These three (Daventry, Highbury, and Homerton) merged as New College London. Its initial programme is laid out in the final chapter of The introductory lectures delivered at the opening of the college: October, 1851.[2]
New College and Hackney College became constituents of the University of London's Faculty of Theology when the faculty was created in 1900.[4] They were united by Act of Parliament in 1924 as Hackney and New College, which was renamed New College, London in 1936.[5]
"New buildings were erected behind the Hackney College premises at Hampstead, and were opened in 1938."[6]
When, in 1972, most English Congregational churches joined the newly formed United Reformed Church (URC), and only a small number remained independent, the New College's work was reorganised. In 1976, its library was donated to Dr Williams's Library.[7] Since 1981, the work of the college has been continued by the New College London Foundation,[8] which trains ministers for the URC and Congregational churches.
Ron Price, a New Testament scholar, studied at the college in the 1960s.[15]
The Revd. Elizabeth Welch, Moderator of the URC in the West Midlands, studied at the college in the 1970s.[16]
David Peel, the URC's Moderator of General Assembly for 2005–2006, came under the influence of the college while residing there as a student lodger ("hostelman").[17]
References
^'Coward College, Byng Place', Survey of London: volume 21: The parish of St Pancras part 3: Tottenham Court Road & neighbourhood (1949), pp. 91. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65179 Date accessed: 15 January 2010. The article itself states in its references that it depends on "information supplied by the Rev. J. B. Binns, Secretary and Librarian of New College, London, and also the articles on Dr. Doddridge and William Coward in Dictionary of National Biography. The date of the Agreement with Coward's Trustees under which New College was formed was 10th September, 1849."
^By New College (London, England), New College, London, England
^New College, London - Annual Report, 1976-1977, p.1
^G.F.Nuttall, New College, London and Its Library Dr. Williams's Trust, 1977, p.8 n.7
^New College, London - Annual Report, 1976-1977, p.1
^'Coward College, Byng Place', Survey of London: volume 21: The parish of St Pancras part 3: Tottenham Court Road & neighbourhood (1949), pp. 91. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=65179 Date accessed: 15 January 2010. The article itself states in its references that it depends on "information supplied by the Rev. J. B. Binns, Secretary and Librarian of New College, London, and also the articles on Dr. Doddridge and William Coward in Dictionary of National Biography. The date of the Agreement with Coward's Trustees under which New College was formed was 10th September, 1849."