History
It was founded in London in 1844 as a training college for the English Presbyterian Church
It merged with Cheshunt College, Cambridge, an evangelical and mainly congregational training institution formerly known as Trevecca College, in 1967
It became a training college for the United Reformed Church when the Congregational and Presbyterian churches of England joined forces as the United Reform Church in 1972
It continues to provide religious training and theological education in association with the United Reform Church and the universities in Cambridge
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What was reforming about it?
It provided higher education and theological training to Nonconformists
Where in Bloomsbury
At first it had no fixed home, holding lectures in Exeter Hall
It then had three successive homes in Bloomsbury: 51 Great Ormond Street, 1852–1858, no. 29 Queen Square, 1858–1864, and Queen Square House, Queen Square, 1864–1899 (Godfrey Heathcote Hamilton, Queen Square: Its Neighbourhood and its Institutions, 1926); the first two of these are usually overlooked by historians
It moved to a new site as Westminster College, Cambridge, in 1899, having previously shown interest in becoming part of the proposed federal “University of Westminster” encompassing most of London’s higher-education institutions (The Times 23 November 1897)
Website of current institution
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Books about it
R. Buick Knox, Westminster College, Cambridge: Its Background and History (2007)
Archives
Its archives are held on site in Cambridge and can be consulted by appointment; details of access are available online via the (opens in new window)
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