Unitarian College, Manchester

Unitarian College Manchester is one of two Unitarian seminaries in England. It is based at Luther King House in the Brighton Grove area of Manchester, and its degrees are validated by the University of Manchester.[1]

Courtyard of Luther King House

It has been preparing students for ministry and lay leadership positions in the Unitarian and Non-Subscribing Presbyterian Churches since 1854, when it was established by the Unitarian Home Mission Board. The College has a tradition of providing occasional overseas scholarships for students from kindred churches, particularly from Hungary and Romania (see Unitarian Church of Transylvania).[2][3] It is now part of the Partnership for Theological Education.[4]

It is to be distinguished from the only other Unitarian college in the country, which confusingly shares a similar name. What is now Harris Manchester College, Oxford started off as a dissenting academy based on the famous one in Warrington. "The Manchester Academy" or "Manchester College", named after its birthplace in 1786, kept the name when it moved to York (1804-1840), and back to Manchester (1840-1853). It then moved to the capital as "Manchester New College, London", in University Hall, Gordon Square (i.e. Dr Williams's Library[5]) 1853–1889. Its final move was to Oxford, where it has remained, becoming in 1996 a full constituent college of Oxford University, and adding "Harris" after a donor. It was the move of the original academy to London in 1854 which occasioned the need for a separate establishment in Manchester.

Principals

gollark: A vector for every node is *probably* suboptimal?
gollark: The closest you're likely to get is some specialized DSLs and Haskell making it one line.
gollark: ```ruststruct Tree<T> { thing: T, children: Vec<Tree<T>>}```to be apiologically inelegant about it.
gollark: It's not *that* hard in either, is it?
gollark: Well, praise be to rustaceoforms?

References

  1. "History and Governance | Luther King House". lutherkinghouse.org.uk. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  2. Leonard Smith Unitarian to the core: Unitarian College Manchester, 1854–2004, Unitarian College, Manchester - 2004 211 pages
  3. Alexander Gordon (9 June 1841 – 21 February 1931) a Biography p42 Ch.III
  4. "Dissenting Academies". dissacad.english.qmul.ac.uk. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
  5. "University Hall (Dr. Williams' Library), Gordon Square | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
  6. Alan P. F. Sell Philosophy, dissent and nonconformity 2003 p139 "Established in 1854, with John Relly Beard, a fellow-student of Martineau's at Manchester College, York, as its first principal"
  7. Steers, David. "Alexander Gordon". Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography. Unitarian Universalist Historical Society. Retrieved 14 February 2017.
  8. Sell "he became principal of the Unitarian College, Manchester (1911–1921)".


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