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  1. Student Life. Whether you want to row for Cambridge, act with the Cambridge Footlights or debate in the world-famous Cambridge Union, Newnham is the College for you. With its strong sense of community, excellent facilities and beautiful and historic city centre site, there is no better base.

  2. 10 de oct. de 2020 · Newnham College is the oldest remaining women’s college, founded in 1871, and thus has the biggest endowment and best bursaries. To be frank, this was the main reason I chose this college over the other two, Murray Edwards College and Lucy Cavendish College (which, incidentally, has just gone coed).

  3. Newnham College, Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. 5,994 likes · 368 talking about this · 12,155 were here. Newnham College: the iconic women’s college at the heart of the University of Cambridge.

  4. Newnham College’s history and the legacies of enslavement. Newnham’s Legacies of Enslavement research programme works to better understand our institution’s foundation within its historical setting, to recognise our responsibilities today, and to contribute to a deeper understanding of…

  5. Gill Sutherland’s history of the College, from its foundation in 1871 until the present day, also contains photos from our archives. Newnham began as a house for five students in Regent Street in Cambridge in 1871. Lectures for Ladies had been started in Cambridge in 1870. These built on the reputation of the University; but Cambridge itself ...

  6. Newnham is a College for women, led by women. It’s a place where you’ll see women hold the most senior roles; where you’ll have the pastoral and academic support to live life to your full potential. Your teaching and social life will be with women and men from across the University, and you’ll come home to a College that supports women ...

  7. The founders of Girton College, Cambridge’s first women’s college, and Newnham, its second, recognised and campaigned for the standards of higher education to be improved so that women could compete with men at the highest level. It wasn’t until 1918 that The Education Act raised the compulsory school leaving age to 14 for both boys and ...