboy 1966

Dr Dorothy Collin (Halstead) 1947

Dr Claire Cockroft (1990)

Professor Paul Brand 1964

Professor Edwina Brown 1967

Professor Alyson Bailes 1966 HF ǂ

Mrs Emily F Halstead ǂ

John M Cockcroft ǂ

Mrs Vanessa Brand (Rodrigues) 1965 ǂ

Mrs Irene Brown (Goodman) 1939 ǂ & Dr Brenan Brown

Mr Haroutune Matossian ǂ

Mr Laurence Mate

Mr Russell and Mrs Penny Roberts

Mr Richard and Mrs Heather Scourse

Datascope Medical Co Ltd

Deas Trust

Dollar Bank Foundation

Duquesne Light Company College Gift Matching Program

Eleanor Rathbone Charitable Trust

Fondation de France

Goldman Sachs & Co

Goldman Sachs Matched Giving Program

Irene Brown Charitable Trust

Michael Bishop Foundation

Nuclear Threat Initiative

Pearwell Charitable Trust

PNC Advisors

ST Telemedia

Thomson Corporation Plc

Tisbury Telegraph Trust

UBS Investment Bank

UPL Limited

Thank you to our growing group of leaders providing Matched Funding opportunities for key projects

Ms Basma Alireza 1991

Ms Libby Ancrum 1978 and Mr David Skinner

Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968

Ms Moira Black 1968

Mr Thomas Bolt

Ms Ayla Busch 1989

Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988

Mr Alan Connery 1994

Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985

Mr Omar Davis 1997

Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989

Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF and Mr Michael Freeman

Mrs Jo Greenslade (Harford) 1993

Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966

Mrs Emily Harvey (Wentz) 2000

Dr Mirriam Griffin (Dressler) ǂ

Professor Mavis Mate (Howe) 1953 ǂ

Mr Jonathan Roberts 2010 ǂ

Mr David Scourse 1999 ǂ

Mrs Eugenia Hibbs

Mrs Tisa Hibbs and Mr Billy Hibbs

Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF and Mr Christopher Kenyon

Dr Niels Kroner 1996

Mr Max Luedecke 1999

Ms Nadine Majaro (Pilgrim) 1975

Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) FF 1974

Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF

Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966 and Dr Simon Mitton

Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969

Ms Hilary Newiss 1974

Mr John Nicoll

Mr Raj Nihalani 1997

Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF

Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF

Ms Ceiri Roberts (Simister) 1975

Ms Virginia Ross 1966

Mr Sonny Sandhu 1994

Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF and

Mr Kevin Scollan FF

Mrs Pam Somerset (Morgan) 1967

Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 and Mr Paul Zisman

Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989

Dr Ruth Thompson 1971ǂ

Ms Judith Unwin 1973

Mrs Sarah Whitley 1977

The Government of India

The Somerville City Group

The Somerville JCR

The Somerville London Group

We would like to thank everyone who donated to our crowdfunding project for the MCR Lift between 1st August 2022 – 31st July 2023.

38
CROWDFUNDING

THANK

YOU TO OUR VOLUNTEERS

The Principal and Fellows would like to thank all those who have given their time and commitment to the College during financial year 2022-23

‡ = Chairs and Vice-Chairs

Development Board Members

Ms Ayla Busch 1989 ‡

Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 ‡

Ms Basma Alireza 1991

Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988

Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989

Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966

Dr Niels Kröner 1996

Ms Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974

Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974

Honorary Development Board Members

Mr Tom Bolt

Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953

Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956

Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971

Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959

Ms Nadine Majaro 1975

Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962

Ms Hilary Newiss 1974

Mr Roger Pilgrim

Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989

Campaign Board Members

Mr Omar Davis (1997)

Ms Emma Haight (1999)

Mr Dan Mobley (1994)

Mr Sundeep Sandhu (1994)

Somerville Association Committee

Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989 ‡

Mr Tim Aldrich 1994

Ms Isabel Ireland (2013)

Mrs Jo Magan (Ward) 1984

Ms Hilary Manning (1977)

Ms Pia Pasternack 1982

Ms Virginia Ross 1966

Mr Joe Smith (2013)

Ms Zoe Sprigings 2004

Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956

City Committee

Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988 ‡

Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010

Ms Sara Glenister 2006

Ms Helena Powell (2008)

Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974

Mrs Clare Whittaker 1978

Mr Bernardo Zang 2011

London Committee

Ms Caroline Totterdill 1984 ‡

Ms Kim Anderson 1978

Ms Bev Cox 1985

Ms Ruth Crawford 1980

Ms Jenny Ladbury 1981

Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973

Ms Eleanor Sturdy (Burton) 1984

Mrs Sarah Wyles (Ryle) 1987

Medics Committee

Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 ‡

Professor Kathryn Abel 1980

Dr Mary Jane Attenburrow 1980

Ms Farah Bhatti 1984

Dr Kate Good (Cooper) 1999

Dr Susanna Graham-Jones 1968

Professor Christine Lee 1962

Ms Natalie Morris (Shenker) 1997

Dr Natasha Robinson 1972

Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989

Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972

Dr Emma Whitehouse 1998

Finance Committee

Amy Rennison (1990)

Elaine Clements (1977)

Woodstock Road, Oxford, OX2 6HD

development.office@some.ox.ac.uk

+44 (0) 1865 270600 (general)

+44 (0) 1865 280626 (Development Office)

www.some.ox.ac.uk/alumni

Somerville is a registered charity. Charity Registration number: 1139440

40
The Somerville College Family Day 2023. Credit: Oxford Atelier
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