Knox College, Otago
Knox College is a selective residential college, established by the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand and affiliated with University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand. The college is set in a landscaped site in Opoho on the opposite side of the Dunedin Botanic Gardens from the University. It is named after John Knox, a sixteenth century leader of the Scottish Reformation, whose efforts in establishing a universal system of free education comprising both academic learning and character formation had a profound influence, not just in Scotland, but internationally, as subsequent generations of Scottish settlers, products of the Scottish Enlightenment, emigrated to far-flung corners of the globe, including New Zealand, taking with them a deep-seated belief in the benefits of applied knowledge and a broad and liberal education. Those strong Scottish Presbyterian foundations are something that Knox College has in common with the University to which it is affiliated. They are depicted on the College's Coat of Arms in the form of a blue St Andrew's Cross. Superimposed on the St Andrew's Cross is the image of a white dove in flight, carrying an olive branch in its mouth, a symbolic depiction of the flood myth in Genesis 8, wherein the olive-branch-bearing dove is a symbol of life and peace. The College Motto, Gratia et Veritas, or Grace and Truth, comes from the Prologue to the Gospel according to Saint John
Function
Knox College was established in 1909 to provide residence for male students and to house an existing seminary for Presbyterian ministers. It became co-educational in 1983. It also houses the Presbyterian Church's Knox Centre for Ministry and Leadership and the Presbyterian Research Centre.As the second oldest residential college in Dunedin, Knox is also one of the more traditional colleges, having been influenced at various stages of its development by Australian, Scottish and English models of collegiate life. The valuing of tradition is evident in some of the names and titles in the College. For example, the Head of College is known as the Master, and the Deputy Head the Deputy Master; residential assistants are called Sub-Masters; and the College has a ceremonial officer called the Beadle.
Academic support for residents takes the form of tutorials, the monitoring of individual academic performances, and progress interviews as needed. In addition, the college benefits from an on-campus library, the , which provides continuous access for students to study space and the library's various collections of books and journals, some of which are of historical significance. Knox College counts among its alumni eighteen Rhodes Scholars.
Upon entry into Knox College, undergraduate residents become part of the Junior Common Room, which is distinct from the Senior Common Room. The latter largely consists of academics and leading figures of the community elected into fellowship on a quinquennial basis. The list of College Fellows currently includes both the Chancellor and the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Otago. Other members of the SCR include postgraduate students in residence, including the Ross Fellow, and the college's Sub-master team. The Ross Fellowship, established in 1920, is the oldest such award in the University.
Until the 1990s, certain Chairs in Theology were held at Knox College. These were disestablished when the University of Otago assumed responsibility for teaching the University's Theology programme.
The Visitor is the Moderator of the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand.
Knox College Students' Club
The Knox College Students' Club is an incorporated society and the oldest college organisation of its kind in New Zealand. The majority of student social events and intercollegiate events are organised through the KCSC Executive Committee, or student nominated Club members, and form a broad range of activities throughout the year. Particularly notable amongst these annual events are the Autumn Ball, the Concert on the Stairwell, and the various sporting and cultural events that comprise the Cameron Shield and Nevill Cup competitions against Selwyn College.Three former presidents of the Students' Club later became Masters of Knox College: the Rev Dr Hubert Ryburn, the Rev Peter Marshall and Mr Bruce Aitken. Other notable names on the list of KCSC Presidents are Professor Sir David Skegg, who later served as Vice-Chancellor of the university, Judge E.O.K. Blaikie, and Mr Joel Amosa, winner of New Zealand's top singing prize, the Lexus Song Quest.
A distinguishing characteristic of Knox, courtesy of it being independently owned, is the freedom it has to accept students back for a second, or even third, year. Students are not obliged to leave the college at the end of their first year. Returners play a key role in setting the tone of the college, passing on traditions, and making incoming students feel welcome. In recent years, the male:female ratio has approximated 40:60, which is reflective of the male:female student ratio throughout the University.
Centennial celebrations
The College achieved its centenary in 2009, with approximately 600 guests attending a variety of events over the celebration weekend in early August. The oldest returning resident planted a Centennial Oak in the College grounds to commemorate the occasion.Relationships with other colleges
Knox College shares its site with Salmond College. Although the two colleges are mostly autonomous in regards to their daily operations, they are governed by the same body, the Board of Knox College and Salmond College, and, being part of the same organisation, they share several staff, including an Operations Manager, a Food Services Manager, a Property Manager and a Groundsman.Knox College enjoys a close relationship with its Anglican equivalent and arch-rival Selwyn College. The two colleges compete annually for the Nevill Cup and Cameron Shield. The current Master of Knox College, the Very Rev Dr Graham Redding, is a former Warden of Selwyn College.
Building history
The college buildings are an imposing group representing a persistent and successful effort to carry out an architectural idea over an extended time which saw considerable change.Initial outlay
The Presbyterian Church of Otago and Southland opened a seminary for Ministers, its Theological Hall, in Dunedin in 1876. Early in the 20th century it acquired the core of the site in Opoho, above North East Valley, intending to re-house the seminary and to provide accommodation for its students and others attending the University of Otago. It established a brief and conducted an architectural competition won by William Gray Young of Wellington in 1906, when he was only 21..J.Louis Salmond came second.Young's plans envisaged development well beyond the college's immediate requirements taking the form of four ranges surrounding a central quadrangle. After the first stage was completed he was retained as architectural adviser and remained responsible for the buildings’ design for more than forty years. His successors remained true to his conception through challenging circumstances.
Because Young was based in Wellington and perhaps also because of his youth, Salmond was appointed supervising architect. The plan called for a principal range facing west with a large, square, central tower. It had subordinate ranges reaching forward at either extremity in a generally symmetrical composition. Behind the west range there were to be others at right angles to it, extending east, forming the north and south sides of the quadrangle.
The first building stage was the tower and the northward parts of the west range together with the range behind that trending east on the north side of the intended quadrangle. This part, the range on the north side of the quadrangle, included not only provision for teaching but a dining hall and servants’ accommodation.
The foundation stone was laid on 6 April 1908 and the building was opened on 23 June 1909 having cost £19,307. The foundations were Port Chalmers breccia. The walls were finished in brick with Oamaru stone trims and the roofs were red clay tiles.
The building was in the Jacobethan style, a late form of the Gothic revival still vigorous in the early 20th century. Knox has the characteristic Tudor arches, oriel windows and battlements and the elaboration of forms and details, if not to the extent of Harlaxton Manor, sometimes pointed to as the type, or template, of the style.
Early development
The second stage was the southern part of the west range, including the forward projecting chapel. Behind this part of the west range the first part of the quadrangle's southern range was also to be built. A tender was accepted in September 1912 and completed by March 1914. Construction had cost £10,525.At this point the College Council's ambitions and those of their architect were becoming clear. On their high site the buildings are very visible. The council had insisted on raising the architect's four-storeyed tower to five storeys. The three storeyed ranges and the forward thrusting subordinate reaches present a complex, but legible and imposing face to the world.
The interiors were spacious and finished with period detailing, including panels and hammer beams in the Dining Hall and stained glass and elaborate plasterwork, notably in the Chapel. Even so, the college, as Young had conceived it, was far from complete.
Plans to extend the southern range, known as the “South Wing”, were prepared by him in enough detail to be estimated by 1929 but the Depression and the Second World War prevented their execution. In 1952 with plans and funding almost complete the project was suspended.
Post-war progress
Meanwhile, the combination of seminary and residential hall was proving difficult to accommodate in the existing space. In 1945 a fund was established to provide additional room. Young was getting old. He oversaw the drafting of the plans but advised the committee of his resignation in 1952. Salmond had died in 1950. His son, Arthur Salmond, now in partnership with Harry Burt, took over the project. A contract was signed in 1953, building commenced the next year and the new Theological Hall was opened on 12 November 1955 for a cost of £80,000.The new building, to become known as the Hewitson Wing, was set parallel to the main west range, behind it, forming the east flank of the quadrangle. With a library as its front, facing the quadrangle, and with a hall behind, this structure is very deep. It is linked by an arch to the north range, closing the quadrangle's corner at that point.
Building methods and codes had changed. This structure, the first of the second building phase, incorporated reinforced concrete while retaining the forms and materials of the earlier buildings. It too is decorated inside in period fashion, the library, for example, managing to make the reference to an Elizabethan interior with a plausible degree of conviction.
The former provision for the Theological Hall in the north range was now made into additional accommodation for residents. This meant the Dining Hall was now too small for the numbers. That had been anticipated in the Gray Young era but in 1953 the council commissioned Salmond & Burt to prepare plans to extend the hall, estimated at £2,500. The work was completed by July 1957.
The extension reaches into the quadrangle courtyard, terminating in a crenellated bay window with stained lead lights. Inside it provides the space for the dais for the hall's high table and seems a natural enlargement of the room.
In 1959 the College Council resumed its effort to extend the "South Wing". Money was raised, the plans revised, tenders were called in August 1961. The building was opened on 21 April 1963 for a cost of £44,501. This was another structure with a reinforced concrete frame, styled and dressed to match the building it joined. It extended the "South Wing" eastward, taking the southern range to its present extent, further closing the quadrangle. It stopped short of the line of the east range which at that time had not reached its full extent. It was named the "Ross Wing".
The quadrangle was still not completed and with the centennial of the Theological Hall approaching the College Council decided in August 1974 to mark it by extending the library. Fund raising was difficult but work began in August 1983. The extension was opened on 30 May 1984 for a cost of $463,000.
This is another structurally modern building dressed to complement the context. By this time Arthur Salmond had retired but his son John was in practice. The addition extends the east range southwards, taking it to the line of the south range but leaving an open space between. With this the quadrangle was all but complete.
Post-millennial contributions
In 2008, the Hewitson Building was modified to house offices and teaching spaces for the newly formed Knox Centre for Ministry and Leadership, and to provide a purpose-built facility for the Presbyterian Archives.In the summer of 2012-13, the main residential building was earthquake-strengthened to comply with the latest building code. At the same time, 40 rooms were added to the college. Some of these were the result of the reconfiguration of rooms and offices at the northern end of the ground floor of the main building; others were the result or rebuilding the area of the college known as The Close. Opportunity was also taken to refurbish the main building from top to bottom, and to open up the Great Hall to the Junior Common Room to facilitate dining for the increased numbers at the college on formal occasions. In the summer of 2019-220, the area of the College known as Somerville Close, comprising Mackay, Marshall, Glendining and Wilson Houses, underwent an extensive refurbishment.
Summary
The main buildings are a striking essay in their manner. They conjure a real sense of the grand home of an academic community of the past. They also meet the needs of a contemporary New Zealand residential college. Their significance is the material evidence they provide of the possibility of successfully persevering with ambitious architectural ideas through challenging times.Changes in Governance
In February 2012, a Commission was appointed by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand to assume responsibility for the governance and management of Knox and Salmond Colleges, instead of the Council of Knox College and Salmond College. The General Assembly took this action following two reviews of the College in 2011 - one by the University of Otago, and the other by the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand - each of which raised significant concerns about certain aspects of the culture of the college, especially in regards to alcohol and student welfare. The six-person Commission comprised an equal number of Church and University appointees. It saw numerous changes being put into effect immediately and other changes being proposed, some of which proved controversial among staff, students and alumni. The former Master of the College, Bruce Aitken, offered his resignation on 20 July 2012. The protests of alumni attracted national press attention.In 2015, the Commission was discharged, and a new Board of Knox College and Salmond College was established, replacing the former Council of Knox College and Salmond College. By that time, the Presbyterian Church's Council of Assembly was satisfied that the Commission had done its work, the management of change was complete, and the process of cultural change at Knox was well under way. In 2017, the Board articulated its vision for Knox College: To be a world-class residential college where students are part of a community that affirms and empowers every resident, expands thought and outlook, encourages service, fosters leadership, and builds strong bonds of friendship.
Controversy
In late March 2019, the University's student magazine Critic published an article citing allegations from four former Knox residents that they had been sexually assaulted by fellow students between 2011 and 2017, and that their complaints were poorly handled by college management and went undisciplined. Moreover, the culture at Knox, it was alleged, was not conducive to sexual assaults being reported. As the article was picked up by local and national media outlets attention was drawn to the broader issue of sexual violence in the tertiary sector. Responding to the allegations, Knox College Master Dr Graham Redding talked about the winds of change that had been blowing through Knox College in recent years and some of the changes that had been made. These included a review of procedures for dealing with student concerns, improved residential leader training, and the introduction of a bystander workshop run by Te Whare Tāwharau with returning residents, who are encouraged to draw on their experience in considering how potential sexual harm in the college might be minimised and the safety of first-year residents strengthened. The success of those changes, Dr Redding said, was evident in student survey results, which showed that significant progress was being made in the areas of student safety and security, and welfare and well-being.Almost a year after it published the article, Critic issued a public apology to a former Deputy Master of Knox College for not giving her the opportunity to comment on aspects of the story that involved her. Critic said it now accepted that there was evidence that the former Deputy Master ensured all complaints were documented and reported to others as appropriate.
Notable alumni
While many of those above have been resident at the College, some of those who attended as Divinity students may have received tuition while living in private accommodation.The College has provided 18 Rhodes Scholars and several Gates Scholars and Fulbright Scholars. For further details of these and certain other of the alumni above, see the College's centennial history. Years provided are of initial entry, rather than of any returning periods.