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Authority record
Person · 1744-1823

Born 1744 in Dickleburgh, Norfolk, the son of Isaac Cowper, vicar of Eye, Suffolk

School – Bury St Edmunds

Admitted pensioner to Clare College in 1760; matriculated 1760
B.A. 1764; M.A. 1767
Fellow of Clare College 1764–73

Ordained deacon London 1754
Ordained priest 1767
Rector of Paglesham, Essex 1771-81
Recton of Rattlesden, Suffolk 1778-98
Rector of Great Barton, Suffolk 1781-1823
Rector of Billingford with Thorpe Parva, Norfolk, 1798-1823
Benefactor to the College Library

Died 1823

Person · 1684 - c.1782

Son of John Copley of Nether Hall (admitted Fellow Commoner of Clare in 1678). Born at Nether Hall, Doncaster. Baptised 13 January 1684/85

Admitted Fellow Commoner at Clare, 19 June 1703.
2 December 1711 married Eleanor Shaw.

Died c. 1782.

Person · 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.

Person · 1781 - 24 October 1867

Born in London the son of John and Susannah of Wardour Street, London

Admitted as a pensioner to Clare College on 13 June 1799
Matriculated at Michaelmas 1799
B.A. 1803, M.A. 1806, D.D. 1818

Ordained deacon 1803, priest 1805. Vicar of Honington, Lincs. 1805-67
Married Harriet Brooke of Low Leyton, Essex at Knaresborough, Yorkshire. Father of Henry A. Coles born 1825.
Died on 24 October 1867

Person · 1833 - 7 December 1920

Admitted as a sizar at Clare College on 9 April 1851
Matriculated Michaelmas 1851
B.A. 1855; M.A. 1859

Ordained deacon, 1856; priest (Exeter) 1857

Second Master of Queen Mary's School, Walsall, 1858-60
Head Master of King Edward's School, Stafford, 1860-70
Vicar of St Chad's, Stafford, 1866-70
Rector of Orcheston St Mary, Wiltshire, 1876-88
Vicar of Little Malvern, Worcestershire, 1895-7. Resided latterly at Malvern Wells.
Died there on 7 December 1920.

Clare College Cambridge
Corporate body · 1326-

In 1326, the University, under the Chancellorship of Richard de Badew, founded University Hall, two messuages in Milne Street being assigned as a residence for its scholars. Little is known of the new college, but within a decade of its foundation, the founder was forced to seek a patron to rebuild the college, possibly after a disastrous fire. It was presumably Badew’s connection with the Clares that he turned to Lady Elizabeth de Clare for assistance and she refounded it as Clare Hall, endowing it with the advowsons of Littlington in 1336 and Great Gransden and Duxford in 1346, and providing it with a set of statutes in 1356. Thus provision was made for a Master and 15 Scholars (later called Fellows) and also 10 poor scholars.
Thanks to multiple endowments, including land at Potton, Everton and Gamlingay, Clare’s wealth and size grew steadily until it was necessary to completely rebuild the college. After a long legal wrangle, land was acquired from King’s College and between 1638 and the early eighteenth century, the buildings that form Old Court were erected together with the bridge which was completed in 1640. Further substantial additions to the College were not required until the twentieth century, when Memorial Court, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, built on the West side of the river, was opened in 1926 and extended later in the century. As admission numbers continued to rise, further extensions to College accommodation saw college property on Chesterton Lane consolidated into The Colony and St Regis Flats built on Chesterton Road.