Balliol Historic Collections Centre at St Cross Church
St Cross Church, St Cross Road, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX1 3TP
‘It’s rather sad…to belong, as we do, to a lost generation. I’m sure in history the two wars will count as one war and that we shall be squashed out of it altogether’ – The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford.
This year, Balliol’s exhibition will delve into the Archives to reopen the space between the first and second world wars. We will explore what went on in College from student pranks to social change, and what members of College were up to in the wider world in the inter-war period.
First built in 890, St Cross Church houses Balliol College’s historic collections of books and manuscripts.
Arguably the oldest of all the Oxford colleges, Balliol has one of the longest continuous histories of any educational institution in the English-speaking world. The College Archives contain well over 10,000 items, covering all aspects of the College’s history from its earliest years to the present.
Balliol also holds many collections of modern personal papers, with notable strengths in 19th- and 20th-century politics, diplomacy and education, including Balliol alumni T.H. Green, and Harold Nicolson, Benjamin Jowett (Master of Balliol (1870-1893), and the papers of the Mallet and Morier families; and an extensive holding of literary manuscripts including material by Balliol alumni Matthew Arnold, Arthur Hugh Clough, and Graham Greene, and Robert Browning.
Balliol’s early libraries include 20,000 early printed books dating back to the 15th century and 400 early manuscripts.
St Cross Church, St Cross Road, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX1 3TP
Access is through the side door of the church and a portable ramp into the nave. Please say hello to the member of staff on the door and they will open the side entrance and set up the ramp.