Welcome
BARONESS ROYALL of BLAISDON
Somerville has received some intriguing gifts over the years, from curtain poles to works of art. And yet the one I find myself thinking of this morning is the bequest made in 1971 by the anthropologist Barbara Aitken.
According to her wishes, Barbara’s gift was used to establish the Marya Antonina Czaplicka Fund. The fund was created in memory of Barbara’s friend and fellow Somervillian, the intrepid anthropologist Marya Czaplicka, who had died fifty years previously, in order to support any anthropologist or student of the Ancient World wishing to study overseas.
In that gift, we see the same impulse which drives so much of the giving at Somerville. It is the story of someone remembering our College as a place where learning, friendship and community came together to enable a lifealtering change to occur, and seeking to pass that experience on to others. A gift received in the past is made to the future.
We are tremendously fortunate that our College continues to inspire such loyalty and trust among our donors and alumni. Indeed, as Covid-19 continues to wreak its toll on the university sector and our students continue to feel its aftershocks, the steadfast support of our community has been more transformative than ever.
For that reason, I would like to start by expressing my thanks to our entire giving community for the speed and generosity with which you have rallied around our continued efforts to mitigate the effects of Covid-19. It’s impossible to say thank you here for every gift we received – but please know your support is essential to us, and never forgotten.
I would also like to say a word about our Development Board and alumni groups. The record levels of support we received this year simply would not have been possible
without the campaigns and initiatives that you helped mastermind and deliver. From Wigmore Hall to the Somerville Auction, you have proven yourself Somerville’s greatest champions, and we are so fortunate to have you.
Covid-19 may have changed our lives, but Somerville’s focus on maintaining academic standards remains undiminished. That is why I am so grateful to Sue Scollan (née Green, 1978, Chemistry) and her husband Kevin for fully endowing our Chemistry Fellowship, as well as to Dr Ailsa Goulding for the generous donation made in memory of her sister Dr Elizabeth Goulding (Modern Languages, 1960) to support French studies at Somerville.
Securing the future of teaching and scholarship at Somerville must remain a focus of our fundraising going forward. In particular, we face a challenge in ensuring that our humanities and social sciences fellowships achieve full endowment, as the science fellowships have.
There are already exciting developments in this regard, with a new Somerville Campaign to meet these and other challenges in its final planning stage. Bringing together the disparate strands of academic excellence, sustainability and inclusivity in one place, this campaign will acknowledge both Somerville’s past and future, and I hope you will join us on that journey when it begins.
Scholarship at Somerville often dovetails with a commitment to the issues about which our community feels most strongly. Thus climate change was firmly on the
agenda when our OICSD scholars welcomed Prince Charles to college in May 2021 and later that summer at the inaugural OpenAg Symposium hosted in partnership with the OICSD’s new partner, Indian agribusiness UPL. At the latter, OICSD scholars met with policymakers, academics, tech investors and NGO innovators to consider how we reshape the role of food systems in the face of global heating – more of which on p14.
Meanwhile, our MTST scholars continue to work at the cutting edge of research and humanitarianism – Martin Fellermeyer is one such scholar, and he tells us about his research into cancerfighting drugs on p12.
Alongside academic excellence, we remain determined to maintain our focus on widening participation. I am pleased to note that, in the latest intake of students, 79% of our UK undergraduates were state school educated. Though we welcome and cherish all our students wherever they were educated, this shift towards a balance that more closely reflects society is an important marker of progress. It also vindicates the work of our Access and Outreach team, who were delighted to resume in-person visits in September 2021.
There is one further cause for support which has captured our community’s imagination this year. Created in 2021
to support our newly acquired status as a College of Sanctuary, the Somerville Sanctuary Scholarships offer a pathway to Oxford for bright students displaced or endangered by conflict, persecution or the violation of their human rights.
Thanks to the generosity of Virginia Ross (1966, International Studies), Shahnaz Batmanghelidj (PPE, 1975) and several other alumni and friends, we have already brought two fully-funded Sanctuary Scholars to Somerville, the newly graduated Marwa Biala (profiled in last year’s Donor Report) and Asif, whose extraordinary journey to Oxford you can read about on p10. More incredibly still, we have
just learned that we have support for two further scholarships, with further enquiries coming all the time.
Why does sanctuary resonate so much for Somerville? Perhaps because it speaks to our earliest promise of combining excellence with inclusivity. Certainly it is a source of inspiration that, when the world beyond Somerville looks so desperate, our community remains committed to improving the prospects of bright students both inside and outside these beloved walls.
Thank you for remaining so steadfast this year, and for supporting Somerville.
A gift received in the past is made to the future.Photo by John Cairns. Photo by John Cairns.
In a challenging year for the whole Somerville community, we were encouraged and uplifted by your continuing warmth, loyalty and generosity.
In 2020-21, an incredible 1,319 of you chose to support your College by making a gift. This represents the largest number of alumni donors to Somerville in a single year that has ever been recorded. We cannot thank you enough for the trust you place in us to use your funds for the greatest need and for the greatest impact. Somerville can honour its tradition of making an impact on the world though groundbreaking research and supporting the development of young people who are committed to making a positive difference – thanks to you.
We do not take your trust lightly. Our use of funds is guided by a commitment to integrity, transparency and effectiveness. As the pandemic continued to wreak havoc on our teaching, research and the student experience, your support enabled us to help those most affected. Our Treasurer, Andrew Parker, was able to commit
Development Director’s Report
SARA KALIMa level of discretionary financial support to our students (through waiving accommodation costs over the lockdowns and making hardship awards available as and when needed) at a level that has never been witnessed before in College history. This was only possible because of the resilience of our endowment, which, over recent years, has been transformed by the magnificent philanthropy of our alumni community. From legacies to regular direct debits to one-off gifts via our crowdfunding projects: no support is ever too small to make a difference.
Last year, I wrote to you about our Covid Hardship Fund, which was
established by alumni donations to our digital platform totalling almost £150,000 to support students in need. The ripple effects of those funds continue to be felt as they are used to benefit the community, with grants available to every Somerville student to enhance the technology they use to learn, buy the books they need, and access any additional teaching required to reach their potential.
Innovation, creativity and - dare I say - fun defined our activities this past year. One of our most creative fundraising moments was surely the wonderful evening of opera at Wigmore Hall organised by Sophie
Forsyth in September 2020. The sublime cadences of that evening were heightened by knowing we were raising the necessary funds to give our lockdown-deprived 2020 Leavers a fitting graduation experience. We also held our first auction for two decades which, thanks to Covid, had to be a digital experience. Going online brought many coincident benefits, such as allowing Somervillians across the world to participate. The auction culminated in a star-studded live broadcast event, and we are grateful to Natasha Kaplinsky, Susie Dent, Xand Van Tulleken, and the many others who helped to make the evening so entertaining. Our final tally of funds raised was over £100,000, with a further £100,000 in the sale of art via professional galleries.
This broadcast was made possible by the AV equipment Somerville has acquired through our Digital Fund. Thanks again to alumni support, we now have the capacity to create videos which can be broadcast to our community wherever they may be in the world. While we would always much rather welcome you back to in-person events held either in College
or beyond, the impact being made by these new technologies is clearly evident in the sheer numbers of you who have joined us online. A silver lining, indeed.
Our Alumni Carol Concert was one such occasion. The UK’s winter lockdowns ruled out an in-person event so we created a recording of our wonderful Choir, led by their equally wonderful Director Will Dawes. Their
performance was paired with readings from three incredible guests: the actor Simon Russell Beale, the theatre producer Matthew Maltby and the writer, Ella Road. The resulting Carol Concert broadcast has been viewed almost 2,000 times, with alumni from Australia to Germany to India able to share in the celebrations. We also welcomed over 500 of you to our online Supporters’ Celebration in February. There our Fellow in Experimental
Amongst the greatest strengths of this community is its commitment to social justice and inclusion.Alumni Carol Concert Recording footage for the Somerville Auction
Psychology, Professor Charles Spence took us on a journey through the world of gastrophysics, showing how sensory innovations from the high end of haute cuisine can nudge us towards a more sustainable food future.
Amongst the greatest strengths of this community is its commitment to social justice and inclusion. The work Somerville does to support refugee students and academics perfectly encapsulates this. Many of
you gave in support of our Sanctuary Scholarships this year and we see ever-growing interest in this work. Your generosity means that last year’s Scholar, a tenacious Libyan medic called Marwa Biala, has completed her Master’s in Radiation Biology. We have also welcomed our new scholar, Asif. Five years after a long, dangerous journey to the UK from Afghanistan as an unaccompanied minor with no previous schooling, he now starts his undergraduate degree in History and
AYLA BUSCH, CO-CHAIR, SOMERVILLE DEVELOPMENT BOARD
“The pandemic brought great challenges to us all in 2020: moments of anxiety and uncertainty, separation from our loved ones, and fewer personal interactions. During these hard times, Somerville and their team managed to stay close to us, they cared. Even more, they were able to bring the global Somerville community together through an abundance of wonderful online events: lectures, discussions, celebrations and even the auction were shared online by Somervillians of all ages, from all around the world, including our friends and families. In these moments of joy, I realized that there is a glue between us all, there is something that makes us distinctly Somervillians.
My warm thanks to Team Somerville for all their hard work in these testing times. On behalf of the Development Board, I would also like to convey immense thanks to each and every one of you who has supported the College this year.”
Economics. You can read more about Asif’s story on page 10.
None of our work would be possible without the unwavering support of our volunteers and ambassadors. The Development Board, chaired by Ayla Busch and Sybella Stanley, which could only meet virtually this year, brought incredible ideas and energy to our appeals and helped us to raise £2.8 million this year. We owe them all our gratitude. In addition, our Development and Alumni Relations team at college has never been more entrepreneurial in coming up with ways of keeping in touch. I am constantly in awe of their commitment and dedication to the Somerville Community, and feel very grateful to be in the company of colleagues who believe so much in Somerville’s spirit and purpose.
Looking ahead there will be a new Somerville Campaign to meet our future challenges focusing on excellence, sustainability, and inclusivity. We will meet those challenges together. For now though, a million “Thank Yous” for your belief and support.
Treasurer’s Report
BY ANDREW PARKERMuch as I envisaged in last year’s Donor Report, Covid-19 has this year continued to dominate our collegiate life.
In 2019-20, we suffered losses of £2m as the pandemic had a dramatic impact on rental income from our retail properties, rental income from students (we waived student rents for Trinity Term 2020 when our students were not in residence) and conference income. Much of this held true in 2020-21, although the impact on student rental income was not quite so significant. The underlying loss was c. £1.5m, which was partially ameliorated by drawing down additional funds from our endowment.
The steady growth in our endowment (which is now mid-table among Oxford colleges) and our unrestricted reserves, which we had been carefully nurturing, gave us the financial heft to absorb these losses without recourse to making any staff redundant, helped by the government furlough scheme. We had inevitably to cut our cloth during the year, as you would expect, but managed to do so without compromising our core activities.
Our endowment has recovered better than we might have hoped after the losses experienced last year. The valuation on 31st July 2021 saw an investment gain of £16m, pushing our endowment to £95m (though it might be prudent to anticipate something of a correction in the year ahead). During the year, we successfully divested from
all our fossil fuel extraction-related investments without crystallising any capital loss. The proceeds raised have been invested sustainably in line with our wider policy.
Equally positively, we have just finished our £4m refurbishment of the kitchen and pantry. The facilities were unsuitable to cater to the number of diners now served at Somerville, and they had reached the end of their life and needed replacement without delay. We now have a state-ofthe-art kitchen with which our catering team is delighted, and the fruits of whose labour we are all greatly enjoying.
Another significant expenditure this year was the purchase of the long-term lease on 25-27 Little Clarendon Street (the building immediately west of the Vaughan arcade). The addition of these three ground-floor shops and a spacious flat above each means we now own all the buildings in the corner of Walton Street and Little Clarendon Street, as well as the freehold. We also completed the refurbishment of Bedford House, which is now a teaching/function/AV room. Honouring a commitment we made as part of the planning permission process for the Catherine Hughes building, we will be making the space available for local community use during September each year.
Looking forward, next summer we are planning to put a sound-absorbing material onto the dining hall ceiling in an attempt to soften the oppressive acoustics we experience in there during busy meal sittings and formal dinners. This will not completely solve the problem, but we anticipate a marked improvement.
The Year in Numbers
Here are the numbers for 2020-21 at a glance.
Amount raised: £2,787,176
Number of alumni who donated: 1,319
Percentage of alumni who donated: 19% Number of friends who donated: 99 Revenue from legacies last year: £186,375
INCOME 2020-21
Total income £14,200,000
Discretionary financial support for students
£22 k £32 k £717 k £735 k
The level of discretionary support during the pandemic has been 22 times higher than pre-Covid-19 levels. Most of this expenditure came from waived student rents, so these peaks are expected to decrease from 2022-23 onwards – though we anticipate a continued need for student support post-Covid.
EXPENDITURE 2020-21
Total expenditure £13, 900,000
Tuition fees
Student rental income
Legacies & donations
Trading income
Furlough scheme
Investment income
Capital gains on unrestricted investments
Teaching & research costs
College operating costs
Depreciation
Fundraising, comms and alumni relations costs
During the year we spent £0.6m on fundraising costs and raised £2.6m as a result. Of this £1.7m went into the endowment to provide ongoing income for future years and £0.9m was taken directly to revenue income in the year.
“I never imagined I’d get into Oxford”
ASIF, SANCTUARY SCHOLAR
Asif had never attended school before he fled the Taliban aged only 14. Five years later, he is studying History and Economics as Somerville’s newest Sanctuary Scholar. Asif shares his exceptional story, and how he realised that education is the most important thing of all.
You might think that leaving my home as an unaccompanied child refugee, or spending nights in a cold Bulgarian prison, or living in Calais’ ‘Jungle’ camp would be the parts of my life that have shaped me the most - but it’s my desire to learn that really drives me.
I grew up in a village in the south-eastern Nangarhar region of Afghanistan with very little access to education except in reading Quranic Arabic. Children in the village often worked, especially at harvest time, but otherwise there wasn’t much for us to do. It wasn’t enough for me; I knew that I wanted to learn more, to read, to write.
I had no idea how my wish would be granted.
In May 2016, my life changed forever. The Taliban were returning to the area after years in exile in Pakistan, and they were conscripting men and boys as fighters. At the age of 14, I was unlikely to be spared. My family was faced with an unthinkable choice: hand me over to violent fundamentalists, or entrust me to people smugglers and send me to seek sanctuary abroad? So I left, alone, and with no idea of where I was going. It was the last time I saw and spoke to my parents.
Photo by John CairnsReaching the UK took five long, terrible months. People traffickers have no mercy in them at all. You had to do what they said without question, and we were told as little as possible at every stage. It was no better without them; some countries would imprison us, only to release us on the border and send us off to repeat the process in the next destination. The worst were the prisons in Bulgaria and Serbia, where we were given only one small meal per day.
In August I reached Calais, where I lived in the infamous ‘jungle’ camp in its final months before demolition by the French government. Sometimes I slept in a shipping container bunkbed, sometimes in a tent. The camp housed thousands of people, and conditions were crowded and filthy. After two months, I was smuggled to the UK hidden in a lorry. Once again, I didn’t really know where I was being taken or if I was safe.
After a night in a children’s detention centre, I was placed in a care home for two weeks before being fostered in Thurrock, just to the east of London. It was surreal that my journey was at an end. I was finally safe, but Thurrock was not at all like home. In my village, I knew every family (of which there were around 300), but now I barely knew who the neighbours were. I miss that sense of support and community.
Nevertheless, I was so fortunate to be there. I quickly realised that I had also been extremely lucky with my foster placement. Right from the start, my foster mum really cared about me and my future. She fought for me to start school a year behind to give me a chance to catch up with my English, and it’s unlikely I would be here at Somerville without that. The support she gave me was just phenomenal, and we are still close now.
I never imagined I’d get into Oxford - I wasn’t sure if I would apply to University at all. After all, I am a refugee who started school aged 14 and went through the care system. And how would I ever afford to study? My asylum application was denied (I was granted five years of Leave to Remain while appealing), so I was unlikely to qualify for student finance or home fee status. And which college would I fit in and be included at, given my background?
The two questions had the same answer. One of my heroes, Lord Alf Dubs, was speaking at an online event I watched, hosted by Somerville’s Principal Jan Royall. I was intrigued, and the more I read about the college, their support for refugees and their commitment to including the excluded, the more I knew I’d found the right place. I can’t describe the feeling when I got the news about the Sanctuary Scholarship. I simply
would not be able to be here without it, and I cannot thank Somerville and the University enough.
It always come back to education. Education breaks the cycle of poverty and violence.
My experience at Oxford so far has been wonderful. I’m studying History and Economics here because I want to be able to create positive change. I’m passionately interested in development economics, learning how countries grow and how the world is moving. I’m finding that the more I learn, the more I want to learn! I want to work for a non-profit once I’ve finished my education, hopefully back in Afghanistan. I know that my parents, wherever they are, are proud of everything I’ve achieved.
It always come back to education. Education breaks the cycle of poverty and violence, and it transforms economies and societies. There is so much you can do, if you have access to the opportunity to learn. I am really looking forward to these next few years… these next few decades come to think of it!
Developing New Weapons In the Fight Against Cancer
Martin Fellermeyer is a third year doctoral student and Oxford Thatcher Scholar based at the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine. We visited him there to learn more about his work developing life-saving cancer therapies, and how the support of the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust has galvanised his work both in and outside the laboratory.
Unlike a virus or bacterial infection, cancer is an intrinsic pathology: it arises due to problems with our own cells. Considering that the human body consists of around 37 trillion cells, any of which can develop into a tumour cell, it didn’t take long for me to become fascinated as an undergraduate by the mechanisms of how our body stops the ‘natural’ build-up of cancer cells. Most importantly, I came to believe that understanding these processes could translate into more effective drugs to treat patients in the clinic – this was the starting point for all my research.
Generally, a cancerous cell is one of our own cells that developed mutations in its genetic material (the DNA), which lead to changes and perturbations of the cell’s behaviour, most importantly an increase in cell divisions that allows the tumour to grow. Luckily, there are
different ‘self-defence’ systems in our body that aim to prevent exactly this from happening.
further damage to the body. That is why developing cancer cells seek not only to increase growth rate through DNA mutations, but also to manipulate DNA damage detection machinery and prevent cell suicide.
Secondly, if a cell’s intrinsic protection mechanisms fail, there are also extrinsic mechanisms in place to reduce the chance of tumour development. Most importantly, immune cells travel through our body looking for ‘different’ cells, including cancerous ones. A developing tumour will always seek ways to evade these protection mechanisms.
Firstly, our cells are constantly scanning themselves for injuries, such as missing or broken DNA, and seeking to repair themselves. If a cell is unable to repair itself, it will voluntarily die in order to prevent
Conventional chemotherapy is not designed to support these protection mechanisms with much accuracy: it simply kills all quickly growing cells, leading to the familiar side effects of
Giving something back has always been important to me – and not merely through my research.
hair loss and gastrointestinal problems, as gut and hair cells are also targeted due to their fast cell growth. That is why there has been a lot of interest in finding drugs that target the different protection mechanisms of our own body in an effort to ‘re-activate’ them.
I hope my research will play a part in this important work. Specifically, my D.Phil. aims to develop novel drugs that will bind and block to what are known as the ‘stop signals’ used by cancerous cells to prevent immune cells from attacking them.
Our immune system works by maintaining a delicate balance of rapidly and effectively eliminating threats (e.g. viruses, bacteria, cancerous cells) and keeping our body intact by not interfering with normal processes (e.g. microbiota in the gut and on the skin). The problem with cancer is that a developing tumour utilises immunestopping factors to disrupt this process, either by sending immune cells away or dramatically reducing their killing functions. In particular, some tumour cells use a ‘stop signal’ on their surface to prevent the patrolling immune cells from identifying them as a threat and killing them.
Consequently, there has been a huge effort from the scientific community to
find drugs that block the different ‘stop signals’ so immune cells can function as usual and eradicate the cancer. The first drug based on this idea was approved in 2011 (ipilimumab), leading to the 2018 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the two scientists who facilitated this discovery.
My research looks to build on this work by developing novel drugs that will bind and block to ‘stop signals’, thereby unleashing the power of our immune cells. As mentioned, there is a great variety of immune cells in our body, all with very specific functions. In my first project, I am testing new drug combinations that focus on the ‘re-activation’ of different immune cells, aiming to create an improved therapy as compared to only activating one type of immune cell. In the second part of my project, I am re-engineering
existing drugs that are used in the clinic to make them more effective in their blockade of the ‘stop signal’.
I am deeply grateful to the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship for enabling me to come to this inspiring city and carry out the research for my D.Phil. The financial support allows me to follow my passions, both through my research and outside the lab.
Giving something back has always been important to me – and not merely through my work. In the first months of my D.Phil., I trained as a peer supporter, offering mental health support to students in Somerville and the Medical Sciences Division. Shortly after, I became vice president of a new University-wide peer support initiative and, in winter 2020, I trained as an LFD Test instructor to help my fellow Somervillians get home for Christmas. Finally, I was this year elected president of the Graduate Student Association at my institute, following a term as welfare officer. There I hope to be able to have a positive influence on the academic and social environment for my peers.
It’s a privilege to do this work here in Oxford, and I hope it makes a difference.
It’s a privilege to do this work here in Oxford, and I hope it makes a difference.All photos John Cairns
An Appetite for Change
The Inaugural OpenAg Symposium 2021
In 2020, leading agri-solutions company UPL and Somerville College, announced the launch of a new UPL Sustainability Fund at The Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development (OICSD), providing support for new research into climate change, food and water security, clean energy, healthcare innovation, sustainable cities and environmental sustainability.
As part of UPL’s support of the OICSD, UPL and Somerville College launched the OpenAg Symposium, a new annual event to discuss a range of sustainability, innovation, technology and investment topics in agriculture. On 3rd September 2021 – ahead of the UN Food Systems Summit and COP26 – the inaugural ‘Food Future
in a Changing Climate’ OpenAg Symposium took place at the University of Oxford.
The event brought together leading academics, policymakers, technology investors, industry pioneers, and NGO innovators from across the globe to address the social and environmental
trade-offs and challenges posed by climate change in the area of agriculture. It outlined a series of policy positions, technological interventions, and collaboration opportunities that can contribute to global efforts to reshape the role of food systems in the face of climate change.
The OpenAg Symposium is also notable for pioneering the first use of a hybrid event at Somerville, featuring remote speakers from around the world alongside in-person attendees. The Symposium opened with an introduction by Jan Royall, Baroness Royall of Blaisdon and Somerville’s Principal, and by Her Excellency the High Commissioner of India to the United Kingdom, Gaitri Issar Kumar. The keynote was given by Sir Charles Godfray, Director of the Oxford Martin School and former Chair of the Science Advisory Council to the UK.
Above and left: Prof Radhika Khosla speaking at OpenAg. Photos: John CairnsThe conference brought together four panels, covering the topics of: ‘The Role of Agriculture in Combatting Climate Change’; ‘Priorities for Policymakers in Land Use and Biodiversity’; ‘Technologies to Transform the Agrifood Chain’; and ‘The Future of India’s Agricultural Sector.’ Among the speakers were Dr Agnes Kalibata, UN SecretaryGeneral’s Special Envoy to the 2021 Food Systems Summit and Somerville’s own Prof Radhika Khosla, Research Director of the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development.
Concluding the OpenAg Symposium, Baroness Royall, said: “The inaugural OpenAg Symposium has been a resounding success. What we have heard and seen today gave us a glimpse of the vital role that food systems must play in the fight against climate change. As an institution, Oxford has an extraordinary power to convene and shape the coalitions that lead to the transformation of some of humanity’s most urgent needs. We are excited to see where the OpenAg Symposium, and the discussions it has inspired, go from here.”
Jai Shroff, Global CEO of UPL Ltd., added: “Agriculture is one of the only systems on the planet that has the ability to reshape and reverse the effects of climate change. At UPL, we take a wholly optimistic view of the opportunity that exists for farms and farmers to nourish the planet, while feeding the population. This transformation will not be easy, but the discussions we have heard at this inaugural OpenAg Symposium show that the will and the means exist to meet this challenge if we continue to work together.”
Oxford has an extraordinary power to convene and shape the coalitions that lead to the transformation of some of humanity’s most urgent needs.”
JAN ROYALL, PRINCIPAL
You can view the full report of conference proceedings and panel discussions online by scanning the following QR code.Jai Shroff, CEO of UPL, in conversation with Sir Charles Godfray, Director of Oxford Martin School. Photo: John Cairns Below: Principal Jan Royall with (l-r) UPL’s CEO, Jai Shroff, and High Commissioner of India to the United Kingdom, Gaitri Issar Kumar. Photo: John Cairns
Lots of Joy THE SOMERVILLE AUCTION
Things looked tough in Michaelmas 2020. A new lockdown was looming and finances were flagging. We needed a boost – something that would raise vital funds for College while at the same time bringing much-needed joy to our community. Development Board Member Judith Buttigieg (Physics, 1989) had a brainwave: what about hosting our very own auction?
“My masterclass with Fiona Stafford will be etched in memory for its sheer brilliance, spontaneity, and deep, meaningful insights into Milton’s poetry.”
GOPAL SUBRAMANIUM, FOUNDATION FELLOW
What followed next were nights of madcap energy, too much coffee and ecstatic celebration as alumni, friends and Fellows met our appeals for help with frankly unbelievable generosity. Wimbledon tickets, stunning holiday destinations, haute couture fashion, even a prize draw for students: our community gave their all for Somerville. Finally, in May 2021, we came together for a gala finale, where celebrity friends including Susie Dent and Natasha Kaplinsky joined us for a rollercoaster evening of bidding and laughter.
Once the bids were in and the art sold via professional galleries, there came the thrill of seeing our lucky winners enjoy their experiences. The delight of everyone involved was surely heightened by knowing they were part of a circle of giving, supporting the essential needs of Somerville in the face of unprecedented challenge.
THE AUCTION IN NUMBERS
69 lots
1,000 bids
230 attendees
£215,221 raised
“What joy – so much more than just lots of joy; a whole pantechnicon of joy. The auction was not only a magnificent embodiment of the spirit of Somerville but also an extraordinary fundraising success.”
from the THANKS PRESIDENT JCR
by DI YINGThis year, Somerville had to do something unprecedented. We had to learn to live with the ‘new normal’, in a world remade in a shape that would have been unimaginable to our predecessors. And yet, thanks to your generous support, our community didn’t just survive, it flourished.
First, there was your amazing and timely support for the Covid Relief Fund. Your support ensured that our students were able to avoid hardship caused by the pandemic and continue their studies without the fear of losing their accommodation or being forced to defer. The same fund was equally valuable, I know, for our early-career tutors, to whom it offered a valuable bursary for web-cam kits to use when remote-teaching.
In addition, there was your support for the Tech Fund, which will transform our ability to deliver Access and Outreach activities in the new online world. Offering virtual open days will radically democratise the College’s efforts to allow potential applicants from disadvantaged or under-represented backgrounds to gain a vivid insight into life at Somerville, raising aspirations that they, too, can one day join our community.
There is so much else for which we’re grateful –from individual gifts to the Auction. I hope that this report will begin to convey some of the incredible opportunities and moments your donations have facilitated, and will continue to facilitate, as well as our gratitude for the same. On behalf of all undergraduate students here, thank you – Somerville would not be Somerville without you.
Beyond the Colour Wheel
Shah Moore (2018, Psychology) is this year’s recipient of the British Neuropsychological Society’s Undergraduate Project Prize 2021. Shah received the award for ground-breaking research into the experience of colour and spatial categories among blind and sighted subjects, and was the recipient of a 2019 Irene Brown Bursary from Somerville College to slow the progression of their visual impairment.
It’s an idea most of us accept without question: the relationship between concepts is derived from our experiences. But what if you have never had a certain experience? What if you’re a blind or partially-sighted person trying to understand concepts that can can only be experienced through vision, such as the relationship between colours, or objects in space? These are the questions which Shah Moore, working with their supervisor, Kate Watkins, sought to answer in a final year research project conducted at the height of the pandemic.
The study took as its starting point the desire to resolve contradictions in the findings of previous research. Some studies suggested that the blind conceptualise colour in both dimensions as per the Newtonian colour wheel, i.e. warm vs. cold and bright vs. dark. However, other studies found that blind colour spaces were unidimensional. In addition to this question, Shah also wanted to explore how blind vs. sighted groups represent spatial prepositions, such as above, below around and between, given that blind individuals
rely on touch and audition alone in guiding object positioning.
Through a combination of pair dissimilarity tasks, plotted maps of concept relationships and questionnaires, the study confirmed that two dimensions was the best fit model for all participants for both colour and spatial experiments. This conclusion has significant ramifications, because it suggests that humans can establish detailed conceptual knowledge with limited direct experience; language, sensory comparison and metaphor alone are enough to convey the relationships between colours and spatial relations.
Speaking of the prize, Shah commented: ‘It is a huge honour for our project to be recognised by the BNS. As someone born with a severe visual impairment, I was thrilled to be able to give something back to the blind and visually-impaired community - and I am so grateful to Somerville College for supporting me throughout this project.’
The Irene Brown Bursary is awarded to studentswithadisability.
The spatial prepositions experiment was an impressive, major contribution, combining complex quantitative and qualitative approaches.”
JUDGING COMMITTEE OF THE BRITISH NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETYShah Moore
Future Proof: The Covid Hardship Fund
By the summer of 2020, we all knew that 2019-20 would be a year to remember. We also knew that College finances were likely to take a hit of not less than £1 million per year for as long as the pandemic lasted, mostly through lost rental, accommodation and conferencing income. Further hits were anticipated through College seeking to mitigate student hardship, including supporting student welfare and assisting postgraduates whose research had been disrupted through loss of labs or travel.
All of these costs were right and proper for Somerville to pay – but the money had to come from somewhere. Fortunately, Somerville is good in a tight spot.
In October 2020, we launched our ‘Future Proof’ Covid Hardship Fund, with a target of raising £100,000 in a month. Recognising the importance of the cause, our extraordinary community of supporters rallied round like never before. We ended the month
of October 127% over target, having raised £127,467 from 387 donors, including matched funding of £55,150.
We cannot express our gratitude to our donors properly for this support: unrestricted funds like these are vital in allowing Somerville to react flexibly, allocating money where it’s needed most for our students and community.
“The COVID-19 hardship fund will help all students at Somerville secure further access to critical resources like the college counselling service or financial hardship support.”
Embracing the New Normal: THE DIGITAL FUND
Somerville was an early adopter of online events with our ‘Somerville At Home’ series, but, by Michaelmas 2020, everyone could see these new platforms were here to stay. We also wanted to consolidate the success of the Access and Outreach team’s Virtual Open Days, which offer ever greater and more egalitarian avenues to connect with prospective applicants.
We duly went to our community with a fundraising target of £30,000 for professional AV kit – and our community once again rose to the challenge. We raised over £50,000 from 37 donors. Special thanks go to Lynn Haight, Virginia Ross, Trevor Hughes, Rosamund Williams and the Somerville London Group for their generous support, the fruits of which can already be seen on the Somerville website and YouTube channel.
In Search of Lost Time SUPPORTING OUR 2020 LEAVERS
In September 2020, moved by the stories of Somerville’s finalists who had lost their last months at Oxford to lockdown, Somerville Development Board Member Sophie Forsyth proposed to raise funds for a leavers’ weekend by hosting an evening of opera at London’s Wigmore Hall. The night featured an eclectic programme curated by celebrated bass Matthew Rose and performed by young singers who had been deprived of a stage for over 6 months. We would like to extend our thanks to Sophie and Hamish Forsyth for their organising genius, to Matthew Rose for bringing so many excellent performers together with an audience and, of course, to everyone who supported this event and gave generously.
The Wigmore Hall event raised £25,000, allowing our 2020 leavers
to return to the college in September 2021 to graduate with their friends and bid farewell to their time in Oxford. A BBQ one evening and Formal the next, with the beloved Somerville brunch in between, guaranteed plenty of opportunities for touchstone experiences. Conversations ranged long into the night and afternoons were spent lazing on the Quad; it’s clear what these newly graduated alumni missed most was each other.
“After such an abrupt ending to the 2019-20 academic year, it was wonderful to see so many familiar faces again and find out what everyone had been up to since leaving. I can’t thank the alumni enough for this chance to reconnect.”
JOEL SUMMERFIELD (2017, MATHS)“The BBQ on the Terrace was wonderful and a great chance to catch up with our cohort while reminiscing late into the night. Thank you so much for making this week-end possible!”
ILONA CLAYTON (2016, HISTORY AND GERMAN)“I have been incredibly impressed by the stoicism shown by Somerville students who have missed out on so many of the ‘rites of passage’ experiences that we were lucky enough to take for granted. It felt profoundly important to raise funds for our leavers to celebrate their achievements. To do so through a remarkable concert that also provided work for young musicians was fantastic.”
SOPHIE FORSYTH (1989, ANCIENT AND MODERN HISTORY)
Strengthening French Studies at Somerville
Brexit may have altered the landscape for the teaching of modern languages. But French studies continue to thrive undaunted at Somerville with the help of a generous in memoriam gift from an anonymous donor, explains Professor Simon Kemp, Somerville’s Tutorial Fellow in the subject.
In October 2020, we welcomed one of the largest and most diverse cohorts of Freshers the college has ever seen to the subject to explore the first-year literature course which runs from the medieval narrative poem of love and jealousy, La Chatelaine de Vergy to Marie NDiaye’s twenty-first-century satire, Papa doit manger.
At the other end of the degree course, meanwhile, all of our finalists opted to begin their Final Honours School studies by delving into the
modern period of literature. They will start their journey with classics of nineteenth-century French Realism, after which they will head off in different directions through our newly revised and expanded course options, which welcome significant new voices from the francophone Arab world, the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa, alongside European poets, novelists and playwrights.
In French language teaching, changes in immigration rules following Brexit
forced us to end our longstanding arrangement with the École Normale Supérieure in Lyon to send us annually a lecteur or lectrice who would hold our students’ conversation classes and other speaking and listening practice alongside their own studies. In its place, we are delighted to have been able to create a new post of Lecturer in French Language for the college, which combines the lecteur role with that of our former part-time language instructor. We are very pleased to welcome Dr Christophe Barnabé to the post this coming term, and look forward to the opportunities this presents to reinvent our spoken and written language provision and its relationship to the literary and cultural side of the course.
In October 2020, we welcomed one of the largest and most diverse cohort of Freshers the college has ever seen.
At a research level, I am continuing to supervise doctoral projects on Iris Murdoch’s and Simone de Beauvoir’s philosophy, on illness and existentialist thought, and on Samuel Beckett’s translations of his own work between French and English, while welcoming a new doctoral researcher who will examine representations of mental illness in contemporary women’s writing. In my own research, I am currently writing on theories of mind and their use in literary studies.
Digitising A Paradise of Dainty Devices
A unique collection of autographs, poems and sketches by preeminent early 20th Century writers, poets, and artists has been digitised and made available online thanks to a crowdfunding campaign.
A Paradise of Dainty Devices is the visitors’ book kept by doctor and writer Percy Withers (1867-1945), father of Somervillian and first female British Vogue editor Audrey Withers (1924, PPE), who donated his papers to Somerville
in 1976. The beautifully bound volume is no ordinary visitors’ book, however. Within its pages are handwritten contributions from writers such as AE Housman and WB Yeats, alongside sketches and watercolours by artists including Paul Nash and Max Beerbohm, all of whom visited Withers and his wife, the Somervillian Mary Withers (née Summers, 1881) at their home, Souldern Court.
A successful crowdfunding campaign in 2018, generously supported by Somerville’s friends and alumni, enabled us to digitise and upload the book to the Bodleian Library’s Digital Bodleian site. Now, following a hiatus brought on by the pandemic, this important collection can be viewed anywhere in the world.
YOU CAN ACCESS A PARADISE OF DAINTY DEVICES VIA THE FOLLOWING QR CODE.
We are particularly indebted to the generosity of Karen Gray and her husband Ian, the current owners of Souldern Court. Karen writes:
My interest in the Withers family began with a locked cupboard in Somerville College library. Hidden away inside was a hoard of correspondence, photographs taken by Percy Withers of his many guests, and the handwritten draft of his autobiography, including a description of the joyful day he first saw his future home (and later ours), Souldern Court.
Here began a fascination for my husband Ian and I that continues to this day. I will always be grateful for Somerville’s generosity in unlocking that cupboard and allowing me to explore this remarkable archive.
Regular Giving at Somerville
NIAMH WALSHE, REGULAR GIVING AND ALUMNI RELATIONS EXECUTIVE
‘Once a Somervillian, always a Somervillian’ is a sentiment that has long defined our alumni community – and nowhere is this sentiment more evident than in the loyalty of our regular supporters.
A record 1,319 Somervillians gave to the College in the past year, allowing us to provide more bursaries and hardship grants than ever before. Thanks to you, students who lost vacation jobs or parental support were able to receive financial support averaging £2,000 each.
The positive impact of this help cannot be overstated. Under Covid-19, students have needed our help more than ever to weather the stresses of daily life, financial hardship and uncertainty about the future.
Fundraising to support our students was made extrachallenging in 2020-21 because we couldn’t run a Telethon
in-person. Fortunately, our Database Office Melissa Gemmer-Johnson and Development Assistant Hannah Patrick, a recent Somerville graduate, were able to pioneer the first ever ‘in-house’ telethon.
With Hannah making the calls and Melissa providing the all-important info, Hannah was able to connect across generations of alumni, sharing updates on how our current students were faring and raising a phenomenal £52,000 in gifts and pledges from 99 donors.
Finally, I am delighted to share an update on our ongoing Sanctuary Scholarship work. This year, Somerville was recognised as a University College of Sanctuary and our first Sanctuary Scholar, Dr Marwa Biala, graduated with her MSc in Radiation Biology in November 2021. Her scholarship was funded directly through our crowdfunding projects and regular giving – meaning that it is your kindness which, year on year, enables Marwa and others like her to succeed against the odds.
“The support of our alumni community was essential in my first year, at a time when we were all dealing with the effects of Covid-19. I used the IT Kit Fund to aid my studies and many of my friends received vital support through the Covid Hardship Fund. That’s why I volunteered to become a Telethon Caller in Michaelmas 2021: I wanted to share my story as well as hear those of my predecessors, discovering the common ground of what it means to be a Somervillian.”
DONA JOSH (2020, BIOCHEMISTRY)THE GIFT OF A LEGACY
Names ordered by surname
Emeritus Fellow Fellow
Foundation Fellow
Honorary Fellow
Honorary Research Fellow
Junior Research Fellow
Senior Research Fellow
Deceased
Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF
Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984
Ms Susan Allard 1962
Ms Pauline Ashall 1978
Mrs Rosemary Baker (Holdich) 1962
Sir Christopher Ball
Mrs Laura Barnett (Weidenfeld) 1972
Dr Jennifer Barraclough (Collins) 1967
Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957
Mrs Carol Bird (McColl) 1990
Mrs Clare Bonney (Penny Tillett) 1964
Mrs Karin Bosanquet (Lund) 1951
Dr Margaret Bowker (Roper) 1955
Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF
Mrs Anne Bradley (Greasley) 1966
Dr Jill Brock (Lewis) 1956 JRF
Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972
Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964
Professor Edwina Brown 1967
Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954
Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF
Mrs Glynne Butt (Merrick) 1962
Sir Neil & Lady Butterfield
Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988
Mrs Ann Buxton (Boggis-Rolfe) 1971
Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974
Ms Charlotte Caplan 1967
Mrs Sheena Carmichael (Inglis) 1960
Dr Christian Carritt 1946
Dr Margaret Clark (Sidebottom) 1967
Ms Marieke Clarke 1959
Mrs Anne Clements
Miss Fiona Clements 1990
Professor Jennifer Coates (Black) 1962
Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981
Dr Claire Cockroft (1990)
Mrs Claire Coghlin (O’Brien) 1960
Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950
Miss Beth Coll 1976
Mrs Miranda Corben (McCormick) 1968
Dr Anne Coulson (Rowley) 1965
Ms Caroline Cracraft (Pinder) 1961
Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953
Dr Bridget Davies 1950
Mrs Janet Davies (Welburn) 1958
Mrs Patricia Davies (Owtram) 1951
Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964
Dr Daphne Drabble (Fielding) 1961
Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952
Miss Rosalind Erskine 1967
Miss Rosemary FitzGibbon 1967
Mrs Elizabeth Fortescue Hitchins (Baldwin) 1946
Mrs Penelope Gaine (Dornan) 1959
Dr Barbara Goodwin 1966
Miss Charlotte Graves Taylor (Graves-Taylor) 1958
Dr Andrew Graydon 1988
Mrs Jane Hands (Smart) 1981
Miss Ann Hansen 1959
Dr Janet Harland (Draper) 1952
Professor Pauline Harrison (Cowan) 1944
Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF
Miss Diana Havenhand 1986
Dr Deborah Healey (Smith) 1971
Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959
Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973
Ms Mary Honeyball 1972
Mr John Horsman
Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965
Mr David Hughes 2009
Ms Penny Hunt 1975
Mrs Nicola Hyman (Tomlinson) 1993
Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964
Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958
Miss Carol Jackson 1982
Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966
Mrs Lynette Jeggo (Wilkie) 1966
Mrs Emily Johnson (Cooke) 1996
Mr Ian Johnson 1996
Dr Barbara Jones 1973
Mrs Clare Joy (Jwala) 1989
Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953
Mrs Ann Kennedy (Cullis) 1947
Dr Racha Kirakosian 2010
Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968
Miss Bridget Knight 1955
Ms Madeleine Knight
Ms Elizabeth Knowles 1970
Dr Loeske Kruuk (Kruck) 1988
Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966
Mrs Penny Lee (Hooper) 1950
Professor Laura Lepschy (Momigliano) 1952 HF
Dr Kate Lesseps (Lay) 1979
Dr Louise Levene 1979
Dr Ruth Lister 1944
Miss Mary Low 1945
Miss Pat Lucas 1949
Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974
Professor Judith Marquand (Reed) 1954
Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF
Mrs Sheila Mawby (Roxburgh) 1962
Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957
Dr Penny McCarthy (Gee) 1962
Mrs Jenny McKeown (Chancellor) 1961
Dr Elizabeth McLean (Hunter) 1950
Professor Kate McLoughlin 1988
Dr Minnie McMillan 1960
Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF
Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967
Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966
Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969
Miss Helen Morton EF
Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958
Dr Fahera Musaji (Sindhu) 1990
Ms Hilary Newiss 1974
Ms Amelia Nguyen 2014
Dr Susan Owens 1990
Mrs Sue Pappas (Dennler) 1962
Ms Neeta Patel 1980
Mrs Kristin Payne (Maule) 1959
Dr Hilary Pearson 1962
Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950
Dr Alison Pilgrim 1974
Ms Sally Prentice 1987
Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968
Ms Jane Robinson 1978
Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954
Miss Linda Salt (1976)
Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF
Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961
Ms Jane Sender (Nothmann) 1974
Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF
Mr George Shea
Mrs Susan Sinagola (Livingstone) 1976
Mrs Sandra Skemp (Burns) 1957 JRF
Mrs Alison Sloan (Goodall) 1978
Mrs Wendy Smith (Arnold) 1965
Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952
Mrs Ann Squires (Florence) 1962
Ms Sybella Stanley 1979
Mrs Felicity Staveley-Taylor (Roberts) 1986
Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988
Ms Jocelyn Stoddard 1976
Dr Vicky Tagart 1967
Mrs Jayne Thomas (Harvey) 1977
Lady Thomas (Valerie Little) 1955
Mrs Joan Townsend (Davies) 1955
Professor Meg Twycross (Pattison) 1954
Ms Judith Unwin 1973
Mrs Kate Varney (Leavis) 1958
Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965
Mrs Rhiannon Wakefield (Hogg) 1984
Mrs Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951
Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF
Ms Jacqueline Watts 1979
Mrs Jenny Welsh (Husband) 1952
Miss Pauline Wickham 1950
Dr Joan Wilkinson 1955
Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956
Mrs Margaret Willis (Andrews) 1940
Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957
Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974
Miss Celia Wrighton 1992
Dr Sarah Young (Gbedemah) 1980
36 Anonymous Donors
Legacies received during the period 01.08.2020-31.07.2021
Lady Abdy (Jane Noble) 1952 ǂ
Ms Gaby Charing 1962 ǂ
Mrs Josie Eckhard 1946 ǂ
Dr Janet Fletcher (Bone) 1951 ǂ
Mrs Barbara Forrai (Lockwood) 1946 ǂ
Mrs Mary Grodecki (Vernon) 1943 ǂ
Miss Jean Hall 1943 ǂ
Mrs Caroline Kenny (Arthur) 1956 ǂ
Mrs Anne Kindersley ǂ
Miss Judith Lovelace 1963 ǂ
Ms Sheila Porter 1951 ǂ
Mrs Dora Rose (Birch) 1951 ǂ
Mrs Betty Williams (Rollason) 1947 ǂ
Legacy gifts have played a transformative role throughout the history of the College, and continue to do so.
Somerville Will Power, our legacy society, honours the special effort and commitment made by alumni and friends who have pledged a legacy or planned gift to Somerville.
If you would like more information about including the College in your estate planning, please contact Sara Kalim –sara.kalim@some.ox.ac.uk
LIST OF DONORS
During the financial period 1st August 2020-31st July 2021
Alumni ordered by matriculation year
Emeritus Fellow Fellow Foundation Fellow
Honorary Fellow
Honorary Research Fellow
Junior Research Fellow
Senior Research Fellow
Deceased
1930-1939
Dr Joyce Reynolds 1937 HF
Mrs Catherine Eden (Sowerby) 1939
1940-1949
Anonymous 1942
Mrs Susan Wood (Chenevix-Trench) 1942
Mrs Mary Foote (Hinchliffe) 1943
Dr Mary Ede (Turner) 1944
Mrs Joyce Molyneux (Ormerod) 1945
Dr Christian Carritt 1946
Mrs Patricia Clough (Brown) 1946
Lady Fox (Hazel Stuart) 1946 HF
Mrs Gladys Green (Brett-Harris) 1946 ǂ
Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF
Miss Sheila Hill 1946
Lady Kirk (Elizabeth Graham) 1946
Dr Patience Barnes (Wade) 1947
Mrs Pamela Drewett (Evans) 1947
Mrs Mary Shorter (Steer) 1947
Mrs Amna Winter (Sankar) 1947
Mrs Mary Brettell (Bennett) 1948
Viscountess Dunrossil (Mavis Spencer-Payne)
1948
Dr Jean Hunter (Hopkins) 1948
Mrs Helge Rubinstein (Kitzinger) 1948
Mrs Helen Sackett (Phillips) 1948
Mrs Theresa Stewart (Raisman) 1948 HF ǂ
Miss April Symons 1948
Miss Marian Brown 1949
Professor Jenny Glusker (Pickworth) 1949 HF
Dr Ruth Roberts (Greenhow) 1949
Mrs Mally Yates (Shaw) 1949
1950-1959
Mrs Hilda Cole (Robinson) 1950
Dr Bridget Davies 1950
Mrs Penny Lee (Hooper) 1950
Dr Rosemary Moore (Filmer) 1950
Mrs Jo Murphy (Cummins) 1950
Mrs Jenny Newman (Hugh-Jones) 1950
Mrs Renate Olins (Steinert) 1950
Mrs Jane Peters (Sheldon) 1950
Mrs Nora Satterthwaite (Cable) 1950
Mrs Maureen Scurlock (Oliver) 1950
Dr Marie Surridge (Thomas) 1950
The Revd Canon Kate Tristram 1950
Miss Pauline Wickham 1950
Mrs Helen Bond (Wilman) 1951
Mrs Karin Bosanquet (Lund) 1951
Miss Barbara Cairns 1951
Mrs Patricia Davies (Owtram) 1951
Miss Cynthia Howard 1951
Mrs Vera Lupton (Johnston) 1951
Mrs Dorothy Newton (Casley) 1951
Mrs Ann Paddick (Dolby) 1951
Mrs Corinne Petford (Chambers) 1951
Mrs Margaret Porter (Wallace) 1951
Mrs Vivienne Rees (Farey) 1951
Mrs Lucia Turner (Glanville) 1951
Mrs Judy Ward (McVittie) 1951
Mrs Jenifer Wates (Weston) 1951
Anonymous 1952
Mrs Cynthia Coldham-Jones (Coldham) 1952
Mrs Shirley Cordeaux Wilde (Legge) 1952
Mrs Pamela Egan (Brooks) 1952
Mrs Nest Entwistle (Williams) 1952
Mrs Isabel Heaman (Garner) 1952
Ms Shirley Hermitage (King) 1952
Mrs Anne Kirkman (Fawcett) 1952
Mrs Gillian Lawrence (Rushton) 1952
Dr Hilary Maitland (White) 1952
Mrs Isabel Roberts (Ferguson) 1952
Mrs Ann Schlee (Cumming) 1952
Mrs Clare Spring (Thistlethwaite) 1952
Mrs Jenny Welsh (Husband) 1952
Mrs Daphne Williamson (Gloag) 1952
Dr Gina Alexander (Pirani) 1953
Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF
Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF
Ms Nadine Brummer 1953
Mrs Susan Cronyn (Cooper) 1953
Mrs Ann Currie (Mansfield-Robinson) 1953
Dr Anne Fuller (Havens) 1953 ǂ
Dr Marjorie Harding (Aitken) 1953
Mrs Felicity Hindson (Lambert) 1953
Professor Sally Humphreys (Hinchliff) 1953
JRF
Mrs Gillian Keily (Gunner) 1953
Mrs Katharine Makower (Chadburn) 1953
Mrs Isobel Morrison (Taylor) 1953
Mrs Jo Pelly (Hirst) 1953
Mrs Sylvia Rudd (Hafekost) 1953
Miss Margaret Smith 1953
Dr Tresca Winteringham (Davis) 1953
Mrs Marion Yass (Leighton) 1953
Mrs Ena Blyth (Franey) 1954
Dr Hilary Brown (Maunsell) 1954
Mrs June Brown (Fisher) 1954
Mrs Janet Glover (Hebb) 1954
Miss Libby Goldby 1954
Dr Nori Graham (Burawoy) 1954
Mrs Daphne Green (Fenner) 1954 ǂ
Dr Birgit Harley (Capps) 1954
Mrs Sheila Harrison (Ashcroft) 1954
Dr Gillian Lewis (Morton) 1954
Dr Gill Milner (Sutton) 1954
Mrs Gwyn Pettit (Coulson) 1954
Mrs Giustina Ryan (Blum Gentilomo) 1954
Dr Molly Scopes (Bryant) 1954
Mrs Anne Weizmann (Owen) 1954
Mrs Sally Marler (Turton) 1955
Dr Priscilla Martin (Jenkins) 1955
Mrs Elizabeth Rogers (Telfer) 1955
Professor Helen Ross 1955
Professor Jane Sayers 1955
Lady Thomas (Valerie Little) 1955
Mrs Sally Wheeler (Hilton) 1955
Mrs Gillian Yacomeni (Bruce) 1955
Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956
Mrs Shelagh Eltis (Owen) 1956
Mrs Carola Emms (Wayne) 1956
Her Honour Audrey Gale (Sander) 1956
The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm)
1956 HF
Dr Judith Heyer (Cripps) 1956 EF
Professor Sonia Jackson (Edelman) 1956
Mrs Christine Parker (Gregory) 1956
Mrs Ann Rice (Creer) 1956
Mrs Sheila Shield (Bateman) 1956
Mrs Margaret Thornton (Way) 1956
Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956
Dr Stephanie West (Pickard) 1956 JRF
Mrs Margaret Williamson (Allott) 1956
Mrs Sylvia Winder (Campbell) 1956
Lady Bingham (Elizabeth Loxley) 1957
Mrs Hyacinthe Harford (Hoare) 1957
Mrs Reziya Harrison (Ahmad) 1957
Dr Hilary Heltay (Nicholson) 1957
Mrs Susan Hilken (Davies) 1957
Mrs Mary Howard (Maries) 1957
Mrs Helen Keating (Caisley) 1957
Mrs Valerie Kerrigan (Knox) 1957
Mrs Elizabeth Leach (Goddard) 1957
Mrs Helen Mawson (Fuller) 1957
Dr Mary McAuley (Harris) 1957
Mrs Theodora Ooms (Parfit) 1957
Mrs Margaret Southern (Browning) 1957
Mrs Shelagh Suett (Hartharn) 1957
Mrs Margaret Windsor (Lee) 1957
Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF
Mrs Patricia Allison (Johnston) 1958
Ms Fran Barker (Flint) 1958
Dr Jane Biers (Chitty) 1958
Mrs Mary Bromley (Richer) 1958
Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF
Professor Dame Averil Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF
Mrs Eileen Denza (Young) 1958
Mrs Virginia Fassnidge (Cole) 1958 ǂ
Mrs Judith Frankel (Noble) 1958
Mrs Margaret Goddard (Alston) 1958
Ms Jane Howard (Gladwin) 1958
Mrs Lucy Ismail (Deas) 1958
Dr Lynette Moss (Vaughan) 1958
Mrs Gillian Phillips (Hallett) 1958
Ms Judith Rattenbury 1958
Mrs Carol Rikker (Roberts) 1958
Mrs Christine Shuttleworth (de Mendelssohn)
1958
Ms Auriol Stevens 1958
Mrs Kate Varney (Leavis) 1958
Mrs Shiela Wharton (Milne) 1958
Mrs Jennifer Wiggins (Walkden) 1958
Mrs Tessa Wilson (Seton) 1958
Professor Catherine Belsey (Prigg) 1959 ǂ
Dr Beryl Bowen (Lodge) 1959
Mrs Angela Costen (Lawrence) 1959
Mrs Maureen Douglas (Bowler) 1959
Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones 1959 EF
Mrs Liz Finch (Gamble) 1959
Dr Lucy Gaster (Syson) 1959
Mrs Jane Gordon (Mackintosh) 1959
Mrs Lisette Henrey (Coghlan) 1959
Dr Hazel Jones (Lewis) 1959
Dr Liselotte Kastner (Adler) 1959
Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF
Mrs Sylvia Neumann (Bull) 1959
Baroness O’Neill of Bengarve (Onora O’Neill) 1959 HF
Mrs Kristin Payne (Maule) 1959
Mrs Cassandra Phillips (Hubback) 1959
Mrs Anne Seaton (Vernon) 1959
Mrs Valerie Crean (Moxham) 1959
1960-1969
Anonymous 1960
Anonymous 1960
Miss Zein Al Rifai 1960
Mrs Jenny Bagnall (Davey) 1960
Miss Priscilla Baines 1960
Dr Liz Berry (Brown) 1960
Dr Jennifer Bottomley (Smith) 1960
Professor Sarah Broadie (Waterlow) 1960 HF ǂ
The Hon Mrs Helen Brown (Todd) 1960
Mrs Sheena Carmichael (Inglis) 1960
Mrs Claire Coghlin (O’Brien) 1960
Mrs Margaret Davies (Thomas) 1960
Dr Tessa Dresser (Woolf) 1960
Mrs Judy Hardy (Hagger) 1960
Ms Lydia Howard 1960
Mrs Janet Howarth (Ross) 1960
Dr Carol Huber (Saunderson) 1960
Dr Catherine Oppenheimer (Pasternak Slater) 1960
Mrs Margaret Panter (Daughtrey) 1960
Miss Anne Pope 1960 JRF
Dr Rosemary Raza (Cargill) 1960
Mrs Elizabeth Smith (Shearer) 1960
Anonymous 1961
Mrs Ellinor Angel (Goonan) (Goonan) 1961
Mrs Susan Anthony (Farrow) 1961
Ms Jane Belshaw 1961
Miss Gladys Bland 1961
Ms Jennifer Bray 1961
Ms Anne Charvet 1961
Ms Caroline Cracraft (Pinder) 1961
Miss Rhiannon Davies 1961
Mrs Nike De Bellaigue (Kent Taylor) 1961
Dr Daphne Drabble (Fielding) 1961
Miss Diana Handford 1961
Mrs Helen Lowell (Krebs) 1961
Mrs Jenny McKeown (Chancellor) 1961
Dr Vivien Morris (Evans) 1961
Mrs Alison Neil (Williams) 1961
Miss Hilary Parkes 1961
Dr Hazel Richardson (Lyons) 1961
Mrs Susan Richardson (Holmes) 1961
Dr Irene Ridge (Haydock) 1961
Dr Peggie Rimmer 1961 JRF
Ms Lyn Robertson 1961
Mrs Margaret Selby (Monitz) 1961
Miss Sonia Spurdle 1961
Mrs Jane Staples (Green) 1961
Ms Pauline Adams 1962 EF
Ms Susan Allard 1962
Mrs Kath Boothman (Scott) 1962
Mrs Margaret Brecknell (Dick) 1962
Dr Gillian Butler (Dawnay) 1962
Mrs Glynne Butt (Merrick) 1962
Mrs Elizabeth Campbell (Nowell-Smith) 1962
Mrs Lesley Coggins (Watson) 1962
Ms Rosemary Dunhill 1962
Mrs Dianne Evans (Love) 1962
Mrs Angela Gillon (Spear) 1962
Ms Cynthia GRAAE (Norris) 1962
Ms Eve Jackson 1962
Professor Christine Lee (Pounder) 1962
Mrs Bernice Littman (Fingerhut) 1962
Dr Hazel Lucas (Craddock) 1962
Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF
Dr Penny McCarthy (Gee) 1962
Mrs Lin Merrick (Stephens) 1962
Dr Hilary Pearson 1962
Mrs Jane Peretz (Wildman) 1962
Mrs Arlene Polonsky (Glickman) 1962
Mrs Stephanie Reynard (Ward) 1962
Miss Janet Richards 1962
Mrs Alice Sharp (Gilson) 1962
Miss Della Shirley 1962
The Revd Vera Sinton 1962
Dr Ginny Stacey (Sharpey-Schafer) 1962
Miss Penny Whitham 1962
Anonymous 1963
Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace) 1963 EF
Professor Margaret Clunies Ross (Tidemann) 1963 JRF
Professor Marian Dawkins (Stamp) 1963 EF
Ms Katie Gray (Beverley) 1963
Mrs Ursula Gregory (Raeburn) 1963
Mrs Helen Haddon (Parry) 1963
Dr Carola Haigh (Pickering) 1963
The Revd Margaret Jones (Cook) 1963
Dr Elisabeth Leedham-Green 1963
Ms Gill Linscott 1963
Mrs Pamela Marsden (Robinson) 1963
Dr Judy Ricks (Coles) 1963
Ms Clare Roskill 1963
Dr Kirsty Shipton (Lund) 1963
Mrs Jennifer Speake (Drake-Brockman) 1963
Mrs Jean Ward (Salisbury) 1963
Dr Jilly Aarvold (Stanley-Jones) 1964
Miss Corinna Balfour 1964
Ms Sunethra Bandaranaike 1964
Mrs Jill Batty (Lipsham) 1964 ǂ
Professor Fiona Broughton Pipkin (Pipkin) 1964
Mrs Deryn Chatwin (Price) 1964
Mrs Jo Christian (Hickey) 1964
Professor Gillian Clark (Metford) 1964 JRF
Dr Margaret Cone (Beckham) 1964
Mrs Liz Cooke (Greenwood) 1964
Mrs Chia Dawson (Chang) 1964
Dr Judy Goldfinch (Oldham) 1964
Mrs Chris Grant (Lyons) 1964
Ms Sue Griffin (Watson) 1964
Mrs Jill Hamblin (Barnes) 1964
Mrs Ros Henderson (Bloomer) 1964
Ms Susan Hoyle 1964
Dr Anne Isba (Lightfoot) 1964
Ms Penny Jamrack 1964
Dr Cilla Price (Pantin) 1964
Mrs Jenny Rambridge (Pares) 1964
Mrs Ruth Rostron (Treloar) 1964
Mrs Rosamund Salisbury (Wright) 1964
Dr Katherine Simmonds 1964
Ms Alison Skilbeck 1964
The Revd Canon Ann Slater (Hollowell) 1964
Lady Strathnaver (Eileen Baker) 1964
Dr Mary Walmsley 1964
Ms Jill Winter 1964
Mrs Linda Wyllie (Akeroyd) 1964
Anonymous 1965
The Revd Professor Loveday Alexander (Earl) 1965
Dr Kate Badcock (Skerratt) 1965
Ms Sarah Bell (Radley) 1965
Mrs Alicia Cansick (Carew-Robinson) 1965
Dr Sarah Cemlyn (Garstang) 1965
Ms Margaret Clare (Baldwin) 1965
Mrs Alison Corley (Downes) 1965
Dr Anne Coulson (Rowley) 1965
Dr Uma Das Gupta (Ray) 1965
Mrs Nicola Davies (Galeska) 1965
Mrs Christine Eagle (Burnside) 1965
Mrs Erika Fairhead (Morrison) 1965
Mrs Cherry Fang (Foo) 1965
Mrs Debbie Forbes (White) 1965
Mrs Caroline Higgitt (Besley) 1965
Mrs Barbara Howes (Lowe) 1965
Ms Natalia Jimenez 1965
Dr Mary Jones (Tyrer) 1965
Mrs Hilary King (Presswood) 1965 ǂ
Dr Helen Lewis (Goodman) 1965
Mrs Jane Loveridge (Hoggett) 1965
Lady Morgan (Angela Rathbone) 1965
Mrs Maggie Pringle (Griffin) 1965
Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF
Professor Tessa Rajak (Goldsmith) 1965
Dr Tessa Sadler (Halstead) 1965
Mrs Tricia Savours (Jones) 1965
Mrs Wendy Smith (Arnold) 1965
Dr Patricia Townsend (Marsden) 1965
Dr Shirley Vinall (Jones) 1965
Professor Fenella Wojnarowska 1965 HRF
Anonymous 1966
Anonymous 1966
Mrs Vicki Archard (Lloyd) 1966
Dr Marylee Bomboy 1966
Mrs Anne Bradley (Greasley) 1966
Ms Anne-Marie Braun (Kelly) 1966
Mrs Carole Anne Brown (Leigh) 1966
Dame Elan Closs Stephens (Roberts) 1966 HF
Professor Gail Cunningham (Pennington)
1966
Mrs Anna Di Basilio (Wright) 1966
Ms Suzanne Elcoat 1966
Dr Barbara Goodwin 1966
Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966
Dr Margaret Hedges (Smith) 1966
Ms Kathy Henderson 1966
Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF
Mrs Sarah Jackson (Venables) 1966
Mrs Lynette Jeggo (Wilkie) 1966
The Revd Gill Keir (Stannard) 1966
Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 HF
Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966
Ms Felicity Luke (Crowther) 1966
Mrs Caroline Macpherson (Bacon) 1966
Dr Angela Mills 1966
Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966
Professor Clare Morris 1966
Ms Roz Morris 1966
Ms Margaret Newens 1966
Mrs Alexandra Nicol (Marr) 1966
Mrs Kate Nightingale (Wilson) 1966
Professor Margaret Rayman (O’Riordan) 1966
Dr Kate Richenburg (Frank) 1966
Miss Viv Robins 1966
Mrs Sue Robson (Bodger) 1966
Ms Virginia Ross 1966
Dr Ilona Roth 1966
Miss Nicola Ruck 1966
Mrs Helen Stammers (Tritton) 1966
Mrs Judy Staples (Bennett) 1966
Dr Mary Warren (Fay) 1966 JRF
Dr Judy Wigfield (Knights) 1966
Ms Anne Winyard (Williams) 1966
Ms Helen Wise 1966
Mrs Rosemary Wolfson (Reynolds) 1966
Mrs Vanessa Allen (Lampard) 1967
Miss Carolyn Beckingham 1967
Ms Rachel Berger 1967
Mrs Miggy Biller (Minio) 1967
Mrs Frances Brindley (Hammersley) 1967
Professor Edwina Brown 1967
Ms Alison Burns 1967
Dr Jill Challener 1967
Mrs Sheila Colls (Duffin) 1967
Dr Freddie Crane (Williams) 1967
Ms Elana Dallas (Gluckstein) 1967
Dr Liz Danbury 1967
Mrs Angela Davies (Holdich) 1967
Mrs Sue Dawes (Cooper) 1967
Miss Rosalind Erskine 1967
Mrs Joanna French (Raeburn) 1967
Ms Rachel Griffiths (Cullen) 1967
Ms Sarah Hale (Watkins) 1967
Dr Helen Hammond (Heywood) 1967
Mrs Stephanie Klass (Brown) 1967
Professor Sally McClean 1967
Ms Maria McKay 1967
Mrs Judith Mitchell (Bainbridge) 1967
Dr Elaine Moore 1967
Lady Scarlett (Gwenda Stilliard) 1967
Mrs Rosamund Skinner (Forrest) 1967
Mrs Pam Somerset (Morgan) 1967
Mrs Rosemary Swatman (Cox) 1967
Dr Vicky Tagart 1967
Dr Penny Wilson 1967
Professor Baroness Wolf of Dulwich (Alison Potter) 1967 HF
Mrs Susie Worthington (Middleditch) 1967
Anonymous 1968
Dr Pamela Ashton (Suissa) 1968
Mrs Helen Barnard (Ratcliffe) 1968
Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968
Ms Moira Black 1968
Mrs Freda Chaloner (White) 1968
Mrs Miranda Corben (McCormick) 1968
Professor Clare Dalton 1968
Mrs Lesley Futcher (Harrison) 1968
Mrs Angela Gillibrand (Parry) 1968
Mrs Hilary Gunkel (Smith) 1968
Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF
Ms Jessica Hodge (Obrei Gann) 1968
Dr Meriel Kitson (De Laszlo) 1968
Dr Bridget Long (Lymbery) 1968
Dr Terry Macdonald (Bowe) 1968
Mrs Clare Matthews (Davies) 1968
Dr Elaine Merrylees (Barrie) 1968
Ms Jo Moffett-Levy (Moffett) 1968
Professor Leslie O’Bell (Claff) 1968
Professor Mair Parry (Evans) 1968
Mrs Niloufer Reifler (Marker) 1968
Dr Ann Rolinson 1968
Ms Sonja Ruehl 1968
Professor Ruth Schwertfeger 1968
Miss Linda Shampan 1968
Dr Sara Turner (Greenbury) 1968
Dr Jenny Wright (Allan) 1968
Anonymous 1969
Mrs Jackie Andrew (Turner) 1969
Mrs Julie Baddeley (Weston) 1969
Mrs Patricia Baskerville (Lawrence-Wilson)
1969
Ms Gill Bennett (Randerson) 1969
Ms Jacky Clements 1969
Dr Anne Davies 1969
Ms Penny Deacon 1969
Mrs Caroline Delbaere 1969
Miss Christine Denwood 1969
Mrs Annie Dobell (Champagne) 1969
Mrs Rachel Fletcher (Toynbee) 1969
Ms Laura Gascoigne (Warner) 1969
Dr Julia Goodwin 1969
Ms Stephanie Hall 1969
Mrs Phillipa Hardman (Faker) 1969
Dr Sophia Hartland (Storr) 1969
Dr Jana Howlett (Dorrell) 1969
Dr Janet Kennedy (Harrison) 1969
Ms Eunice Lord 1969
Dr Ann Martin 1969
Dr Sophie McCormick (Williams) 1969
Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969
The Revd Elizabeth Pearce (Earl) 1969
Dr Jill Pipe (Pritchard) 1969
Mrs Yolanda Powell (Radcliffe-Genge) 1969
Dr Judith Sear (Partington) 1969
Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF
Dr Angela Smallwood 1969
Ms June Stanworth 1969
Dr Lorna Stuart (Bennett) 1969
Mrs Elizabeth Thorne (Westbrook) 1969
Miss Jay Young 1969
1970-1979
Anonymous 1970
Anonymous 1970
Mrs Juliana Abell (Fennell) 1970
Ms Maggie Ainsley 1970
Mrs Helen Anderson (Thumpston) 1970
Mrs Ann Barlow (Jones) 1970
Dr Sarah Beaver (Wilks) 1970
Dr Eleanor Broomhead (Harries) 1970
Dr Alison Callaway 1970
Mrs Judy Curry (Wilkinson) 1970
Mrs Sarah Danby (Sherrard) 1970
Miss Judith Fell 1970
Ms Felicity Goulden 1970
Ms Gillian Greenwood 1970
Mrs Wendy Holmes (Beswick) 1970
Mrs Ruth Jolly (Foote) 1970
Ms Patricia Kearney 1970
Ms Rowena Loverance 1970
Dr Sabina Lovibond 1970 JRF
Mrs Janet Matcham (Milligan) 1970
Mrs Grania Phillips (De Laszlo) 1970
Ms Hilary Puxley 1970
Dr Sharon Seltzer 1970
Professor Susan Senior Nello (Senior) 1970
Professor Christine Slingsby 1970
Dr Jenny Spurgeon (Paul) 1970
Ms Carolyn White 1970
Mrs Sue Wingfield Digby (Aizlewood) 1970
Anonymous 1971
Mrs Jill Bowman (Watkins) 1971
Mrs Philippa Bridge (Barrett) 1971
Mrs Jeanne Carrington (Flood) 1971
Professor Kathleen Coles 1971
Dr Chris Fletcher (Moerder) 1971
Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF
Mrs Elizabeth Harbord (Harris) 1971
Dr Gill Knight 1971
Mrs Lepel Kornicka (Phipps) 1971
Mrs Tina Lee (Rogers) 1971
Dr Penelope Mackie 1971
Mrs Stephanie Martin (King) 1971
Dr Jody Maxmin 1971
Mrs Sally Patmore (Wiseman) 1971
Mrs Liz Railton (Nisbet) 1971
Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 HF
Dr Penelope Rapson (Eltis) 1971
Mrs Manya Romano-Wayne (Romano) 1971
Ms Mary Saunders (Dauman) 1971
Mrs Pat Sellers (Burns) 1971
Ms Robyn Spencer (Gee) 1971
Lady Stanhope (Jan Flynn) 1971
Mrs Helena Taylor (Chicken) 1971
Dr Dilys Wadman 1971
Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF
Anonymous 1972
Mrs Laura Barnett (Weidenfeld) 1972
Ms Gillian Bastow 1972
Mrs Alison Brierley (Mowat) 1972
Professor Nicky Britten 1972
Mrs Kay Brock (Stewart Sandeman) 1972
Professor Michele Calos 1972
Dr Chi Davies (Mbanugo) 1972
Dr Gillie Evans 1972
Dr Susan Farnsworth 1972
Mrs Eleanor Fuller (Breedon) 1972
Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF
Ms Mary Honeyball 1972
Mrs Val James (Jacobs) 1972
Ms Jane Lethem 1972
Dr Liz McDougall (Webster) 1972
Ms Dot Metcalf (Metcalfe) 1972
Professor Fatemah Moghadam 1972
Ms Karen Niles (Larson) 1972
Mrs Nicky Ormerod (Callander) 1972
Dr Helen Peters 1972 JRF
Ms Karen Richardson 1972
Dr Natasha Robinson 1972
Mrs Deborah Rohan (Hickenlooper) 1972
Miss Ruth Sillar 1972
Ms Hilary Solanki (Reed) 1972
Ms Liz Tran 1972
Mrs Liz Watson (Jones) 1972
Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972
Ms Louise Whitaker 1972
Anonymous 1973
Ms Jill Barelli 1973
Ms Barbara Bleiman 1973
Ms Pamela Charlton (Clarke) 1973
Mrs Ginny Covell (Hardman Lea) 1973
Dr Pauline Davies 1973
Ms Helen Demuth (Gaworska) 1973
Mrs Karen Dixon 1973
Mrs Jane Foster (Morris) 1973
Dr Alison Furnham (Green) 1973
Professor Penelope Gardner-Chloros (Chloros) 1973
Dr Elizabeth Grayson (Thomas) 1973
Ms Barbara Habberjam 1973
Mrs Isabella Harding (Wallace) 1973
Mrs Aileen Hingston (Simkins) 1973
Mrs Susan Jenkins (Clift) 1973
Mrs Venita Lok (Leung) 1973
Ms Kathy Mead (Robson) 1973
Mrs Rachel Miller (Sims) 1973
Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973
Mrs Elly Pearce (Hartwell) 1973
Miss Elizabeth Potter 1973
Professor Anne Redston 1973
Mrs Janet Rogers (Ersts) 1973
Mrs Celia Stuart-Lee (Hogarth) 1973
Dr Hazel Thomas 1973
Miss Ruth Thomas 1973
Ms Judith Unwin 1973
Mrs Judith Wainwright (Paton) 1973
Ms Hilary Walters 1973
Mrs Victoria Younghusband 1973
Ms Rachel Anderson 1974
Ms Sophie Balhetchet 1974
Mrs Alison Cadle (Cowley) 1974
Dr Denise Cavanaugh (Aurousseau) 1974
Miss Ruth Crocket 1974
Ms Beth Crutch 1974
Mrs Linda Garvin (Clews) 1974
Miss Marie Ann Giddins 1974
Dr Tina Green 1974
Mrs Ruth Harris (Lodge) 1974
Mrs Clare Hatcher (Lawrence) 1974
Ms Olwyn Hocking 1974
Mrs Alison Jones (Emmett) 1974
Mrs Jane Jones (Davis) 1974
Mrs Rachel Kent (Paterson) 1974
Dr Agnes Kocsis 1974
Ms Monique Krohn (Rubens) 1974
Miss Margaret MacDonald 1974
Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF
Miss Alison Mathias 1974
Miss Madeleine Melvin 1974
Her Honour Judge Moir (Judy Edwardson)
1974
Ms Susan Morris 1974
Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF
Mrs Gail Sperrin (Kyle) 1974
Dr Elizabeth Theokritoff (de La Briere) 1974
Mrs Janice Tibble (Fidler) 1974
Mrs Deborah Woudhuysen (Loudon) 1974
Ms Nazee Batmanghelidj 1975
Mrs Romy Briant (Frampton) 1975
Ms Vicky Carnegy-Arbuthnott (Carlstrand)
1975
Mrs Amanda Clarke (Dalton) 1975
Dr Judith Collier 1975
Mrs Sylvia Cooper (Clift) 1975
Ms Judy Corstjens (Gilchrist) 1975
Mrs Francesca Currie (Kay) 1975
Mrs Sarah Elliott (Nicholls) 1975
Mrs Marianne Godfrey (Morgan) 1975
Mrs Alyson Gregory (Roberts) 1975
Mrs Suzan Griffiths (Green) 1975
Ms Eleanor Harre 1975
Ms Joanna Haxby 1975
Ms Jayne Huntley (Digby) 1975
Mrs Juliet Johnson (Adams) 1975
Ms Marcy Kahan 1975
Dr Caroline Lucas (MacKinnon) 1975
Ms Jane Nicholson (Wilkinson) 1975
Dr Sarah Parish (Williams) 1975
Mrs Fiona Sewell (Torrington) 1975
Mrs Jane Shepherd (Booth) 1975
Dr Alison Singleton (Ricketts) 1975
Miss Sian Skerratt-Williams (Williams) 1975
Mrs Judy Sommers (Knapp) 1975
Ms Kate Williams 1975
Ms Leila Abu-Sharr 1976
Mrs Penelope Baines (Lord) 1976
Ms Hilary Bates 1976
Ms Sarah Chambers 1976
Mrs Clare Colacicchi (Clutterbuck) 1976
Miss Beth Coll 1976
Ms Vanessa Couchman 1976
Mrs Anne Cowan (MacKay) 1976
Ms Catherine Darcy 1976
Mrs Angela Dean (Britton) 1976
Ms Frances Dewhurst 1976
Ms Lesley Fidler 1976
Mrs Gaynor Fryers (Smith) 1976
Miss Victoria Gibson 1976
Mrs Fin Gowers (Clarke) 1976
Dr Jane Gravells (Schroder) 1976
Dr Ann Lorek 1976
Dr Jane Macintyre 1976
Mrs Jenny Meader (Heseltine) 1976
Dr Latha Menon 1976
Mrs Jane Millinchip (Davenport) 1976
Mrs Wilma Minty (Wilson) 1976
Mrs Rosie Oliver (Rogers) 1976
Mrs Eleanor Orr (Brown) 1976
Mrs Robin Reeves Zorthian (Reeves) 1976
Miss Linda Salt 1976
Mrs Philippa Schofield (Cash) 1976
Mrs Susan Sinagola (Livingstone) 1976
Dr Julia Smith 1976
Ms Jocelyn Stoddard 1976
Dr Jasmine Tickle (Hussain) 1976
Mrs Jane Trewhella (Carpenter) 1976
Ms Dominique Vaughan Williams 1976
Mrs Annabelle Woolf (Spooner) 1976
Ms Sarah Woolley (Slade) 1976
Anonymous 1977
Ms Jane Bell (Gilman) 1977
Mrs Sheila Bulpett (Thomson) 1977
Ms Cortina Butler 1977
Ms Susan Catchpole 1977
Mrs Rachel Coates (Lucas) 1977
Ms Elspeth Corrie 1977
Miss Sally Davenport 1977
Ms Cindy Gallop 1977
Lady Harlech (Amanda Grieve) 1977
Mrs Kati Hughes (Whitaker) 1977
Mrs Caroline Jarrett (Sankey) 1977
Mrs Merryn Kent (Wills) 1977
Dr Kate Lack (Taylor) 1977 ǂ
Miss Catherine Lorigan 1977
Miss Hilary Manning 1977
Mrs Anne Marriott (Clarence-Smith) 1977
Mrs Mary McConnell (Norton) 1977
Dr Julia Nehring 1977
Dr Chloe Rackow-Cabocel (Rackow) 1977
Ms Susan Reigler 1977
Ms Helen Roberts 1977
Miss Margaret Robertson 1977
Ms Madeleine Ruehl 1977
Mrs Alexandra Schaapveld (Cook-Schaapveld) 1977
Mrs Julie Skipworth (Deegan) 1977
Miss Frances Truscott 1977
Mrs Lesley Watts (King) 1977
Miss Sarah Whitley 1977
Mrs Rosamund Williams (Manterfield) 1977
Professor Jane Aaron 1978
Ms Kim Anderson 1978
Ms Pauline Ashall 1978
Mrs Joanna Bell (Priest) 1978
Dr Angela Bonaccorso 1978
Mrs Liz Brockmann (Madell) 1978
Dr Virginia Brooke (Brember) 1978
Madame Pia de Richemont 1978
Professor Helen Dolk 1978
Ms Anna Economides 1978
Ms Fiona Freckleton 1978
Dr Elizabeth Gladstone (Hare) 1978
Mrs Helen Harkness (Lyon) 1978
Mrs Ruth Hazel (Grieves) 1978
Mrs Jeannette Jennings (Rankin) 1978
Ms Tessa Jones 1978
Dr Yuki Konii 1978
Ms Jill Longmate 1978
Mrs Margaret McKenna (Wylie) 1978
Professor Michele Moody-Adams (Moody) 1978 HF
Professor Christine Nicol (Frank) 1978
Dr Ruth Paynter 1978
Dr Jacqueline Phillipson (Williams) 1978
Dr Rebecca Pope 1978
Ms Annette Rathmell 1978
Ms Jane Robinson 1978
Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF
Ms Kim Severson 1978
Mrs Alison Sloan (Goodall) 1978
Mrs Diane Smith (Lightowler) 1978
Mrs Pat Wales (Bagley) 1978
Professor Teresa Webber (Russill) 1978
Mrs Clare Whittaker (Potter) 1978
Anonymous 1979
Mrs Alexa Beale (Little) 1979
Mrs Jenny Bennet (Caldwell) 1979
Ms Dona Cady (Millheim) 1979
Miss Penny Chapman 1979
Mrs Carey Dickinson (Hingston) 1979
Mrs Judith Dingle (Martin) 1979
Mrs Chrissie Ellis (Tooze) 1979
Dr Diane Gray (Paterson) 1979
Ms Jennifer Haverkamp 1979
Mrs Brigitte Hetherington (Bryant) 1979
Mrs Gail Higgins (Hudson) 1979
Ms Alison Hindell 1979
Queen Zarith Idris 1979
Dr Katherine Innes Ker (Jones) 1979
Ms Mary Kirk 1979
Professor Dame Angela McLean 1979 HF
Mrs Joy Morris (Lecky-Thompson) 1979
Mrs Rachel Parker (Nicholls) 1979
Professor Isha Ray 1979
Mrs Margaret Robertson 1979
Ms Hazel Ryan (Smith) 1979
Ms Sybella Stanley 1979
Dr Elaine Tudor 1979
Mrs Elizabeth Waggott (Webster) 1979
Mrs Karen Willis (Harley) 1979
1980-1989
Professor Lynn Baker 1980
Ms Anna Barber 1980
Ms Debbie Beckerman 1980
Mrs Jane Bluemel (Boorman) 1980
Mrs Fabia Bromovsky (Sturridge) 1980
Ms Nancy Brown (Freeman) 1980
Dr Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 HF
Ms Ruth Crawford 1980
Ms Andrea Davison 1980
Mrs Cathy Fleming (MacKesy) 1980
Mrs Elizabeth Freedman (Allsopp) 1980
Mrs Claire Hayes (Lines) 1980
Ms Anne Heal 1980
Mrs Ruth Irons (Harris) 1980
Miss Dinah Jones 1980
Dr Susan Karamanian 1980
Ms Betsy Kendall 1980
Mrs Daphne Leck (Bigmore) 1980
Mrs Anne Locke (Hill) 1980
Mrs Debbie Megone (Barker) 1980
Mrs Kerry Monaghan-Smith (Monaghan) 1980
Mrs Susan Mortimer (Perry) 1980
Mrs Jill Moulton (Ford) 1980
Ms Neeta Patel 1980
Mrs Jacky Rattue (Roynon) 1980
Mrs Carole Rumsey (Austin) 1980
Mrs Judith Shepherd (Bos) 1980
Mrs Jackie Stopyra (Oliver) 1980
Mrs Veronica Tregidgo (Innes) 1980
Ms Alexia Tye 1980
Mrs Sharon White (Duckworth) 1980
Mrs Jane Wickenden (Stemp) 1980
Dr Sarah Young (Gbedemah) 1980
Dr Anasuya Aruliah 1981
Ms Hazel Barton 1981
Dr Sally Browne (Mellor) 1981
Ms Jennifer Bruce-Mitford 1981
Ms Sara Burnell 1981
Mrs Denise Cockrem (Lear) 1981
Dr Ursula Cox (Nicholls) 1981
Mrs Heather Cunningham (Sharp) 1981
Dr Ramona Doyle 1981
Miss Sue Elliott 1981
Mrs Naomi Emmerson (Fletcher) 1981
Dr Helen Ernst-Reed (Reed) 1981
Mrs Rosey Gardiner (Proctor) 1981
Dr Fiona Gatty 1981
Ms Elena Kiely (Cleary) 1981
Ms Jenny Ladbury 1981
Ms Catherine McLoughlin 1981
Ms Beverley Morris 1981
Mrs Rachael Nichols (Warner) 1981
Ms Nilly Sarkar 1981
Miss Cambria Tortorelli 1981
Baroness Vadera of Holland Park (Shriti Vadera) 1981 HF
Professor Ruth Webb 1981
Dr Louise Wilkinson (Thurston) 1981
Dr Sonia Wilson 1981
Anonymous 1982
Mrs Karen Blick (Clements) 1982
Ms Kathryn Bourke 1982
Mrs Judith Crosbie-Chen (Crosbie) 1982
Mrs Fiona Evans (Carley/McLeod) 1982
Ms Nina Formby 1982
Dr Christine Franzen 1982 JRF
Dr Catherine Higham (Clarke) 1982
Miss Carol Jackson 1982
Ms Celia Keen (Thorne) 1982
Miss Joanna Lancaster 1982
Mrs Karen Lindley (Smalley) 1982
Ms Anneli Mclachlan (McLachan) 1982
The Revd Frances Nestor (Benn) 1982
Mrs Wendy Seago (Lucas) 1982
Mrs Amanda Wain (Woodman) 1982
Mrs Julia Walsh (Hope) 1982
Ms Laura Wilson 1982
Dr Rebecca Brown 1983
Miss Karen Eldred 1983
Mrs Maggie Fergusson (Parham) 1983
Ms Susan Hyland 1983
Mrs Elizabeth Light (Wimbush) 1983
Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF
Mrs Julia Nisbet-Fahy (Nisbet) 1983
Mrs Jacqueline Todd (Steers) 1983
Mrs Jane Toogood (Bradley) 1983
Mrs Sarah Adkins (Holmes) 1984
Mrs Christina Bayly (Hindson) 1984
Mrs Lucy Borland (Dean) 1984
Ms Susan Bright 1984
Ms Melanie Essex 1984
Ms Robyn Field 1984
Miss Fiona Forsyth 1984
Mrs Justina Garagnon (Wall) 1984
Mrs Helen Jones (Newsam) 1984
Ms Andrea Lyons 1984
Mrs Jo Magan (Ward) 1984
Ms Emma O’Rourke 1984
Mrs Cathy Reid-Jones (Reid) 1984
Ms Rebecca Rendle 1984
Mrs Clare Roberts (Austen) 1984
Professor Claire Shepherd-Themistocleous (Shepherd) 1984
Miss Elizabeth Stubbs 1984
Mrs Eleanor Sturdy (Burton) 1984
Dr Alison Warry 1984
Anonymous 1985
Mrs Yvette Bannister (Darraugh) 1985
Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985
Ms Beverly Cox 1985
Mrs Fiona Freely (Say) 1985
Mrs Linda Grenyer (Grayson) 1985
Dr Julia Griffin 1985
Mrs Lucy Kilshaw (Butt) 1985
Mrs Emma Knight (Giles) 1985
Ms Clare Latham 1985
Professor Irene Lynch Fannon (Lynch) 1985
Mrs Anna McGowan (Heselden) 1985
Ms Nina Molyneux 1985
Mrs Carolyn Naylor (Fooks) 1985
Mrs Sarah-Jane Rees-Porter (Rees) 1985
Miss Jacqueline Schaebbicke 1985
Ms Lucinda Smith (Humphreys) 1985
Ms Jane Willis 1985
Dr Fiona Andrewartha (Haworth) 1986
Miss Rachel Belsham 1986
Ms Mary Betley 1986
Mrs Katharine Finn (Morgan) 1986
Mrs Beccy Johnson (Wallace) 1986
Ms Roanna Lobo (Logo) 1986
Professor Joan Loughrey 1986
Ms Lucy Morrison (Duncan) 1986
Ms Sacha Romanovitch 1986 HF
Ms Kathryn Sharp 1986
Miss Sian Snelling 1986
Dr Jackie Watson 1986
Mrs Emma Wattam (Goddard) 1986
Anonymous 1987
Anonymous 1987
Mrs Rebecca Clarke (Haynes) 1987
Mrs Katharine Cook (Chapman) 1987
Mrs Jo Donnachie (Featherstone) 1987
Mrs Elenore Falshaw (Lawson) 1987
Mrs Jane Follows (Hughesdon) 1987
Ms Alysoun Glasspool (Owen) 1987
Ms Lisa Gygax 1987
Lady Heywood (Susan Cook) 1987
Mrs Naiza Khan (Malik) 1987
Dr Jennifer Mathers (Jenkins) 1987
Ms Darina Mohd-Yusof (Mohd Yusof) 1987
Ms Jackie Orme 1987
Dr Thuy Phung 1987
Miss Pri Pinnaduwa 1987
Mrs Rachel Renshaw (Perella) 1987
Dr Liane Saunders 1987
Ms Emma Sky 1987
Mrs Natalie Smith (Nurock) 1987
Mrs Rachel Tothill (Burns) 1987
Mrs Veronica Vaughan-Williams (Thornton)
1987
Miss Philippa Wright 1987
Ms Sarah Wyles (Ryle) 1987
Ms Talya Baker (Cohen) 1988
Dr Jaine Blayney (Bell) 1988
Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988
Ms Katie Ghose 1988
Dr Andrew Graydon 1988
Mrs Alex Hems (Bailey) 1988
Mrs Claire Jacob (Evans) 1988
Ms Lucy McCann 1988
Ms Andrea Minton Beddoes 1988
Ms Noelle Morris 1988
Mrs Sara Nix (Field) 1988
Mrs Rachel Owens (Fox) 1988
Lady Poole (Anna Poole) 1988
Ms Kate Ryle 1988
Dr Alison Stewart (Lacey) 1988
Miss Helen Thomas 1988
Ms Catherine Walker 1988
Mrs Claire Wansbury (Sketch) 1988
Mrs Rachel Wintour (Sylvester) 1988
Anonymous 1989
Miss Jo Ball 1989
Mrs Tobie Brealey (Williams) 1989
Ms Ayla Busch 1989
Mrs Rachel Byford (Leach) 1989
Mrs Kristina Dziekan (Quattek) 1989
Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989
Mrs Sharon Gould (Rowland) 1989
Mrs Victoria Hodges (Edwards) 1989
Mrs Carolyn Howard-Jones (Harrison) 1989
Mrs Clare Joy (Jwala) 1989
Mrs Claire Long (Jameson) 1989
Mrs Fiona Mayhew (McCallum) 1989
Ms Auriol Miller 1989
Dr Hsin-yun Ou 1989
Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989
Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989 JRF
Dr Kathryn Walters 1989
Mrs Helen Ward-Horner (Davies / Johns) 1989
1990-1999
Dr Shahnaz Ahmad 1990
Mrs Catherine Callen (Goddard) 1990
Dr Alice Carter (Drewery) 1990
Mrs Emma Cross (Rich) 1990
Mrs Abigail Gayer (Macve) 1990
Ms Amy Halliday (Linenthal) 1990
Mrs Sara Hannan (Maynard) 1990
Miss Eugenie Hunsicker 1990
Mrs Sara Kalim 1990 F
Mrs Kasia Kilvington (Johns) 1990
Ms Samantha Knights 1990
Mrs Angela Kotlarczyk (Quigley) 1990
Mrs Karin Majdalany (Hraiki) 1990
Ms Sally Mitcham 1990
Miss Rachael Pallas-Brown 1990
Dr Sophie Pilkington 1990
Mrs Amy Rennison 1990
Mrs Christine Riddington (McLean) 1990
Miss Rebecca Stubbs 1990
Ms Archana Taraporevala (Mehra) 1990
Ms Nicola Williams 1990
Dr Swee Choo Yeoh 1990 JRF
Ms Basma Alireza 1991
Viscountess Clement de Grandprey (Wensde Smedley) 1991
Mrs Nina Copping (Booth-Clibborn) 1991
Ms Zoe Cross 1991
Dr Jo Freeman (White) 1991
Ms Antonia Hardy 1991
Ms Julie Hopkins 1991
Mrs Emma Ingall (Gordon) 1991
Ms Katie Jackson 1991
Mrs Miranda Jollie (Oakley) 1991
Mrs Kay Kiggell (Adam) 1991
Mrs Barbi Mileham (Cecchet) 1991
Dr Tammy Rothenberg 1991
Mrs Emily Sterz (Boxall) 1991
Mrs Janita Tan (Patel) 1991
Dr Tracy Watson (Axe) 1991
Dr Kathryn Whitney 1991
Anonymous 1992
Ms Alex Bigland 1992
Dr Anne Bishop 1992
Mrs Clare Bone (Swinburn) 1992
Ms Caroline Garnett 1992
Mrs Julia Hall (Fitzhugh) 1992
Dr Joanna Hart (Edmonds) 1992
Mrs Sarah Newman (Goddard) 1992
Ms Natasha Phillips 1992
Mrs Linda Scott (Love) 1992
Mrs Emily Stokes Hotchkiss (Stokes) 1992
Miss Celia Wrighton 1992
Miss Malika Chandoo 1993
Mrs Cathy Godfrey (Lewis) 1993
Mrs Joanna Greenslade (Harford) 1993
Mrs Ciara Hammond (Doherty) 1993
Mrs Alex Hatchman 1993
Dr Anita Howard 1993
Mrs Nicola Hyman (Tomlinson) 1993
Mrs Helen Jolliffe (Archer) 1993
Mrs Hannah Manning (Short) 1993
Mrs Joanna May (Froggatt) 1993
Mrs Esther Moffett (Schutzer-Weissmann) 1993
Mrs Helen O’Sullivan (Hunter) 1993
Dr Becky Parker (Green) 1993
Mrs Louise Rouch (Williams) 1993
Miss Sara Stepney 1993
Ms Sarah Watson 1993
Anonymous 1994
Mrs Rosamund Akayan (Brown) 1994
Mr Tim Aldrich 1994
Mrs Daphne Alexander (Chrysostomides) 1994
Dr Christian Bottomley 1994
Mr Trevor Bradbury 1994
Mrs Jo-Anne Breckon (Swales) 1994
Mr Phil Collington 1994
Ms Winnie Man 1994
Mr Dan Mobley 1994
Miss Joanna Myerson 1994
Mrs Lara Payne 1994
Mrs Fiona Powell (Meldrum) 1994
Mr Sonny Sandhu 1994
Mr Kallol Sen 1994
Ms Zoe Trinder-Widdess 1994
Mr Andrew Whitworth 1994
Anonymous 1995
Mr Chris Bland 1995
Professor Christopher Bruner 1995
Dr David Buttle 1995
The Revd Tim Carter 1995
Mrs Florence Collier (Coupaud) 1995
Mr Jason Gray 1995
Mr Sam Gyimah 1995
Mrs Emily Hammer (Carlisle) 1995
Mr Richard Hartshorn 1995
Mrs Jo Howard (Cooper) 1995
Mr Frank Hyman 1995
Dr Rachel Isba 1995
Mrs Julia Jago (Sanders) 1995
Ms Leonore Petruch 1995
Ms Anna Tweedale 1995
Dr Bradley Strauchen-Scherer 1995
Mrs Amelia Gould (Resheph) 1996
Dr Niels Kroner (Kroninger) 1996
Mr David Lewsey 1996
Mrs Vanessa Luedecke (Kelly) 1996
Mrs Catherine Marke (Wren) 1996
Ms Kirsty McShannon 1996
Mr Daniel Mikkelsen 1996
Mrs Victoria Noble (Dugdale) 1996
Dr Lynette Nusbacher (Aryeh) 1996
Mr Peter Robertson 1996
Mr Eduard Ruijs 1996
Mr Alan Saunders 1996
Mrs Eleanor Smith (Reid) 1996
Mr Terry Stickland 1996
Dr Emma Thomas (Rothery) 1996
Dr Xand Van Tulleken 1996
Mrs Alison Walker (Waldron) 1996
Mr David Willman 1996
Dr Philip Thomas 1996
Mr Stephen Abletshauser 1997
Mr Chris Barron 1997
Dr Gemma Bramley 1997
Mr David Brooks 1997
Mr Omar Davis 1997
Miss Sophy Harford 1997
Mr Tim Knipe 1997
Mr Dan Lester 1997
Mr Sam Newhouse 1997
Ms Katerina Potamianos 1997
Miss Kate Rennoldson 1997
Dr Claire Rosten (Popper) 1997
Dr Oliver Rosten 1997
Mr Erich Scherer 1997
Dr Natalie Shenker 1997
Miss Rosie Sudol (Jenkins) 1997
Mr Michael Sweeney 1997
Anonymous 1998
Mrs Lorraine Antypova (Perry Williams) 1998
Ms Goga Ashkenazi (Berkalieva) 1998
Ms Kathryn Bonnici 1998
Dr Barbara Gabrys 1998
Mr Upkar Gata-Aura 1998
Mr Peter Gibb 1998
Mrs Liz Hudson (Richardson) 1998
Mr Peter Jolly 1998
Dr Hiromi Kinoshita 1998
Mr Daniel Levy 1998
Ms Louisa Radice 1998
Mrs Caroline Wakefield 1998
Dr Emma Whitehouse (York) 1998
Mrs Hannah Capgras (Gold) 1999
Mr Tim Cheung 1999
Dr Kate Good (Cooper) 1999
Ms Emma Haight 1999
Mr Rishi Kansagra 1999
Dr Katerina Kaouri 1999
Miss Zoe Lindesay 1999
Mr Ferdy Lovett 1999
Mr Max Luedecke 1999
Mrs Caroline Lytton (Smith) 1999
Mrs Anna Mayadeen (Ryan) 1999
Ms Laura McMaster 1999
Mr Tristan Neagle 1999
Mr Ben Salter 1999
Ms Jo Venkov 1999
Mr Paul Waite 1999
Mr Stephen Weston 1999
2000-2009
Anonymous 2000
Anonymous 2000
Mrs Tara Ballinger (Reeves) 2000
Dr Alistair Fair 2000
Miss Isabelle Hung 2000
Mr Tony Marsden 2000
Ms Sian Robyns Owen 2000
Mrs Verena Rux-Burton (Timbul) 2000
Mr Ralf Skoruppa 2000
Dr Josh Yiu 2000
Mr James Ballinger 2000
Dr Anthony Catchpole 2000
Dr Helen Caldwell 2001
Mrs Aimee Donnison 2001
Dr Kenneth Kar 2001
Ms Alice McKay Hill 2001
Miss Rachel Sales 2001
Mrs Antonia Stirling (Lee) 2001
Mrs Sarah Thomas (Lumsden) 2001
Mr Kaj Thuraaisingam 2001
Mr Christopher Vessey 2001
Mr Alexander Webb 2001
Mr Caradog Williams 2001
Anonymous 2002
Mr Frank Clarke 2002
Ms Annabel Gaba 2002
Dr Kezia Gaitskell 2002
Dr Rotraud Hansberger 2002
Mr Tom Jenkins 2002
Mr John Laird 2002
Mr Tom Lilley 2002
Mr Hugo Mackay 2002
Mr Nick Martlew 2002
Mrs Sophie O’Shaughnessy (Penny) 2002
Mr Stephen Costigan 2002
Dr Philip Allfrey 2003
Mr Nicholas Bell 2003
Dr Caitlin Callaghan 2003
Mr Thomas Hodson 2003
Ms Laura Macdougall 2003
Mr Andy Overton 2003
Dr Hannah Shepherd 2003
Mr Lee Thomas 2003
Mrs Stacey Woodcock (Quaye) 2003
Mr Kai Yang 2003
Miss Eleanor Broughton 2004
Dr Rachel Brown 2004
Mr Thomas Chapman 2004
Ms JJ Chen 2004
Dr Phil Gemmell 2004
Mrs Annabel Hirani (Harrison) 2004
Mr Jay Hoffman 2004
Ms Karin Lai 2004
Ms Heather Ridley 2004
Ms Beth Seaman 2004
Ms Zoe Sprigings 2004
Mr Mark Wassouf 2004
Dr Stefano Palazzo 2004
Anonymous 2005
Dr David Broadbent 2005
Ms Emily Chiswick-Patterson 2005
Mr Luke Fitzsimons 2005
Mr Edward Fuller 2005
Mrs Kei Kei Lam 2005
Mr Alexander Marr 2005
Mr Dave Marshall 2005
Miss Kathryn Skelton 2005
Mr Sean Smith 2005
Ms Heather Storey 2005
Dr Angela Wright 2005
Ms Michelle Goulty 2005
Dr Helen Ashdown (Davis) 2005
Mr George Abraham 2006
Ms Gabriela da Costa 2006
Ms Sarah Glenister 2006
Mr Ben Gough 2006
Mr Philip Kemp 2006
Dr Bernd Krehoff 2006
Dr Liz Murphy 2006
Mr Alex Parker 2006
Miss Rebecca Scanlon 2006
Ms Rosie Shakespear-Reeve (Shakespear) 2006
Mrs Carolyn Shipley (Hudders) 2006
Miss Irmak Uzumcu 2006
Ms Cordelia Witton 2006
Ms Wei Xu 2006
Mr Simon Hodge 2006
Dr Gabriela Andrejeva 2007
Mr Wojciech Chrobak 2007
Mr Ian Lister 2007
Miss Elizabeth Macneal 2007
Ms Samantha Miller 2007
Mr Jacques Schuhmacher 2007
Mr Philip Sellar 2007
Mrs Sabrina Sloan (Hearn) 2007
Mr David Blagbrough 2008
Mr Constantin Calavrezos 2008
Dr Nick Cooper 2008
Dr Edward Cope 2008
Ms Sally Dickinson 2008
Mr Alex Gunn 2008
Mr Mike Johnson 2008
Miss Xiao Liu 2008
Mr Iain Moss 2008
Mr Samuel Newton 2008
Mrs Kate Taylor (Fallows) 2008
Miss Clara Williams 2008
Mr Almat Zhantikin 2008
Ms Katie Borg 2008
Anonymous 2009
Anonymous 2009
Dr Simi Bansal 2009
Mr Patrick Cash 2009
Miss Katherine Corkum 2009
Ms Anusha Couttigane 2009
Ms Manuela Galan 2009
Miss Pria Ghosh 2009
Mrs Anna Matei 2009
Mr Kumaran Perinpanathan 2009
Mr David Railton 2009
Miss Dona Sandu 2009
Mrs Philippa Gunn (Smithson) 2009
2010-2019
Mr Kartik Aiyar 2010
Mr Tom Allsup 2010
Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010
Mr Benedict Hardy 2010
Mx Cato Hastings 2010
Mrs Sally Kennedy (Stevenson) 2010
Mr Douglas Knight 2010
Miss Martha Mends 2010
Dr Vikram Nagarajan 2010
Mr Nicholas Shinder 2010
Ms Lorna Sutton 2010
Mr Alim Thawer 2010
Mr Tim Williams 2010
Miss April Zhang 2010
Mr Jack Kennedy 2010
Anonymous 2011
Miss Adiya Belgibayeva 2011
Ms Alice Broughton 2011
Mr Ian Buchanan 2011
Miss Rosie Carpenter 2011
Mr Jolyon Coates 2011
Miss Monica Qian 2011
Mr Henry Robinson 2011
Miss Jenny Scrine 2011
Miss Isabel Sinagola 2011
Miss Marsha Sudar 2011
Anonymous 2012
Mr Gabriel Asman 2012
Miss Amelia Hamer 2012
Mr Fredrik Hellstrom 2012
Mr Richard Higson 2012
Miss Marina Holden 2012
Miss Alice Jamison 2012
Mr Peter Johnstone 2012
Mr Di Wei Lee 2012
Miss Colette Lewis 2012
Miss Anna Nosalik 2012
Mr George Pearson 2012
Mr Gonçalo Pereira Simoes Matos 2012
Miss Tooba Qadri 2012
Miss Katie Robinson 2012
Mr Harry Staight 2012
Ms Brigitte Stenhouse 2012
Mr Chengzhi Zhou 2012
Mr Jonas Hoersch 2012
Miss Amrit Bal 2013
Dr Fergus Cooper 2013
Miss Holly Freeborn 2013
Ms Niluka Kavanagh 2013
Mr Akira Marusaki 2013
Miss Margot Mazzia 2013
Ms Maia Perraudeau 2013
Miss Andreea Raslescu 2013
Ms Sondos Shalaby 2013
Mr Joe Smith 2013
Mr Harry Travis 2013
Miss Anna Bett 2014
Mr Chris Broughton 2014
Ms Sophie Jackson 2014
Dr Nick Jennings 2014
Mr Dan Keane 2014
Miss Martha MacLaren 2014
Mr Konrad Strack 2014
Ms Frances Varley 2014
Mr Jonathan Wu 2014
Miss Jess Bollands 2015
Miss Lizzie Bosson 2015
Ms Catrin Haberfield 2015
Miss Maria Hohaus 2015
Mr Rowan Nicholls 2015
Miss Zsofia Palasik 2015
Miss Gemma Seabright 2015
Ms Vaanathi Sundaresan 2015
Miss Niamh Walshe 2015
Miss Tianjia Zhang 2015
Miss Hannah Patrick 2016
Miss Ilona Clayton 2017
Miss Safa Fanaian 2017
Ms Keira Tan 2018
Fellows
Dr Margaret Adams 1958 EF
Ms Pauline Adams 1962 EF
Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953 HF
Professor Sarah Broadie (Waterlow) 1960
HF
Mrs Lesley Brown (Wallace) 1963 EF
Dr Paula Brownlee (Pimlott) 1953 HF
Dame Antonia Byatt (Drabble) 1958 HF
Professor Dame Averil Cameron (Sutton) 1958 HF
Dr Margaret Casely-Hayford 1980 HF
Dame Elan Closs Stephens (Roberts) 1966 HF
Professor Marian Dawkins (Stamp) 1963 EF
Professor Katherine Duncan-Jones 1959 EF
Dr Karin Erdmann EF
Lady Fox (Hazel Stuart) 1946 HF
Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF
The Hon Victoria Glendinning (Seebohm) 1956 HF
Professor Jenny Glusker (Pickworth) 1949 HF
Professor Joanna Haigh 1972 HF
Miss Barbara Harvey 1946 EF
Dr Judith Heyer (Cripps) 1956 EF
Professor Carole Hillenbrand 1968 HF
Professor Judith Howard (Duckworth) 1966 HF
Mrs Sara Kalim 1990 F
Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF
Dame Emma Kirkby 1966 HF
Ms Norma MacManaway EF
Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF
Dr Anne Manuel F
Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF
Professor Dame Angela McLean 1979 HF
Professor Michele Moody-Adams (Moody) 1978 HF
Miss Helen Morton EF
Dr Hilary Ockendon (Mason) EF
Baroness O’Neill of Bengarve (Onora O’Neill) 1959 HF
Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF
Dr Frank Prochaska SRF
Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 HF
Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF
Dr Joyce Reynolds 1937 HF
Ms Sacha Romanovitch 1986 HF
Baroness Royall of Blaisdon (Principal) F
Mr Kevin Scollan FF
Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF
Professor Caroline Series 1969 HF
Dr Nicholas Shea SRF
Mrs Theresa Stewart (Raisman) 1948 HF ǂ
Mr Gopal Subramanium FF
Professor Almut Suerbaum F
Dr Benjamin Thompson F
Baroness Vadera of Holland Park (Shriti Vadera) 1981 HF
Professor Fenella Wojnarowska 1965 HRF
Professor Baroness Wolf of Dulwich (Alison Potter) 1967 HF
Former JRFs
Professor Gillian Clark (Metford) 1964 JRF
Professor Margaret Clunies Ross (Tidemann)
1963 JRF
Dr Christine Franzen 1982 JRF
Professor Helena Hamerow JRF
Professor Sally Humphreys (Hinchliff) 1953
JRF
Dr Sabina Lovibond 1970 JRF
Dr Sophie Mills 1983 JRF
Dr Helen Peters 1972 JRF
Miss Anne Pope 1960 JRF
Dr Peggie Rimmer 1961 JRF
Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989 JRF
Dr Mary Warren (Fay) 1966 JRF
Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF
Dr Stephanie West (Pickard) 1956 JRF
Dr Swee Choo Yeoh 1990 JRF
1 Anonymous Donor
Friends of Somerville
Dr Michael Ashdown
Mr Simon Backshall
Mrs Tracey Backshall
Mr Timothy Bell
Mr Sunil Bhalla
Mrs Sarah Botcherby
Professor Paul Brand
Dr Susanne Brand (Jenks)
Dr Brendan Brown
Mr Roy Brown
Mr Kaya Busch
Mr Bob Carnell
Mr Edward Clayton
Mrs Janet Clayton
Mr Alex Cohen
Mr Liam Conroy
Mrs Yvonne Conroy
Mr Bernard Crean
Mr Luigi D’Antonio
Mr Nick Drewe
Mr Thomas Ewing
Ms Clare Finch
Mr Arthur Fleiss
Ms Melissa Gemmer-Johnson
Ms Zerbanoo Gifford
Lord Glendonbrook
Dr Pheroza Godrej
Dr Ailsa Goulding
Mr John Havard
Mr Kenneth Heale
Mr Julian Hemming
Mr Billy Hibbs
Ms Tisa Hibbs
Professor Simon Hiscock
Dr Trevor Hughes
Mr Ian Hyde
Ms Yvonne Hyde
Mr Daniel Jones
Mr Roy Jones
Mr Christopher Kenyon
Mr Darius Khambata
Mrs Anne Kilminster
Mr Greg Kilminster
DONOR IN MEMORY OF
Dr Marylee Bomboy 1966
Ms Venetia Kudrle (Thomas) 1966
Ms Roz Morris 1966
Mr Roy Brown
Professor Edwina Brown 1967
& Dr Brendan Brown
Sir Neil & Lady Butterfield
Mr Julian Hemming
Mr Bob Carnell
Dr Ailsa Goulding
Dr Trudy Watt 1971 JRF
Mr Thomas Ewing
Mr Laurence Mate
Mr Russell and Mrs Penny Roberts
Mr Timothy Rose
Professor Alyson Bailes 1966 HF ǂ
Professor Alyson Bailes 1966 HF ǂ
Professor Alyson Bailes 1966 HF ǂ
Mrs Diana Brown (Clements) 1957 ǂ
Mrs Irene Brown (Goodman) 1939 ǂ
Mrs Michala Butterfield (Emmett) 1995 ǂ
Mrs Michala Butterfield (Emmett) 1995 ǂ
Mrs Shirley Carnell (Mair) 1954 ǂ
Dr Elizabeth Goulding 1960 ǂ
Miss Mary Jane Hands EF ǂ
Mrs Mira Harding (Vidakovic) 1947 ǂ
Professor Mavis Mate (Howe) 1953 ǂ
Mr Jonathan Roberts 2010 ǂ
Mrs Dora Rose (Birch) 1951 ǂ
Ms Claire Lamrick
Mr Damon Lamrick
Ms Julie Leader
Mr Simon Leader
Mrs Caroline Lees
Mr Peter Lees
Mrs Maro Limnios (Papathamos)
Mr Robert Lister
Mrs Sue Lister
Ms Rebecca Lockwood
Dr Yvonne Huiqi Lu
Mr Ali Mahmoud
Mrs Jessica Mannix
Mr Laurence Mate
Professor Andre McLean
Ms Vin Murria
Mr John Nicoll
Dr Yoko Odawara
Professor Peter Oppenheimer
Ms Amee Parikh
Mrs Veronica Patrick (Davies)
Mr Robert Pidgeon
Mrs Yvonne Pidgeon
Mr Antony Poppleton
Dr Sarah Poppleton
Mr Akash Prakash
Mrs Bernie Quinn
Mr Harin Raval
Dr Steve Rayner
Mrs Penny Roberts
Mr Russell Roberts
Mr Timothy Rose
Ms Luciana Rubinstein Szaniecki
Mr Hemant Sahai
Mrs Carla Scarano D’Antonio
Mrs Heather Scourse
Mr Richard Scourse
Ms Yousra Shanshal
Dr Elizabeth Sharp
Mr Jai Shroff
Ms Clare Skidmore
Ms Adelene Smith
Mr Alexander Smith
Somerville MCR
Mrs Deborah Southwell
Ms Fiona Standfield
Mr Peter Standfield
Ms Madeleine Ruehl 1977 Mrs Beryl Ruehl ǂ
Ms Sonja Ruehl 1968 Mrs Beryl Ruehl ǂ
Mr Richard and Mrs Heather Scourse
Mr George Shea
Ms Rebecca Lockwood
Ms Clare Skidmore
Mr John Upton
Mr David Scourse 1999 ǂ
Mrs Shirley Shea (Ashton) 1952 ǂ
Mrs Jenny Skidmore (Sargent) 1969 ǂ
Mrs Jenny Skidmore (Sargent) 1969 ǂ
Mrs Francesca Upton (Ricketts) 1955 ǂ
CROWDFUNDING
We would also like to thank everyone who donated to our crowdfunding project between 1st August 2020 and 31st July 2021.
The COVID Hardship Fund
Ms Carole Stone
Mrs Jennifer Summerfield
Mrs Julie Thomson
Mr Richard Thomson
University of Oxford Law Faculty
Mr John Upton
Miss Heather Weightman
Dr Philippa Wells
Ms P Whitehead
Ms Mary Williams
Mr Sarosh Zaiwalla
1 Anonymous Donor
Companies and Trusts
American Endowment Foundation
Benjamin Leighton Charitable Settlement
Denigris and Jamrack Fund
Dollar Bank Foundation
Don’t Leave Me As I am Charity Fund
Eleanor Rathbone Charitable Trust
Fidelity Investment
Hamish & Sophie Forsyth Charitable Trust
Jeet and Kuki Charitable Foundation
Kent Investment Ltd
The Michael Bishop Foundation
Moyola Charity
Nomura International plc
The Nuremberg Trust
UBS Investment Bank
UPL Limited
Thank you to our growing group of leaders providing Matched Funding opportunities for key projects
Ms Basma Alireza 1991
Ms Libby Ancrum 1978 and Mr David Skinner
Lady Beatson (Charlotte Christie-Miller) 1968
Ms Moira Black 1968
Mr Thomas Bolt
Mrs Ayla Busch 1989
Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988
Mr Alan Connery 1994
Mrs Janine Coulthard (Bailey) 1985
Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989
Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971 HF and Mr Michael Freeman
Mrs Joanna Greenslade (Harford) 1993
Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966
Mrs Emily Harvey (Wentz) 2000
Mrs Eugenia Hibbs
Mrs Tisa Hibbs and Mr Billy Hibbs
Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959 HF and
Mr Christopher Kenyon
Dr Niels Kröner 1996
Mr Max Luedecke 1999
Ms Nadine Majaro (Pilgrim) 1975
Mrs Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974 FF
Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962 HF
Dr Jacqueline Mitton (Pardoe) 1966
Ms Charlotte Morgan 1969
Ms Hilary Newiss 1974
Mr John Nicoll
Mr Raj Nihalani 1997
Dr Alice Prochaska (Barwell) 1965 HF
Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974 HF
Ms Ceiri Roberts (Simister) 1975
Ms Virginia Ross 1966
Mr Sonny Sandhu 1994
Mrs Sue Scollan (Green) 1978 FF and Mr Kevin Scollan FF
Mrs Pam Somerset (Morgan) 1967
Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 and Mr Paul Zisman
Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989
Dr Ruth Thompson 1971 ǂ
Mrs Sarah Whitley 1977
The Government of India
The Somerville City Group
The Somerville JCR
The Somerville London Group
THANK YOU TO OUR VOLUNTEERS
The Principal and Fellows would like to thank all those who have given their time and commitment to the College during financial year 2020-21
= Chairs and Vice-Chairs
Development Board Members
Ms Ayla Busch 1989 ‡
Ms Sybella Stanley 1979 ‡
Ms Basma Alireza 1991
Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988
Mrs Sophie Forsyth (Wallis) 1989
Ms Lynn Haight (Schofield) 1966
Dr Niels Kröner 1996
Ms Vicky Maltby (Elton) 1974
Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974
Honorary Development Board Members
Mr Tom Bolt
Dr Doreen Boyce (Vaughan) 1953
Mrs Paddy Crossley (Earnshaw) 1956
Mrs Clara Freeman (Jones) 1971
Mrs Margaret Kenyon (Parry) 1959
Ms Nadine Majaro 1975
Mrs Harriet Maunsell (Dawes) 1962
Ms Hilary Newiss 1974
Mr Roger Pilgrim
Mrs Sian Thomas Marshall (Thomas) 1989
Somerville Association Committee
Professor Baroness Alison Wolf 1967 ‡
Mr Tim Aldrich 1994
Ms Isabel Ireland (2013)
Mrs Jo Magan (Ward) 1984
Ms Hilary Manning (1977)
Ms Pia Pasternack 1982
Ms Virginia Ross 1966
Mr Joe Smith (2013).
Mrs Frances Walsh (Innes) 1956
City Committee
Ms Judith Buttigieg 1988 ‡
Mr Tom Allsup 2000
Mr Barnaby Geddes-O’Dolan 2010
Ms Sara Glenister 2006
Ms Helena Powell (2008)
Mrs Nicola Ralston (Thomas) 1974
Mrs Clare Whittaker 1978
Ms Cordelia Witton 2006
Mr Bernardo Zang 2011
Lawyers Committee
Ms Sheena Singla 1994 ‡
Dr Michael Ashdown
Mrs Emily Forrest (Freeland) 1994
Mr Tim Knipe 1997
Mr Neil McKnight 2002
Ms Hayley Smith 2003
London Committee
Ms Caroline Totterdill 1984 ‡
Ms Kim Anderson 1978
Ms Bev Cox 1985
Ms Ruth Crawford 1980
Mrs Rachel Kent (Paterson) 1974
Ms Jenny Ladbury 1981
Ms Krystyna Nowak 1973
Ms Eleanor Sturdy (Burton) 1984
Mrs Sarah Wyles (Ryle) 1987
Medics Committee
Dr June Raine (Harris) 1971 ‡
Dr Mary Jane Attenburrow 1980
Ms Farah Bhatti 1984
Dame Fiona Caldicott – President
Dr Kate Good (Cooper) 1999
Dr Susanna Graham-Jones 1968
Professor Christine Lee 1962
Ms Natalie Morris (Shenker) 1997
Dr Natasha Robinson 1972
Dr Nermeen Varawalla 1989
Professor Wisia Wedzicha 1972