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George William Kitchin

George Kitchin
George-Kitchin.jpg
Kitchin by Lewis Carroll (1859)
Warden of the University of Durham
In office
1894–1908
Preceded by William Lake
Succeeded by Frank Jevons
Chancellor of the University of Durham
In office
1908–1912
Preceded by New creation
Succeeded by Henry Percy, 7th Duke of Northumberland
Dean of Durham
In office
1894–1912
Preceded by William Lake
Succeeded by Hensley Henson
Personal details
Born 7 December 1827
Naughton, Suffolk, United Kingdom
Died 13 October 1912 (1912-10-14) (aged 84)
Durham, County Durham, UK
Alma mater Christ Church, Oxford, King's College London
Profession Dean, Academic and Warden

The Very Reverend George William Kitchin, MA, DD, FSA (7 December 1827 – 13 October 1912) was the first Chancellor of the University of Durham, from the institution of the role in 1908 until his death in 1912. He was also the last Dean of Durham to govern the university.

Kitchin was born to a minister in the Rectory at Naughton, Suffolk. He attended King's College School and King's College London. Later, he attended Christ Church, Oxford where he took a Double First in Classics and Mathematics in 1850 and gained his Master of Arts (Oxford) (MA Oxon) in 1852. In 1854, Kitchin was an examiner in Mathematics at Christ Church. Kitchin left Oxford to become Headmaster of Twyford Preparatory School in Hampshire but returned to residence at Oxford as Censor in 1861. While at Christ Church he was partly responsible for the end in late 1861 of the Latin Prayer, conducted there since time immemorial, and for which special provision had been given in the Act of Uniformity 1662. Kitchin married in 1863, and served as Oxford's first Junior Censor of non-collegiate students from 1868 to 1883. He was Select Preacher at Oxford from 1863–64, Whitehall Preacher from 1866–67. Resided at Brantwood, in the Lake District from 1869–71, the property later purchased by John Ruskin. Here he untook assignments for Clarendon Press, including working on the proofs of Richard Cleasby and Gudbrand Vigfusson's Icelandic-English Dictionary.

Appointed Chaplain to William Jacobson, Bishop of Chester from 1871–72, tutor of Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark (later Frederick VIII of Denmark) and lecturer and tutor in History in Christ Church from 1870-83. He was also Commissary to Charles Sandford, Bishop of Gibraltar from 1874–1904, and was an Honorary Fellow of King's College London, and an honorary student of Christ Church. In theology he was a moderate liberal.


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