A small display of maps and other documents relating to Lolworth arranged for some residents of the village who had been researching the village history
These three items belonged to Edward Brian Pope who came up to Clare in 1929. They were donated to the College on his death in 2011.
Admitted fellow commoner 1753
Matriculated at Clare, 1898
Henry Cecil Llewellin and George Trenery Bennet both came up to Clare in 1909 after leaving schoool at Barker College in New South Wales, Australia.
The volumes in this series are all notebooks Majerus use in the field to record his findings. Very few are dated by year.
Matriculated at Clare, 1857.
(1902-2001), Fellow from 1936 until his death.
Matriculated at Clare, 1960.
(1873-1940), matriculated at Clare. 1892.
Alfred Young was born on 16 April, 1873 in Widnes, Lancashire; his family moved to Bournemouth in 1879 and after being educated at home when to Monkton Combe School near Bath. He won a scholarship to Clare College and was admitted in 1892; excellent oarsman; began to undertake research in his third year which prevented him from achieving a very high position in the Tripos and so he was placed tenth Wrangler in 1895; he published his first paper in 1899, "The irreducible concomitants of any number of binary quartics" and in 1900 he introduced "young tableaus" the method for which he is best remembered; appointed as lecturer at Selwyn College in 1901 and Fellow at Clare in 1905 where he also became Bursar; married Edith Clara in 1907; ordained in 1908 and became a Curate at Christ Church, Hastings; also awarded a Sc. D from Cambridge; then parish priest at Birdbrook, Essex where he lived for the rest of his life, combining successfully the work of a parish priest with his researches in the theory of the algebra of groups. He was elected Fellow of the Royal Society in 1934; he died on 15 December 1940. See obituary in Clare Association Annual 1947, pp. 99-101