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Ramsey & Muspratt
Instelling · 1932-1980

Lettice Ramsey (née Baker, 1898 -1985) was a graduate of Newnham College, Cambridge, and she married Cambridge mathematician and philosopher, Frank Ramsey (son of A.S. Ramsey, President of Magdalene College) in 1926. Frank died in 1930 and Lettice looked for a new way to support herself and her two young daughters. In 1932 she set up in the photographic business with Helen Muspratt, a Dorset photographer who had trained at Regent Street Polytechnic in London. Lettice had the Cambridge contacts to get the firm work while Helen had the photographic skills and experience.

In 1937 Helen Muspratt moved to Oxford and set up a second studio for the firm there. While the partnership continued, Helen ran the Oxford Studio and Lettice the Cambridge one.

Nicholas Lee took over the business in 1978 when Lettice retired. The business was then purchased by Peter Lofts in 1980. There is an extensive indexed negative collection from the firm in the Cambridgeshire Collection, deposited by Peter Lofts after he bought up the business.

Ramsey and Muspratt are best known for their portrait work. Their sympathetic, well lit images quickly made the firm fashionable, photographing the up and coming and influential throughout the 1930s, including Anthony Blunt and Virginia Woolf. The firm also undertook a wide range of commercial photography.

Copyright and Reproductions
The negatives that survive from the studio and copyright are held in the Cambridgeshire Collection, the local studies department of Cambridgeshire Libraries.
Contact - Mary Burgess, Local Studies Librarian, Cambridgeshire Collection, Cambridge Central Library, (01223) 699755, Cambridgeshire.Collection@cambridgeshire.gov.uk

Persoon · 1602-1686

Born at Kirkthorpe, Yorkshire, and was baptised on 27 December 1602 in the parish church at Wakefield. He was the son of Francis Oley, clergyman, and his wife, Mary Watterhouse.

In 1607 Oley entered Wakefield grammar school.
In 1617 he was admitted to Clare College as a Cave Scholar.
Graduated BA in 1621.
Having been elected a probationer fellow of the foundation of Lady Clare at the college on 28 November 1623, he proceeded MA in 1625 and was elected a senior fellow in 1627.

In 1633 he was appointed to the college living of Great Gransden, Huntingdonshire, which he held for the rest of his life, but due to his duties as a Fellow he continued to live in Cambridge for many years.

In 1634–5 he served as taxor (price regulator), for the university, and in 1635–6 as proctor.
He started the rebuilding of Clare College on 19 May 1638, although work was not finished until 1715.

Oley was a Royalist and on 8 April 1644 he was ejected from his Fellowship by Edward Montagu, 2nd Earl of Manchester on the grounds of non-residence in Cambridge and failure to appear before the commission of visitors. All his personal and landed property was confiscated and he was forced to leave Great Gransden.

During the late 1640s he led a wandering and impoverished life.
In 1643 and 1646 he was in Oxford.
During the sieges of Pontefract in 1644 and 1645 he preached to the Royalist garrison defending the castle.
By 1647 he had been sequestered from the impropriate rectory of Warmfield, Yorkshire, which his father had resigned in 1643.
Having helped Sir Marmaduke Langdale to escape in 1648 from prison and a death sentence, the following year Oley had to compound for delinquency in assisting the forces against parliament, and was fined £30. A further £50 was added in 1652, in lieu of which he was required to settle £5 a year on the minister of Warmfield.

In 1659 Oley returned to Great Gransden and on 9 July 1660 he was restored to his Fellowship at Clare College by order of the same Earl of Manchester.

On 3 August 1660 he was presented to the third prebendal stall of Worcester Cathedral.

In 1663 he left his Fellowship.

In 1664 he was the leading benefactor of the brick school house at Gransden, which he endowed with £20 a year. He built brick houses for six poor people on his own freehold land, leasing them for one thousand years to the churchwardens for the time being at a peppercorn rent, and he erected a vicarage.

He had given a pulpit to Gransden church in the first months of his incumbency in 1633 and in 1681 he provided wainscot seats for the chancel.

On 8 November 1679 he was nominated to the archdeaconry of Ely, but the following year he resigned this preferment because of doubts of his ability to discharge its duties. However, he retained the stall at Worcester until his death.

Oley died at Great Gransden on 20 February 1686, and in accordance with his will was buried there on the night of 22 February.

In his will he left 100 marks (£67) to Clare College for building a library, and £10 to the descendants of John Westley, the builder of the College.

A charity was set up in his name, with assets in Warmfield, Kirkthorpe, and Great Gransden, overseen by the fellows of Clare College and still operating with limited resources in the late twentieth century.

Persoon · c.1645-1724

Probably the son of John Wilson, Rector of Yardley Hastings, Northamptonshire

Admitted pensioner at Clare College on 15 September 1663
Matriculated 1663
B.A. 1667/8
M.A. 1671
Freeman Fellow, 1669-72

Ordained deacon (Lincoln) 19 March 1670/1
Rector of Compton Basset, Wiltshire, 1671

Founded two scholarships at Clare
Died 1724

Persoon · 22 October 1870 – 2 January 1947

Born in 1871 the son of Edward Chadwick, Vicar of Thornhill Lees, Yorks
School - Wakefield

Admitted to Clare as a scholar on 23 March 1889
Matriculated at Michaelmas 1889
Classics Tripos 1st Class, Pt I, 1892, and Pt II, 1893
B.A. 1892; M.A. 1896
Fellow, 1893

University Lecturer in Scandinavian, 1910-12
Elrington and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon, 1912-39
Hon. D.Litt. (Durham). LL.D. (St Andrews)
Fellow of the British Academy

Author of 'Studies in Old English'; 'Studies in Anglo-Saxon Institutions'; 'The Origin of the English Nation'; 'The Heroic Age'; 'The Growth of English Literature' (with his wife)

Persoon · 1897-1965

Matriculated at Clare, 1919

Collymore was from Barbados and suffered from Tuberculosis. As a result, despite studying Law, it was decided that teaching in the country would be better for his health than working in a city so he became a teacher at Lancing College where he taught Physics and Chemistry.

Persoon · 3 April 1909 - 27 July 1976

From an Ulster family, son of Samuel Cunningham and Janet Muir Knox
School - Royal Belfast Academical Institution, and Fettes College in Edinburgh

Admitted to Clare College in 1928 where he read English with Mansfield Forbes, was a member of the Dilettanti Society and heavy-weight boxing champion

In the 1930s he studied law and was called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1939

During the Second World War he served in the Scots Guards although he continued his legal studies, and called to the Bar in Northern Ireland in 1942
Fought the Belfast West by-election in 1943 and the same seat in the 1945 general election
In the 1955 general election he was chosen as the new Ulster Unionist MP for South Antrim
In 1959 he was made a Queen's Counsel

After the 1959 general election, he was picked by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan as his Parliamentary Private Secretary. When Macmillan resigned, he awarded Cunningham a baronetcy in his resignation honours

Remained on the backbenches, known as one to the right of Ulster Unionism and a friend of Ian Paisley.
He retired at the 1970 general election

1973-74 - Master of the Drapers Company
1970-1976 - Provincial Grand Master of the Masonic Order in Gloucestershire
Member of the Apprentice Boys Club in Derry a

He died on 29 July 1976 aged 76

Military intelligence, the RUC and victims named Cunningham as a paedophile and identified his close links to the sex offender ring at Kincora Boys' Home, but MI5 denies this

Persoon · 20 May 1948 - present

Born and raised in Lahore into a Punjabi family of the Khatri community

He graduated from Government College, Lahore (now Government College University), in 1967, earning the President's Gold Medal for achieving the highest academic distinction among more than 50,000 students of the University of the Punjab

Completed a Master of Arts degree in Economics and Politics at the University of Cambridge in 1970
1971 to 1972, he was a PhD research student at Clare College
In 2011, Clare College named him Alumnus of the Year and awarded him an Honorary Eric Lane Fellowship

In 1988 he founded the English Language newspaper 'The Friday Times' in Pakistan

Persoon · 1859-1931

John Reynolds Wardale was admitted to Clare in 1878, became a Fellow in 1882, Junior Tutor in 1894, sole Tutor in 1915, remained as Lecturer until 1923.

Compiled the "Notes" from his research into the College records for "Clare College" (1899) as part of the series of University of Cambridge College histories, for "Clare College Letters and Documents" as well as for general interest.

Persoon · 1749-1806

Born in Corby, Lincolnshire, the son of the Revd Francis

Admitted to Clare College on 11 May 1767 as a sizar
B.A. 1771
M.A. 1774

Rector of High Halden, Kent, 1780-1806
Vicar of Bethersden

Died 30 May 1806