Search results
Phone: 01865 277900. Enquiries. Keeper of the Archives: Jeffrey Hackney. Contact us. Further reading. Secondary sources. Our proud history. From the meeting place of the experimental scientists who went on to form the Royal Society to one of the first Oxford colleges to admit women, find out more about Wadham's history. Royal Society foundations.
- Wadham College
Parks Road Oxford, OX1 3PN General enquiries T: +44 (0)1865...
- Wadham College
Wadham College was founded in 1610 by Dorothy Wadham, according to the will of her late husband Nicholas Wadham, a member of an ancient Devon and Somerset family. The central buildings, a notable example of Jacobean architecture, were designed by the architect William Arnold and erected between 1610 and 1613. They include a large and ornate Hall.
Jul 31, 2023 · Contact information Activities - how the charity spends its money The College, working with the University, provides an education aimed at offering outstanding students from all backgrounds the opportunity to fulfil their maximum potential and seeks to advance world- leading research.
Wadham offers college accommodation for each year of your undergraduate study, set within breath-taking gardens and outdoor spaces. This includes our recently completed Dorothy Wadham Building for second years, in vibrant East Oxford on Iffley Road.
Buildings and architecture. Wadham’s architectural heritage spans a variety of building styles from the classical Oxford Gothic of the original buildings to the contemporary lines of the new Undergraduate Centre. Statues of the founders, Nicholas and Dorothy Wadham seen through the College entrance.
Parks Road Oxford, OX1 3PN General enquiries T: +44 (0)1865 277900 E: lodge@wadham.ox.ac.uk. Contact | Visit
People also ask
Who built Wadham College?
Where is Wadham College?
Does Wadham offer college accommodation?
When was Wadham library built?
Is Wadham College part of Oxford for East England?
What is Wadham College Archive?
'Wadham is the only college [in Oxford] which was built all at one go and has remained virtually unchanged since....' (or at least had when Sherwood and Pevsner first published their survey of Oxfordshire in 1974).