Ecucated at Clifton College 1930-35, and admitted to Clare in 1935. Was in the 1st May Boat in 1938.
Admitted to Clare in 1938. Distinguished military career; awarded an MC during Emergency in Malaya.
Born in London in June 1728 the son of John Parkhurst of Catesby Priory, Northamptonshire
School - Rugby
Admitted as a pensioner at Clare College on 28 June 1745
Matriculated 1745
B.A. 1748/9
M.A. 1752
Fellow 1751-52
Ordained deacon (Ely) 23 Feb 1752 and priest 24 Sept 1752
Biblical lexicographer and anti-Newtonian
Died on 21 Feb 1797
Son of the distinguished field geologist Robert Millner Shackleton and great-nephew of the explorer Ernest Shackleton
Educated at Cranbrook School, Kent
Read Natural Sciences at Clare College
BA 1961
MA 1964
In 1967 Cambridge awarded him a PhD degree, for a thesis entitled 'The Measurement of Paleotemperatures in the Quaternary Era'.
Apart from periods abroad as Visiting Professor or Research Associate, Shackleton's entire scientific career was spent at Cambridge. He became Ad hominem Professor in 1991, in the Department of Earth Sciences, working in the Godwin Institute for Quaternary Research.
Professor of Anatomy at Cambridge University and a Fellow of Clare College.
Born in New York, USA in 1907 to James Dickson Boyd and Grace Smythe, he moved with his father to his homeplace in County Antrim, United Kingdom in 1917.
Described by J. R. Wardale as the only volume to survive the fire in the Master's Lodge and Muniment Room in 1521.
The Development Office became separate to the Bursary towards the end of the 1990s and was a separate department by 1998.
(Gransdens and Warmfield), 1686
Taylor Benefaction (Cambridge, Girton etc), 1600
Exeter Foundation (Eye and Peterborough rentcharges), 1612