Set up in October 1985 (Minute 8 of Council of 7 October 1985)
The Estates Committee has undergone various name changes and was known before as the Buildings, Amenities and Green Committee, the Buildings and Gardens and Green Strategic Sub Committee (BAGG) and the Liaison Committee before that. This series therefore includes papers relating to these three committees.
Nicola Jackson (n�e Davis ) Clare 1973 was a near contemporary of Polly O'Hanlon (Clare 1972)
Edmonds was vicar of Great Gransden
Sabine Baring-Gould (1834-1924), born in Exeter in 1834 and travelled across Europe as a child before being admitted as Pensioner to Clare College in 1853. He was a prolific writer.
William John Harrison (1884-1969) was awarded a scholarship to Dulwich in1900 and was then admitted as scholar at Clare College in 1904 and became Fellow in 1907 after getting a First in Mathematics. The next year he was one of the three joint winners of the Smith Prize for a an essay on Mathematics. After lecturing in maths at Liverpool and then back in Cambridge he was commissioned as a Scientific Officer at Woolwich Arsenal in 1914. From 1919-1924 he continued scientific work in Cambridge and then changed direction to deal with administration of Clare College. He became Bursar, Financial Tutor and Steward and also dealt with the College Archives. This was the period when the College was run mainly by three men, Sir Henry Thirkill, Dr. W. Telfer and William Harrison who were known as the "Holy Trinity". Harrison retired in 1949 but continued his research in the Archives publishing books on the history of the College. He died in 1969.
Jiro Shirasu (Clare 1923-6); a prominent figure in Japan who receives ongoing interest from Japanese visitors
Smith was a College servant between 1919 and 1966. He died on 18th November 1967.
The University Pitt Club, popularly referred to as the Pitt Club was founded in 1835 and named in honour of William Pitt the Younger, who had been a student at Pembroke College, Cambridge. It is now only open to male students at the University of Cambridge. In the past, most of its membership attended certain public schools, however this is no longer a criterion for membership, and some members are now drawn from minor public schools. The Club has premises at 7a Jesus Lane, which was originally designed as Victorian Roman Baths in 1863 by Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt. ( Details taken from Wikipedia)
Matriculated 1922