Students' Representative Council
The Students' Representative Council (SRC) was founded in 1884 by Robert Fitzroy Bell and gained statutory recogition in the Universities (Scotland) Act, 1889. It has responsibility for representation on teaching and learning, welfare, academic services, postgraduate affairs and external affairs and also for running Freshers' Week.
In 1889 it established the University Union and it has also been responsible for the publication of The Student newspaper and (until recently) the Student Handbook.
In April 1884, the University of Edinburgh celebrating its Tercentenary in a week-long festival organized by Principal Sir Alexander Grant (1826-1884).
The Tercentenary was celebrated in 1884 instead of the historically correct date of 1883 in order to coincide with the official opening of the new Medical School, built by Sir Robert Rowand Anderson (1834-1921). While celebration of university centenaries was common practice in continental Europe, this was the first event of its kind in Great Britain, and provided a model for future university festivities throughout Britain and Ireland. The Town Council and local professional bodies played a prominent role, and the Festival was also a landmark in the development of student life at Edinburgh. The Students' Representative Council was formed with the initial aim of organizing student participation in the Tercentenary.
Edinburgh University's Students' Representative Council was founded in 1884.
The stimulation for the foundation of the Council was provided by the Tercentenary Festival of 1884. There was widespread anxiety lest the celebrations be marred by the outbreaks of student rowdiness which had previously marred public occaions, in particular, election and inaugural address of the University's Rector. The Senatus Academic thus welcomed the initiative of a group of students headed by Robert Fitzroy Bell (1859-1908) and David Orme Masson (1858-1937), who argued that a representative council could aid in maintaining order and decorum, in promoting student social life, and in fostering a 'wholesome esprit de corps' and a spirit of loyalty towards the university. A first formal meeting of the Student's Representative Council (SRC) was held on 17 January 1884, bringing together representatives from the university's many clubs and societies. Its first task was to maintain order at the inaugural address of Rector Stafford Henry Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh (1818-1887) and at the torchlit process that followed. This the SRC accomplished so successfully that it was entrusted with policing the Tercentenary Festivities. It was nonetheless dissatisfied with the limited place allotted to students in the official programme of events. After protest, the SRC was finally permitted to organize five events: a torchlight procession, a performance of a drama based on Sir Walter Scott's novel The Fortunes of Nigel, a reception for foreign guests, a formal ball, and an informal smoking concert.
The SRC was soon imitated by the other Scottish universities and was granted formal recognition as the official representative body of Edinburgh's students by the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889. It used its success in the Tercentenary festivities to launch an appeal to fund its first priority: the opening of a Student Union, eventually achieved in 1887.
The Student was first published on 8 November 1887.
The brainchild of Robert Cochrane Buist (1860-1939), it first appeared as an eight-page quarto costing a penny. It was issued fortnightly and contained portraits of professors with critical sketches of their work, reports of sporting events, articles, reviews, and a fortnightly series of songs with music.
When Buist graduated in 1888, the Student was adopted as the official organ of the Students' Representative Council. It assumed both a more formal and a more critical tone and set as its object 'faithfully to record the passing events of University life' and 'to form a bond of union between present and absent sons of our Alma Mater'. Where previous student publications had all been relatively short-lived, the Student would go on to provide a permanent focus for and record of student corporate life.
he first official Edinburgh University Charities Week, also known as 'Rag Week', was organized by the Students' Representative Council in 1932.
The event had its origins in the student 'Rag' organized in 1867 by a group of students shocked by the levels of poverty in the streets surrounding Edinburgh University. They set up a body now known as the Edinburgh Students Charities Appeal to carry out a collection of used clothing to be given to the destitute. Further 'rags' and charity events were a prominent feature of university life over the next six decades. In 1931, however, the Students' Representative Council decided that too much time time and effort was being expended on individual charity initiatives which would prove more efficient and lucrative if centrally coordinated. It was decided to hold a grand Charities' Week in the summer of 1932, and to divide the proceeds among the various charities that students had hitherto campaigned for.
The form adopted in the 1932 Charities' Week remained constant for many decades. The centrepiece was a parade of floats accompanied by a street collection by students in fancy dress. A theatrical review was organized, taking the place of the traditional Students' Representative Ceenium, and a comic magazine published to raise further funds.
In the 1980s responsibility for organising the event passed from the Students' Representative Council to the Edinburgh Students Charities Appeal. Since 2006, it has been co-hosted by the ESCA and Edinburgh University Students Association and renamed as the RAG (Raising and Giving) Week
In 1973 Edinburgh University Students' Association was founded via the merger of the Students' Representative Council (SRC), the Edinburgh University Union, and the Chambers Street Union.
The early 1970s saw campaigns both to increase student participation in university governance and to unify all student bodies into a single organization. At the beginning of the decade, there were three discrete bodies:
The Students' Representative Council - Founded in 1884, the SRC was formally recognised as the official representative body of Edinburgh's students by the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889.
Edinburgh University Union - Founded in 1889, the Union was designed to be the focus of the collective life of the university's students. Nonetheless, membership was male-only.
Chambers Street Union - Founded as Edinburgh University Women's Union in 1906, it occupied the Chambers Street premises and assumed its new name in 1964.
On 5 February 1971, Edinburgh University Union finally voted to admit women. Previous attempts had been thwarted by the need for a 75% majority to effect any change in the constitution of the body. By this stage, the Chambers Street Union had already passed a motion admitting men. At a later meeting, on 21 April 1972, Edinburgh University Union voted to make all students automatic members of the Union.
Negotiations now began to dissolve all three bodies and create a unified students' association. It was soon established, however, that the Students' Representative Council could not be dissolved as it had been officially recognised by the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889. Nor was it possible to alter its constitution in a way that would permit it to take over responsibility for the unions.
In the end, it was resolved that the Students' Representative Council and Edinburgh University Union would continue to exist as discrete entities within the proposed association. Chambers Street Union, conversely, would merge entirely with Edinburgh University Union.
Edinburgh University Students' Association came into being on 1 July 1973. Each newly matriculated student would automatically become a member.
The Court now also includes three assessors elected by the General Council, four Senatus assessors, one assesor elected by members of the non-teaching staff, two fully-matriculated students nominated by the Students' Representative Council and eight co-opted members. The Rector (office of) is the President of the Court. The Vice-Chairman of the Court is elected triennially by the Court from among its members. Meetings are normally held seven times a year.
Related Events
- Tercentenary Festival, 1884
- Opening of New Medical School, 1884
- First Publication of the Student, 1887
Sources
- Robert Anderson, 'Ceremony in Context: The Edinburgh University Tercentenary, 1884', Scottish Historical Review, 87 (2008), 121-45 [[1], accessed 1 August 2014]
- Sir Thomas Henry Holland, 'Introduction', in A. Logan Turner (ed.), History of the University of Edinburgh 1883-1933 (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1933), pp. xiii-xxx.