Churchill Scholarship


The Churchill Scholarship is awarded by the Winston Churchill Foundation of the United States to graduates of the more than one hundred colleges and universities invited to participate in the Churchill Scholarship Program, for the pursuit of research and study in the physical and natural sciences, mathematics, engineering, for one year at Churchill College at the University of Cambridge. The scholarship is often considered one of the most prestigious and competitive international fellowships available to American graduate students, alongside the Marshall, Rhodes, and Mitchell scholarships. Each year, up to two students may be endorsed by each of the 110 U.S. institutions invited to participate in the program.

Eligibility, selectivity and selection criteria

With an acceptance rate of approximately 6.3%, the Churchill Scholarship is less selective than the Marshall, Rhodes, Gates Cambridge and Mitchell scholarships, however, significantly fewer institutions are allowed to nominate candidates for the Churchill Scholarship. Furthermore, each institution may nominate only two candidates to the Churchill Scholarship, so the endorsed candidate pool is initially very selective. By comparison, the Marshall scholarship typically receives 915-980 endorsed applicants and the Rhodes scholarship typically receives 850-880 endorsed applicants, and the Mitchell scholarship typically receives 300 endorsed applicants. In contrast to the Gates Cambridge Scholarship, applying to the Churchill, Marshall, Rhodes, or Mitchell scholarships all require the endorsement of an approved U.S. undergraduate institution. As such, the actual acceptance rates for these scholarships are significantly lower than the official acceptance rate of endorsed applicants. Instead of looking for the canonical "well rounded" applicant, the Churchill Scholarship seeks those with "interesting jagged-edges" and is considered one of the most academically challenging scholarships; the average GPA of the applicant pool is 3.8, and the average GPA of the winners is 3.98. From 2014-2017, 69% of the winning Churchill Scholars had previously received a Goldwater Scholarship.

Eligibility

Applicants for the Churchill Scholarship must be:
Applicants are chosen on the basis of:
Each participating institution may nominate only two candidates for the Churchill Scholarship, and each sets its own criteria for nomination.

History

In 1958, Churchill College at Cambridge was founded in honor of Sir Winston Churchill with a primary focus on science, engineering and mathematics. Anticipating the final establishment of the college, Churchill met with American friends Lewis W. Douglas, John Loeb, Sr., and Carl Gilbert to ask them to create a scholarship for young Americans to study at the college. In 1959, the Winston Churchill Foundation of the United States was established as a nonprofit charitable organization. The Foundation initially made travel grants to , distinguished senior faculty from American colleges and universities who would spend a sabbatical year at the College. Eight of the Churchill Fellows won the Nobel Prize.
In 1963 the Foundation funded the first three Churchill Scholarships for one year of study. Subsequently, the Scholarships funded either one-year programs or three-year doctoral degrees. In order to increase the number of Churchill Scholars, the foundation decided in the early 1980s to support only one-year programs. To this day however, it is not uncommon for Churchill Scholars to obtain alternate funding to support continued doctoral study at the University of Cambridge following the completion of their Scholarship year.
Since 1963, around 550 Churchill Scholarships have been awarded. As of 2016 the Foundation has increased the number of scholarships awarded each year from fourteen to fifteen. The scholarship is worth between $50,000 and $60,000 depending on the exchange rate, covering all university and college fees at the University of Cambridge, a living allowance, visa fees, up to $1,500 for travel between the United States and the United Kingdom, and the possibility of an additional $2,000 Special Research Grant.
A complete list of past Churchill Scholars is available .
As of 2017-2018, 80 institutions have had successful nominations, and the schools with the most Churchill Scholars are:
SchoolNumber of Scholars
Princeton University43
Harvard University42
Duke University25
Cornell University23
California Institute of Technology23
Yale University21
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign20
Michigan State University18
Johns Hopkins University16
Harvey Mudd College16
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill13
University of Chicago13
Brown University12
Massachusetts Institute of Technology12
Purdue University12
Stanford University12
Northwestern University11
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor11
University of Rochester11
Carnegie Mellon University10
University of Minnesota10
University of Pennsylvania10
Dartmouth College9
Vanderbilt University9
Amherst College9
Case Western Reserve University8
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute8
University of California, Berkeley8
Rice University6
Indiana University Bloomington6
Pomona College5
University of Arizona5
Williams College3
United States Naval Academy2
United States Military Academy2
University of New Mexico2
University of Massachusetts Amherst1