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Contents
1. A Brief Historical Account
2. Glimpses of St. Stephen's College
3. Footprints on the Sands of Time (A Timeline)
A Brief Historical Account
St Stephen's College was founded on 1
February 1881 by the Cambridge Mission to Delhi in conjunction with the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. The Cambridge Mission
comprised a number of Dons from various colleges at Cambridge
University, and one of them, the (later Canon) Samuel Scott Allnutt was
the founder and the first Principal of the College. There was a St.
Stephen's School in Delhi, run by the S.P.G Mission since about 1854 .
The Cambridge Brotherhood arrived in Delhi in 1877 to reinforce the
teaching strength of this school. The Government had meanwhile, in 1879
closed down its Delhi College here, thus depriving the city and the
neighboring districts of the benefits of higher education. St Stephen's
College stepped into the breach in 1881. The College was in fact an
extension of the school and for some time, Allnutt was the Principal of
both the School and the College.
In the early years both the School and
the College occupied rented premises in two mansions built in the old
Mughal style in the bye lanes off Chandni Chowk, opposite the present
Central Bank Building. The College was housed in Shish Mahal in Katra
Khushhal Rai in Kinnari Bazar from 1881 to 1890. On 8 December , 1891 it
moved into its own beautiful buildings designed by Col (later Sir)
Swinton Jacob, Chief Engineer of Jaipur State. These buildings stand on
both sides of the road in Kashmere Gate, close to the historic St.
James' Church. On 1 October 1941, the college occupied its present home
in the Delhi University Enclave. Designed by Walter George, it is an
elegant two story red brick building around four spacious courts. Built
on ground levels, it has beautiful lines all along and in other respects
too, particularly in the subtle Mughal motifs, it is a fine piece of
architecture. Many more buildings have been added since 1941, the most
remarkable of them being the Chapel, again designed by Walter George and
added in 1952.
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To
commemorate the College Centenary Year, a 35p. stamp
showing the front view of College was released by the Prime
Minister, Smt. Indira Gandhi, on 1 February 1981. |
The University of the Punjab (at
Lahore) received its charter more than one year after the founding of
St. Stephen's College which became one of the two institutions first
affiliated to it. Six students of the College sat for the Intermediate
Arts exam of the Calcutta University in 1882, and two students passed
the Punjab and two the Calcutta F.A. examination in 1883. St. Stephen's
College became one of the three original constituent colleges of the
University of Delhi when the latter was established in 1922.
The following figures indicate how the
number of students in the College fluctuated over the years, and
escalated later :1881(5), 1882(10), 1883(31), 1884(42), 1885(62),
1888(40), 1892(69), 1893(80), 1897(585), 1902(47), 1904(85), 1906(107),
1909(164), 1915(256), 1918(226), 1924(284), 1928(328), and 1929(355).
The number at present is around 1100.
In the first ten years the strength of
the teaching staff varied between 8 and 12 teachers which gradually rose
to between 20 and 25 by 1920 and hardly ever went up beyond 30 until
1960. Since then, the number of teachers has tended to increase rapidly
and is now around seventy.
Since 1941, the College has been
slowly and gradually increasing in numbers and infrastructure. The
layout of its present buildings in a 25 acre site was planned for a
College of 450 junior members and 35 senior members, with at least half
of them in residence. With increasing number of students teachers,
administrative staff and the Karamcharis, the college has had to augment
space in the library, the cafe, add two blocks of residence and new
class-rooms.
Between the end of the second decade of this century and the end of
1940's, the College had a number of women students varying between one
and twenty. This at a time when there were either no facilities or
inadequate facilities for higher education for women in Delhi. The
College ceased to be co-educational in 1950; but it became
co-educational once again in 1975.
St. Stephen's College has many 'firsts' to its credit. It was the first
College in India with a large proportion of Englishmen on its teaching
staff to appoint an Indian, Sushil Kumar Rudra, as Principal, as far
back as 1906. C. F. Andrews, then a teacher in the College, was
responsible for this revolutionary step. While its missionary members
from England received only a pittance, St. Stephen's was the first among
private colleges to have a decent grade for the Indian members of the
teaching staff and even more importantly, to treat teachers of Oriental
Languages at par with others. It was almost certainly the first by a
long chalk to institute the system of study leave for two years on full
pay for its Indian teachers, and then send them to Oxford, Cambridge or
Dublin. First also, to gradually replace sectarian messes by
inter-dining messes, until it had a dining hall large enough to
accommodate all its resident students and some teachers at each meal.
Both teachers and students going out of St. Stephen's into the larger
world outside have made significant contributions to various walks of
our national life: education, art, science, law, commerce,
administration, sports, journalism and politics.
C.F. Andrews who taught English in the College from 1904 to 1914, was
increasingly in demand for his great work as conciliator and fighter
against social injustice and political exploitation, all over India and
abroad. He left the College in 1914 for Rabindranath Tagore's
Shantiniketan, and was instrumental in bringing together the Poet,
Mahatma Gandhi, Sarojini Naidu and the Principal S.K. Rudra in memorable
friendships. Mahatma Gandhi and Kasturba Gandhi visited the College on
13 April 1915 and thereafter, he often stayed with the Principal on his
visits to Delhi, and C.F.Andrews, too in the course of his
peregrinations was frequently in the College.
Also worth mentioning here is what C.B.Young who taught English and was
editor of the St. Stephen's Magazine (later The Stephanian) at the time,
wrote about Jallianwala Bagh in the editorial of the July 1920 issue of
the Magazine : "These columns as a rule do not engage in current
political controversy. As a public institution it is our duty to avoid
taking sides on strictly political issues, and where we touch politics
at all we endeavor to deal with them in the spirit of impartial students
rather than in that of partisans. It only because they matter to our
mind concerns, concerns ultimate principle rather than mere party
politics and raises profound moral issues that we find it our duty in
this number to express our opinion in the subject which more than any
other is engaging pubic attention at the moment. We are in empathic
agreement with the condemnation bestowed on the action of General Dyer
by all the authorities who have pronounced judgment in connection with
the Hunter Committee of Enquiry. We rejoice especially at the strong and
unequivocal repudiation by the Imperial Government through the mouth of
the Secretary of State of the Principles enunciated and followed by
General Dyer. With the purely political issues dealt with in the Report
- the necessity of martial law and the existence or non - existence of
open rebellion - we have less concern. They are questions of
interpretation of fact on which opinions may differ without reproach.
But as Christian Missionaries we cannot avoid the duty of forming and
expressing a judgment on such a deed of horror as the slaughter in
Jallianwala Bagh. The former plea has a sinister history. It was Satan,
according to Milton, "With necessity, The tyrant 's plea, excused his
devilish deeds"; and after him was the German Chancellor, Bethmann
Hollweg, who defended the invasion of Belgium on the ground that
"necessity knows no law". The second line of defense equally ignores the
moral issue. If it could be proved the General Dyer by his action "saved
the Punjab", as has been claimed, we would still not withdraw a word
that we have written. Better, a thousand times better, in our view, if
India were lost to the British Empire, than preserved only by such
methods. The idea of an India held for England only by naked and
ruthless force is one that no follower of Jesus Christ can consistently
tolerate for an instant. We believe it to be also entirely out of the
relation of the facts; the links which bind India and England together
are of more nobler and durable material than brutal might. But it is
with principles rather than facts that we are here concerned; and with
principle we repudate with detestation a policy based on a belief in the
continuing efficacy of "blood and iron".
The College motto is "Ad Dei Gloriam" the Latin for "To the Glory of
God".
The College colors are martyrs' red and Cambridge blue.
The badge is a martyrs' crown on a field of martyrs' red , within a five
pointed star, edged with Cambridge blue. Round the five pointed star
which stands for India , is the Cambridge blue border, representing the
impact of Christian Cambridge upon our Country, for the College was
founded by the members of the Cambridge Mission to Delhi. On the ground,
which is colored red to represent St. Stephens, the first Christian
martyr, in whose memory the College is built, stands the martyrs' crown
in gold, which awaits the person who will give his life for Truth.
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