Identity area
Reference code
Title
Date(s)
- 1849-1900 (The dates given here are those of the information covered. The volume was compiled in the early 20C with addtions to c.1960.) (Creation)
Level of description
File
Extent and medium
1 volume 10 x 8 x 1+ in.; cloth-bound with leather spine and corners, worn at edges. paper
Context area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Freddy Brittain was born on 24th October 1893 and was the eldest son of William Brittain and Elizabeth Daniels. He was educated at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Barnet.
During World War I he worked on board the military hospital ship 'HMAT Egypt'. He went up to Jesus College in 1919 and took the Medieval Languages tripos. After graduation he lived at Oratory House and undertook free-lance teaching. In 1937 he was elected as a Fellow of Jesus College.
His academic career centered on Romance literature, especially Provençal and Medieval Latin, in which latter subject he was University Lecturer. In 1948 he was awarded his doctorate for works on the lives of St Radegund and St Giles, 'Latin in Church' and 'The Medieval Latin and Romance Lyric'. In 1962 he published a Penguin Anthology of Classical, Medieval and Modern Latin Poetry.
He served two terms of University Proctorship from 1943 - 1948. He acted as Steward of the College from 1945 - 1954 and was editor of The Cambridge Review from 1942 - 1948.
He was a church man and his Christian faith was an important influence in his life. He was a chorister at his parish church in South Mymms as a boy. He studied and wrote about the use of Latin in church services.
He enjoyed rowing as an undergraduate and did some coaching alongside Steve Fairbairn. He possessed a unique collection of books on rowing and co-wrote a history of the Boat Club.
He gave most of his time and energy to his College. It is said that he was the first person returning students went to see when they visited the College and he possessed a remarkable talent for remembering not only their names but their academic careers whilst undergraduates and their subsequent careers.
He got to know many of the undergraduates so well through his membership of the Roosters. This Society was founded in 1908 as a light-hearted debating society and he was an active member of it from when he first joined as an undergraduate himself in 1919. He was heavily involved in writing its rules, debating, and organizing a fund raising campaign to raise enough money to commission a portrait of Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch by Sir William Nicholson.
He loved singing and acting and as an undergraduate he was a member of 'The Footlights'. He wrote many plays, performed, often dressed as a woman, in plays and pantomimes and liked to enliven lectures by singing troubadour songs in the Old Provençal language.
He was well known in college for having a collection of over a thousand cockerels. He bought the first one but all subsequent ones where gifts from friends.
He loved the country and especially his home village of South Mymms. This is seen most easily in his various books about the place: 'History of South Mymms' 'Tales of South Mymms and Elsewhere' and 'Mostly Mymms'.
He was close friends with Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch and Bernard Manning and wrote biographies not only of them but many others too.
He married Muriel Cunningham in 1959.
Archival history
Immediate source of acquisition or transfer
Content and structure area
Scope and content
Alphabetical list of members with brief biographical details (preceded by a note about its composition and guide to abbreviations used); in Freddy Brittain's hand but with later additions by Muriel Brittain. There follow lists of those who matriculated in 1849 or 1859, and of those from before 1849 who were in residence later. The volume also contains: copies of the Statutes of 1841 and 1861; names of incumbents of College livings since 1849; extracts from Cooper's Annals of Cambridge for 1850-56; extracts from the Report of the Royal Commission of 1852; biographies of Jesus men who were Fellows in 1849, ex-Fellows in 1849, and those otherwise especially notable from the second half of the 19C; and finally brief notes about rowing, covering 1849-70. On p. 231 is a pasted-in Who's Who entry for historian Herbert G. Wood, with a note about his death in 1963; at p. 240 are two newscuttings of obituaries for Sir Owen Beasley and Col. B. C. Hartley (both d. 1960). There is a flyleaf contents list.