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June 1914: The Commemoration Dance

‘The hall proved ideal for dancing: the floor was all that could be desired.’          Somerville College Log Book, June 1914 Commemoration Week, the week after the end of Trinity Term, is a traditional time for balls in Oxford, and in 1914 Somerville held a Commemoration Dance in its new hall. The JCR sought permission for an end of term dance from… Read More »June 1914: The Commemoration Dance

September 1914: the Contribution of Non-Combatants

“It is impossible even in writing a college letter to pass over in silence the subject which is filling everyone’s mind. In Oxford we are reminded at every turn of the greater happenings…” Oxford Letter, Somerville Students Association Annual Report 1914 Initially, the outbreak of war had comparatively little impact on Somerville College; the long vacation was drawing to a… Read More »September 1914: the Contribution of Non-Combatants

October 1914: Vera Brittain Arrives for the New Academic Year at Oxford

In October 1914, thirty six new students arrived to begin their university careers at Somerville. Amongst these ‘freshers’ were Vera Brittain, the future author and playwright Muriel St Clare Byrne and another English exhibitioner, Una Ellis-Fermor, who would become a distinguished academic.  In her diary, Vera Brittain recorded the excitements of student life, her impressions of the University of Oxford… Read More »October 1914: Vera Brittain Arrives for the New Academic Year at Oxford

December 1914: ”Go Home and Keep Quiet”; Early War Work for Women

As Michaelmas Term ended in December 1914, Somerville ‘sustained an irreparable loss’ with the departure of Miss Lucy Kempson, the College librarian and Principal’s secretary. Leaving to join the war effort, she initially nursed with the Red Cross and later went on to work in the Intelligence Department of the War Office. Miss Kempson (pictured right) was one of many women who answered… Read More »December 1914: ”Go Home and Keep Quiet”; Early War Work for Women

January 1915: Dr. Maude and the RAMC

1915 was to be a year of momentous change for Somerville College. Unlike the men’s colleges, life in Somerville had been largely unaffected during the first five months of the war, but by Hilary Term of 1915, the War Office was starting to cast covetous eyes on Somerville’s buildings which conveniently abutted the Radcliffe Infirmary.  For the time being, however,… Read More »January 1915: Dr. Maude and the RAMC

February 1915: Parliament and the Tub Thumpers; political debates in college

Debating, and particularly the discussion of political issues, had long been popular in Somerville. A women’s debating society was founded in 1882 and became the United Halls Debating Society (later the Oxford Students’ Debating Society, see February 1914 post) with the inclusion of members from Lady Margaret Hall and St. Hugh’s.  In the pre-war years, Somervillians were active in the suffrage movement… Read More »February 1915: Parliament and the Tub Thumpers; political debates in college

March 1915: The 3rd Southern General Hospital, Somerville Section

‘.. if the War Office would welcome the use of Somerville for wounded, and if we can find some suitable place in which we could accommodate the college for a time, we ought to be patriotic.’   Miss Penrose to Mr Gillett, 20th February 1915 On 27th March 1915, Somerville was approached by a sanitary inspector, Mr. Best, who asked leave, under confidential instructions,… Read More »March 1915: The 3rd Southern General Hospital, Somerville Section