|
| |

click on image for greater detail
THE
JUBILEE
OF
THE
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF WALES,
ABERYSTWYTH
1872-1922
From
the WESTERN MAIL,
July,
1922.
IN writing the history of University education in
Wales and of the pioneer University College it is customary to begin with the
dreams of Owen Glyndwr, and to linger with the projects of Richard Baxter, the
divine, John Lewis, the squire of Glasgrug, and Dr. John Ellis, the rector of
Dolgellau. These men in the
seventeenth century discussed Aberystwyth as a college site, and appealed in
vain to rich & childless Welshmen to provide the funds.
I will leap the intervening centuries, and come at once to the middle of
the nineteenth century.
One
of the rare practical results of St. David’s Day festivities occurred at a
celebration in 1852, when a group of Welsh Churchmen in the West Riding of
Yorkshire decided to petition Parliament in favour of setting up in the
Principality “a University founded on broad and liberal principles,” with
the object of raising the moral and intellectual character of the people, “be
they Churchmen or Dissenters.” A
year later a Glasgow student - B.T. Williams, afterwards Q.C. and M.P. - who, 1
am glad to say, li
ke others after him, had not forgotten his native land, published a pamphlet
pleading for a Welsh University somewhat on the lines of Glasgow University.
Then, in the next year, 1854, Hugh Owen gathered together in a private
house in London a small band of famous Welshmen, with the object of pressing the
Government to establish colleges in Wales on the model of the Irish Queen’s
Colleges.
This
meeting, at which Lewis Edwards, Henry Rees, and “S.R.,” among others, were
present, “marks the real beginning of the movement for the foundation of the
University of Wales.” The Crimean War interrupted the project, and Hugh
Owen’s energies were diverted to the founding at Bangor of the North Wales
Training College for elementary teachers.
The
project was, however, revived in 1862 by articles in the “Cambria Daily
Leader.” An executive committee was set up in London, with Osborne Morgan and
Hugh Owen as hon. secretaries, William Williams, M.P., and Morgan Lloyd as
treasurers, and Dr. Nicholas, the author of the articles in the “Leader,” as
secretary tothe committee.
These pioneers had a federal University in mind, and one of their first efforts
was an attempt to negotiate the inclusion of St. David’s College, Lampeter, in
their scheme. It was contemplated from the start that the University Senate
should have power to afliliate any Welsh college of the requisite University
standard, and some imagined that the denominational colleges would migrate and
plant themselves physically on the hills around Aberystwyth.
It
is not easy to-day to realize the obstacles which confronted the pioneers of
popular education in Wales. There was not only the division between Church and
Chapel, but the Nonconformists themselves were divided between those prepared to
welcome State aid and those who denounced all State aid of education as poison.
There were, further, those who, while friendly to the University as the goal,
believed that the more immediate need was non-theological colleges of an
advanced type, free to send their students for degrees to London University. Dr.
Lewis Edwards was of this view, and his article in the “Traethodydd” (1865)
is illuminating. Throughout he lays stress on the quality of the work to be done
rather than on the number of students, and shows the superiority of the tutorial
over the lecturing system. Students went to lectures “as to some huge
depot,” expecting knowledge to be poured out on their heads without any effort
on their part - a criticism which is still not without point.
The
collection of funds quietly proceeded: a free site was offered to the committee
for a college in Bangor, and Dr. Nicholl Came offered St. Donat’s Castle as a
temporary home for a South Wales college and six acres of land near Llantwit
Major, where many centuries ago “all the arts known in Britain” had beeii
taught. In the meantime an adventurous railway contractor had erected a huge
railway hotel on the sea front at Aberystwyth, another at Borth, and another at
Aberdovey, and had then become a bankrupt. Largely by the aid of David Davies of
Landinam, the Aberystwyth hotel was bought for £10,000 in 1867 for the purpose
of a college, and it is interesting to observe that the other two hotels have in
their time been used as educational centres. Thus the question of the site was
settled.
By
June, 1872, a fund of £2,000 a year for the payment of professors’ salaries
had been guaranteed, and in July it was announced that the Rev. Thomas Charles
Edwards had been selected as first principal of the University College of Wales
- as it was now called. On October 9, 1872, the college was opened with 25
students. No applicant was refused. By the end of the first session 40 more had
been enrolled. Marchant Williams came in the second term from Bangor Normal
College with a great reputation, for he had passed his “first B.A., “as the
London Intermediate used to be called. Names of other early students are well
known: 0. M. Edwards, T. E. Ellis, S. T. Evans, Ellis Jones Griffith,
David Samuel, Owen Evans, J. E. Lloyd, T. F. Roberts, H. H. Humphreys, and
David Adams, who has just died. The principal & two professors, both
clergymen, shared the whole realm of knowledge between them. It was, as Dr.
Mortimer Angus once said, the day of small beginnings and great debts. There
were prize-givings and recitations, and years later Principal Edwards confessed
to granting a holiday to celebrate someone’s achievement in passing London
Matriculation.
To
the personality and career of the principal I shall devote a separate article.
The teaching staff quickly increased, Mr. Mortimer Angus joining in 1873,
carrying “with grace the weight of an eminent name.” Dr. Joseph Parry’s
brief tenure of the Chair of Music dated from the opening of the third session.
Tanymarian and Miss Megan Watts were examiners in music, and under them David
Jenkins got a “first,” in later years to become himself a professor at the
college.
In
1874, or thereabouts, arrangements were made for the students to reside in the
college, and there are endless tales of the joys & exploits of that golden
age. There were morning prayers in the college library, at which the
Presbyterian principal used the Book of Common Prayer and Hymns Ancient and
Modern. The champions of the faith saw in this an attempt to proselytize and
“Romanize” the students, and the service had to be stopped in response to
the clamour outside.
There
lies before me an appeal to Mr. Gladstone to help higher education in Wales
published in 1881 by the Rev. Edward Davies, Rhymney, at whose feet I was
instructed in my youth. It is a passionate plea for intermediate and university
education, with impressive proofs of the Government’s neglect of Wales. But on
the introduction of prayers and hymns he is uncompromising. “It will be
totally inconsistent with the Bible for one farthing of public money to be
devoted to the completion of the college building at Aberystwyth so long as a
book of prayers & hymns is used in the college as a religious service on the
part of masters and students together.” Readers of “Clych Adgof’ will
remember 0. M. Edwards’ amusing description of the moral peril to which he was
exposed when he found that in the room immediately beneath his lodged a student
of Socinian views. The air was full of these sectarian fears for the safety of
the students’ orthodoxy.
In
1872 Hugh Owen abandoned his post at the Local Government Board, and devoted
himself without salary to the service of the college, and especially to the
raising of funds by means of a remarkable public effort. He addressed meetings
innumerable all over the land. The churches were induced to set aside a special
Sunday to collect for the college. There were house-to-house collections, and it
was estimated that over a hundred thousand had given sums under half-a-crown. In
all this he was backed by the brilliant weekly articles of “Y Gohebydd” in
the “Baner,” and by its proprietor, Thomas Gee.
In
1875 permanent legal form was given to the executive committee in the shape of a
Declaration of Trust. Trustees, Court of Governors, and a College Council were
appointed, with Lord Aberdare as first president, and Mr. David Davies, M. P.,
as treasurer. The treasurer gave the college a great deal more than large sums
of money in its early and critical period; he gave it his powerful will, his
courage and large ideas. At the breakfast on the opening of the college he had
pleaded for an endowment fund of £50,000. Despite superhuman efforts,
development was seriously arrested for lack of means, and there were repeated
and fruitless journeys to Whitehall. The college cost £5,000 a year to run; £10,000
was wanted to complete the college building; £30,000 had already been collected
in Wales: Scotland and Ireland were receiving £50,000 a year in grants for
higher education; Wales got nothing—all these cogent arguments were pressed on
the Lord President of the Council by Lord Aberdare, Henry Richards, Osborne
Morgan, and others on June 1 5th ,1875, but in vain. Other
deputations met with the same fate. In 1877 the department of music was closed
and other commitments were reduced. In i88o the students numbered only 57,
and a general sense of disappointment was reflected in the Departmental
inquiry appointed in that year.
The
report of the Departmental Committee which was published in 1881 declared that
Aberystwyth had failed to attract students in sufficient numbers to entitle it
to be regarded as a successful institution. The report proceeded (fortunately,
as events proved) to threaten the very existence of the college by recommending
the establishment of two Welsh University Colleges in all, one for the South at
Cardiff or Swansea, and a second for the North at Aberystwyth, or
elsewhere in North Wales.
In
January, 1883, a conference of some 350 representatives of North Wales met at
Chester, and it appointed a committee to fix a site for the college within the
six northern counties, thus excluding Aberystwyth. A dozen towns competed for
the honour. Ultimately, the question was referred to arbitration, and Bangor was
chosen. Henry Jones, then a lecturer at Aberystwyth, was asked by Mr. William
Rathbone to draw up a draft charter for the new institution. Meanwhile, the
friends of Aberystwyth were far from idle. David Davies among old, and Stuart
Rendel among new friends rallied to its financial support, and in 1884 the
college was promised a temporary Government grant of £2,500 per annum, while
Cardiff & Bangor received £4,000 apiece. Hardly had this insecure foothold
been reached when, in July, 1885, a great portion of the college buildings was
destroyed by fire, and three men lost their lives in attempts to save the
treasures of the museum and library.
This
disaster made an instant appeal to the hearts of the public. Stuart Rendel
doubled his contribution, Henry Richard sent £200, so did Sir Watkin Williams
Wynn. Letters poured in bidding the authorities to stand East. Archdeacon
Griffiths wrote, “I met a farmer in the Vale of Aeron the other day, who said,
‘I have never given a shilling towards the college, but now I will give 1/- to
make up the loss. The fire has destroyed the college, but it has also destroyed
a large amount of prejudice that existed in the minds of many against it.”
“Y
Coleg a’r dan” was recited in hundreds of Penny Readings. The Principal,
David Davies. and Humphreys Owen were the chief members of a committee appointed
to make plans for the future. The cost of restoring the damaged building was
estimated at £25,670 while a new building on a new site would cost just double
that figure. David Davies undertook to add £20 to every £100 collected by the
country. The Treasury relented and increased the grant to Aberystwyth to £4,000,
and four years later Aberystwyth was also put on a level with the two other
colleges by the grant of a Royal Charter. There is no doubt whatever that the
long struggle to support the college in the face of one calamity after another
had the result of entrenching it very deeply in the affections of the Welsh
people. In 1890 the principal visited the United States and raised over £1,000
for the equipment of the college library from American Welshmen.
In
1891 Thomas Charles Edwards succeeded his father as principal of Bala
Theological College. The name of 0. M. Edwards occurred to many as a likely
successor, but he, advised by Jowett and others, decided to remain in Oxford.
Professor Mortimer Angus, Thomas Darlington, H.M.I., Dr. R. J. Lloyd, of
Liverpool, and T. F. Roberts, then professor of Greek at Cardiff, formed the
“short list.” Angus was favoured by the college staff. Darlington knew no
Welsh, but was reported to have offered to learn the language in three weeks. He certainly did learn to write and speak it with ease.
Lloyd, first holder of the newly-constituted London D. Lit. degree, had
been acting as professor of English in the interregnum between the resignation
of Macallum and the arrival of Dr. Hereford Roberts. the son of a Towyn
policeman, and an old student. “an able and a good man,” was appointed.
At
this juncture the students numbered about 200. The chief increase which followed
occurred in the number of women students, especially after the founding of
Alexandra Hall in 1896, under the sagacious direction of Miss Carpenter. The day
training department for elementary teachers, an agricultural department, the
schools of law and music, the beginnings of the tutorial class movement, the
erection of science buildings, including the “Edward Davies Chemical
Laboratories” - aft date from Principal Roberts’ regime, and they coincide
with immense labours on his part in connection with the Intermediate Act of 1
889, and with what the historians have called The Second University Movement.”
which led to the establishment of the University in 1894.
The
federal scheme evolved was one which taxed the, endurance of’ the principals
of the three colleges to the utmost, especially in the periods when they filled
the office of Vice-Chancellor. Long
railway journeys to London, innumerable conferences at Shrewsbury and elsewhere,
a heavy correspondence, often written by hand, were a constant drain on their
energies. One often wished they had known better how to delegate minor duties to
others, and thereby allowed the nation to share more liberally in their rich
mental endowment.
One
of the red letter days at Aberystwyth was that on which the Prince of’ Wales
(afterwards King Edward VII.) was installed as Chancellor of the new University
in 18%. It was a brilliant ceremony, and the Prince and Mr. Gladstone were given
a notable reception. One blot marred the picture. There were honorary degrees
for Mr. Gladstone, Lord Herschell, Lord Spencer and the Princess of Wales, -
there was nothing for the man who, by his exertions, had “saved the
college,” Thomas Charles Edwards. But it came two years later, just two years
before his death.
In
1911 the National I Library was opened at Aberystwyth. Principal Roberts died in
August. 1919, and was succeeded by J. U. Davies, M. A., also a former student of
the college, and for many years its indefatigable registrar. t Under his
direction the college has continued to make wide progress, the students at the
opening of last session numbering over 1,000 about one-third of whom are drawn
from Glamorgan and Monmouth. There
are thus at the college more students to-day than were enrolled throughout the
first principal’s twenty years. The
total teaching staff numbers nearly 100.
The
shadow of the Great War fell upon this college, as upon all others, and took its
toll of promising youth. Over 800
students joined the Services, and 100 laid down their lives. “Mewn anghof ni
chant fod.” Their sacrifice is
being commemorated by a Students’ Union, for the purchase and upkeep of which
the Old Students’ Association is aiming to raise £10,000, of which about
one-half has been secured.
Looking
back over the story we have thus rapidly sketched one is struck with the
comparative neglect of those very subjects in which a Welsh college might have
been expected to specialize: the Welsh language, agriculture, music, and
extra-mural adult education. Thanks
mainly to what the “Gohebydd” used to call “hen hosan fawr Llandinam”
and to Sir Lawrence Phillips, it is in these four directions that the greatest
expansion has taken place in the last half- dozen years. The pioneer efforts of
Silvan Evans, Sir Edward Anwyl, Joseph Parry, and David Jenkins are being
developed beyond the most sanguine hopes of their day. Great ingenuity has been
shown in tackling the problem of accommodation, and a map of Aberystwyth shows
college properties dotted all over the town.
It
is a heartening story of aspiration and achievement, and we do well to rejoice.
1 have mentioned only the more conspicuous helpers “who have left a name
behind, that their praise might be reported.” I have said nothing of the more
humble, but not less faithful workers, like Penllyn Jones and Williams, the
librarians, Mortimer Green, the registrar, “Jones the Porter,” and the other
janitors to whom generations of students are indebted. “And some there be
which have no memorial, who are perished, as though they had never been.”
All old students who remain will to-day unite in praying:—
Vivat,
crescat, floreat in eternum.
|