CAMPION HALL
The history of Campion Hall is briefly as follows.
In 1896 the Rev. Richard Clarke, S.J., who had taken
his degree as a member of St. John's College in 1860
and had rowed for the Varsity in 1859, obtained leave
from the Vice-Chancellor to open a Private Hall. On
9 Sept. 1896 this hall was opened under Fr. Clarke's
direction at 40 St. Giles's. The house proved to be too
small, and 15 months later the remainder of an 80
years' lease of 11 St. Giles's was purchased from the
Rev. Bartholomew Price, who had just been appointed
Master of Pembroke College. This house, formerly
known as Middleton Hall, had originally been the
'grange' where the nuns of Godstow Abbey received
the rents of the manor of Walton, but belonged now
to St. John's College, which it adjoins and whose
tenant the Master of Clarke's Hall now became on his
taking possession of the house in June 1897. In the next
year the lease of 13 St. Giles's was purchased and this
house, situate on the other side of The Lamb and Flag
Inn and formerly a shop where Japanese goods were
sold, became the 'Annexe' of Clarke's Hall. In 1900
Fr. Clarke died suddenly at York, and with his death
'Clarke's Hall' ceased to exist. It was reconstituted as
'Pope's Hall' under Fr. O'Fallon Pope as licensed
Master, and the statues were amended so as to allow
the Vice-Chancellor to appoint any Member of
Convocation as temporary Master in case of need. In
1902 Fr. Pope purchased the freehold of nos. 14 and
15 St. Giles's (the former from Balliol College) and in
1903 purchased (also from Balliol College) the freehold of no. 13. This with a view to providing the hall
with a site when the lease of 11 St. Giles's should fall in in April 1936.
In 1915, after hoding the office of Master for 15
years, Fr. O'Fallon Pope was succeeded by Fr.
Charles Plater, and the hall once again changed its
name. But in 1918 a statute was passed empowering
the Vice-Chancellor, subject to the consent of Convocation, to grant licences for the establishment of
Permenent Private Halls for the reception of academical students on condtition that provision is made for
their government on a permanent footing, and that
such halls are not established for purposes of profit.
There were then two private halls, Plater's Hall and
Parker's Hall, which became respectively Campion
Hall and St. Benet's Hall, and in 1928 a third Permanent Private Hall was licensed, St. Peter's.
On the death of Fr. Plater in 1921 Fr. Henry
Keane was appointed Master of Campion Hall, and
upon his retiring in 1926 he was succeeded by Fr.
Ernest G. Vignaux, during whose mastership plans
were drawn for the building of a new hall on the site
of nos. 13,14, and 15 St. Giles's. This site, hemmed in
on three sides by the property of St. John's College,
was barely adequate for present purposes and offered
no scope for expansion. Consequently, when in 1933
Fr. Vignaux was succeeded as Master by Fr. Martin
D'Arcy, the project of building on the site in St.
Giles was dropped and a new site was sought and
at length found in Berwer St. This site comprised
two buildings, a large and ancient lodging-house,
known as Mucklem Hall, which for nearly a hundred
years had housed a succession of distinguished undergraduates, most of them members of Christ Church,
and, adjoining it, a garage which had once been the
stables for the horses which pulled the Oxford trams.
The freehold of Micklem Hall belonged to and was
purchased from Hall's Brewery, and the freehold of
the garage from the Feoffees of the Parish of St. Aldate's.
The latter tenement was granted soon after 1485 to the
church of St. Michael South, whence it passed to St.
Aldate's; it was a strip about 20 ft. wide, extending
from the street to Trillmill stream. On the west it had
a similar strip which was acquired by Balliol in 1473,
sold to Hall & Co. about 1913, and united with
Micklem Hall. Micklem Hall itself covered the site
of two medieval tenements, extending westward to the
parish boundary; it had a frontage of over 60 ft. and
had at one time been a gentlemen's residence owned by
brewers named Micklem (c. 1820–70), previously
by brewers named Drought (c. 1750–1800), earlier
(c. 1600–60) by brewers named Carpenter. The
house contained some Elizabethan work, which is still
preserved in Campion Hall. The site in St. Giles's was
sold to St. John's College. Sir Edwin Lutyens, O.M.,
K.C.I.E., P.R.A., was appointed the architect for the new
building in Brewer St., the construction of which was
entrusted to the firm of Messrs. Benfield and Loxley,
who had already built the New Infirmary in Oxford
and have since built the New Bodleian Library. They
began work in 1934. The garage and the kitchen,
out-buildings, and some dilapidated servants' rooms
were demolished, but at the request of the Oxford
Preservation Trust the more interesting portion of
Micklem Hall was retained, including an old panelled
room and the old doorway, but the wall to the left of the
doorway had to be rebuilt and set back owing to its unsafe condition.
The present Campion Hall extends from Brewer
St. to Rose Place, adjoining the Christ Church Choir
School. The main entrance is in Brewer St., with a
subsidiary entrance in Rose Place. It comprises, in
addition to Micklem Hall (which has two common
rooms, a parlour, and seven living-rooms) an entrance
hall, chapel, dining-hall, library, 30 rooms for students
and resident members of the hall, and, in the semibasement, kitchens and 7 rooms for the domestic staff.
The building is of Clipsham stone with a red-tiled roof,
unbroken by gables. In the garden is a fountain which
is a relic of Micklem Hall, and a flight of steps leading
to a doorway in the centre of the main building, over
which are the arms of the hall. In the entrance hall,
facing the main staircase, is a large Spanish wood-carving,
early 17th century, depicting St. Ignatius Loyola surrounded by the early members of his Order. On the
staircase is a plaque by Eric Gill, representing St.
Martin of Tours in modern military dress. The antechapel, separated from the main chapel by an oak
screen, is in memory of Francis Urquhart of Balliol, and
is dedicated to St. Thomas More, whose life and
martyrdom are depicted symbolically in a painting by
Daphne Pollen. In the main chapel is a baldacchino,
designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, and Stations of the
Cross designed and executed by Frank Brangwyn and
originally intended for Rheims Cathedral. A small Lady
Chapel adjoins the main chapel, and above the sacristy
is another small chapel with a window overlooking the
main chapel. On the ground-floor of the east wing
are the dining-hall and library, the latter panelled in
Austrian oak. On the first and second floors are
corridors running the length of the building and flanked
on either side by living-rooms. The staircases in this
wing, three in number, are all of teak, and the floors
throughout the building are also of teak—Rhodesian teak, polished a deep red.
The west wing was completed in Sept. 1935, and
was handed over for occupation on the 1st of Oct. The
remainder of the building was completed in the spring
of 1936, and was solemnly opened by the Duke of
Alba in June 1936, in the presence of the architect
and the Vice-Chancellor. The foundation-stone was
laid by the Archbishop of Bombay, the late Alban
Goodier, in conjunction with Julian, Earl of Oxford and Asquith.
The residents are generally about 35 in number, of
whom 5 or 6 are lecturers and tutors, the rest are
undergraduates; they are mostly members of the
Society of Jesus, though a few secular priests and one
or two laymen are generally in residence. In 1945
Fr. Thomas Corbishley succeeded Fr. D'Arcy as Master.
When circumstances permit, it is hoped to add a
west wing corresponding to the existing east wing, on
the site of a factory at present occupied by Hall the
Printer. The plans for the new building were drawn by Sir Edwin Lutyens before his death in 1944.