Magee College
, Magee campus is located in Derry, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. It opened in 1865 as a Presbyterian Christian arts and theological college. Since 1953, it has had no religious affiliation and provides a broad range of undergraduate and postgraduate academic degree programmes in disciplines ranging from business, law, social work, creative arts & technologies, cinematic arts, design, computer science and computer games to psychology and nursing.
Academics
Magee offers a large number of undergraduate and postgraduate programmes through Ulster University's four faculties:- Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences
- Computing, Engineering and the Built Environment
- Life and Health Sciences
- Ulster Business School
- Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences – School of Arts and Humanities, School of Education, School of Law, School of Applied Social and Policy Studies
- Computing, Engineering & the Built Environment – School of Computing, Engineering and Intelligent Systems
- Life and Health Sciences – School of Nursing, School of Psychology
- Ulster Business School – Department of Global Business and Enterprise
Research
Research activities include several research institutes and centres.Magee is home to the Arts & Humanities Research Institute
with membership drawn from former research groupings in the Humanities Research Institute,
the Academy for Irish Cultural Heritages
and the Institute of Ulster Scots Studies.
The AHRI provides an institutional focus for research activity and collaboration across four research clusters in Creative Arts and Technologies, Irish Language & Literature, English and History embracing a range of subject areas within the Faculty of Arts, including Creative Technologies, Music, Drama, Dance, Irish Language & Literature, English and History. The AHRI promotes a broad research culture and environment within which research activity in individual disciplines flourishes.
Magee is the location for the Intelligent Systems Research Centre dedicated to the creation of intelligent computational systems through research in neural networks, fuzzy systems, artificial intelligence and cognitive robotics. Other research areas include ambient intelligence, wireless sensor networks, robot vision, brain computer interfacing and serious games.
It also houses International Conflict Research, a joint venture between the United Nations University and Ulster University. Established in 1993, it aims to address issues of the conflict in Northern Ireland and seek to promote conflict resolution internationally.
The Transitional Justice Institute is based at both the Magee and Jordanstown campuses.
Provost
The principal academic post at the campus is the provost. Professor Thomas G Fraser was provost from 2002 to 2006, succeeded by Professor Jim Allen. In 2011, Professor Deirdre Heenan was appointed to the post in 2011, following the retirement of Professor Allen. She was replaced by Dr Malachy O'Neil in 2016History
The Magee Campus gained its name from Martha Magee, the widow of a Presbyterian minister, who, in 1845, bequeathed £20,000 to the Presbyterian Church of Ireland to found a college for theology and the arts.It opened in 1865 primarily as a theological college, but accepted students from all denominations to study a variety of subjects.
It was a college of the Royal University of Ireland from 1880 and later became associated with the Trinity College, Dublin when the Royal University was dissolved in 1909 and replaced by the National University of Ireland.
World War II: Royal Navy
During World War II, the college was taken over by The Admiralty for Royal Navy operational use, becoming with Ebrington Barracks, a major facility in the Battle of the Atlantic. A 2013 BBC report describes a secret major control bunker, later buried beneath the lawns of the college. From 1941 this bunker, part of Base One Europe, together with similar bunkers in Derby House, Liverpool, and Whitehall was used to control one million Allied personnel and fight the Nazi U-boat threat.On 14 September 2013 Magee hosted, for the first time on the island of Ireland, the 23rd International Loebner Prize Contest in Artificial Intelligence based on The Turing Test proposed by the renowned British Computer Scientist, Alan Turing in 1950 who also worked on cracking the Enigma Machine code at Bletchley Park which was instrumental in the Battle of the Atlantic.
Julian Peck's mother, Lady Winifred Peck, was a sister of Dilly Knox who directed the code breaking at Bletchley Park. Sir Harry Hinsley OBE was Director of Studies at Cambridge University to Professor Robert Gavin, a former Provost of Magee.
Dame Alice Rosemary Murray, the first female Vice-Chancellor of the Cambridge University, who also sat on the John Lockwood Committee which recommended the closure of Magee as well as
the location of Northern Ireland's 2nd University being Coleraine, from which she was later awarded a Doctor of Science Honorary Degree,
was stationed at Base One Europe as WRNS Chief Officer
and responsible for the welfare of 5,600 Wrens stationed at Londonderry.
Postwar
In 1953, Magee Theological College separated from the remainder of the college, eventually moving to Belfast in a 1978 merger that formed Union Theological College.Also in 1953, Magee College broke its links with Dublin and became Magee University College. It was hoped by groups led by the University for Derry Committee that this university college would become Northern Ireland's second university after Queen's University of Belfast. However, in the 1960s, following the recommendations in the Lockwood Report by Sir John Lockwood, Master of Birkbeck College, London and former Vice-Chancellor of the University of London, the Stormont Parliament made a controversial decision to pass it over in favour of a new university in Coleraine. Instead it was incorporated into the two-campus New University of Ulster in 1969. The next fourteen years saw the college halve in size, while development focused on the main Coleraine campus.
In 1984, the New University merged with the Ulster Polytechnic, and Magee became the early focus of development of a new four-campus university, the University of Ulster. Student and faculty numbers recovered and grew rapidly over the next ten to fifteen years, accompanied by numerous construction projects. Magee grew from just 273 students in 1984 to over 4000 undergraduates in 2012. In 2012, the University continued to lobby the Northern Ireland Executive for an additional 1000 full-time undergraduate places, leading to 6000 students at Magee in 2017. In October 2014 the University of Ulster was rebranded as Ulster University.
Timeline
- 1845 – Foundation endowment from Martha Magee.
- 1865 – Magee College opened.
- 1880 – Magee College joined the new Royal University of Ireland.
- 1909 – Royal University dissolved. Government funding greatly reduced. Magee College became an autonomous university college, with students completing their degrees at Trinity College, Dublin.
- 1953 – Magee University College received major government grant funding for the first time.
- 1969 – Magee University College merged with the New University of Ulster.
- 1978 – Magee Theological College closed, merging with Assembly's College to form Union Theological College in Belfast.
- 1984 – New University merged with the Ulster Polytechnic, Jordanstown, to form the University of Ulster.
- 2014 – Rebranded name to Ulster University.
Historical notes
- Florence Nightingale visited Magee College on 31 May 1867.
- The Magee College bequest is mentioned on the founder's graveyard memorial in Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland, where her husband was a minister.
Campus
The campus is used for education, but also as a convention centre. For example, Magee hosted the 2006 Tomo-Dachi convention.
;Timeline of recent construction
- 1988 – Phase I building
- 1989 – Carrickmore House, extension of main building
- 1990 – Phase II library building
- 1991 – Refurbished main building
- 1992 – Extension of 3/4 College Avenue
- 1993 – Strand Road student residence
- 1995 – Phase III buildings, Duncreggan Road student residences, floodlit all-weather sports ground
Tip O'Neill Chair
- Mitchell Reiss, United States Special Envoy to Northern Ireland, 2006
- John Kerry, United States Senator, 2006
- Garret Fitzgerald, former Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, 2005
- Hillary Rodham Clinton, United States Senator, 2004
- Kofi Annan, UN Secretary-General, 2004
- Romano Prodi, EU Commission President, 2004
- Pat Cox, MEP and President of the European Parliament, 2004
- Bertie Ahern, then Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland and President of the European Council, 2003
- Bill Clinton, former President of the United States, 2003
- Michel Rocard, former Prime Minister of France, 2003
Notable alumni
- Gregory Campbell, 1982
- Mark Durkan, Deputy First Minister of the Northern Ireland Executive, c.1980s
- Dill Macky, 1866, founder of The Scots College school in Sydney
Honorary graduates
- Rt Hon Lord Ashdown, former Liberal Democrat Leader and former UN High Representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina, 2006
- Amanda Burton, actor, 2002
- Bill Clinton, then President of the United States, 1995
- Hillary Clinton, United States Senator, 2004
- Enya, Irish singer, instrumentalist, and songwriter, 2007
- Gary Lightbody, Musician, 2012
- Stephen Rea, actor, 2004
- Fiona Shaw, actor, 2004
- Sir Ian McKellen, actor, 2013