University of Sheffield
File:University of Sheffield coat of arms.png | ||||||||||||||
Former names | University College of Sheffield | |||||||||||||
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Motto | Template:Lang-la | |||||||||||||
Motto in English | To discover the causes of things | |||||||||||||
Type | Public | |||||||||||||
Established | 1897 1905 – University of Sheffield | – University College of Sheffield|||||||||||||
Endowment | £39.0m (as of 31 July 2015)[1] | |||||||||||||
Chancellor | Lady Justice Rafferty | |||||||||||||
Vice-Chancellor | Sir Keith Burnett | |||||||||||||
Students | 30,055 (2022/23)[2] | |||||||||||||
Undergraduates | 19,100 (2022/23)[2] | |||||||||||||
Postgraduates | 10,955 (2022/23)[2] | |||||||||||||
Location | , , England 53°22′53″N 1°29′18″W / 53.381389°N 1.488272°W | |||||||||||||
Campus | Urban | |||||||||||||
Colours | Black & gold | |||||||||||||
Affiliations | Russell Group, WUN, ACU, N8 Group, White Rose, EQUIS, AMBA | |||||||||||||
Website | www.sheffield.ac.uk | |||||||||||||
Logo of the University of Sheffield |
The University of Sheffield (informally Sheffield University[3][4]) is a public research university in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England. It received its royal charter in 1905 as successor to the University College of Sheffield, which was established in 1897 by the merger of Sheffield Medical School (founded in 1828), Firth College (1879) and Sheffield Technical School (1884).[5]
Sheffield is a multi-campus university predominantly over two campus areas: the Western Bank and the St George's.[6] The university is organised into five academic faculties composed of multiple departments. It had 19,100 undergraduate and 10,955 postgraduate students in 2022/23.
The university is widely recognised as a leading research and teaching university both in the UK and in the world.[7][8][9] The QS World University Rankings 2015-16 placed Sheffield as the 80th university worldwide and 16th in the UK.[10] In 2011, Sheffield was named 'University of the Year' in the Times Higher Education awards.[11] The Times Higher Education Student Experience Survey 2014 ranked the University of Sheffield 1st for student experience, social life, university facilities and accommodation, among other categories.
It is one of the original red brick universities, a member of the Russell Group of research-intensive universities, the Worldwide Universities Network, the N8 Group of the eight most research intensive universities in Northern England and the White Rose University Consortium. There are six Nobel Prize winners amongst Sheffield alumni and academics.[12]
History
Origins
The University of Sheffield was originally formed by the merger of three colleges. The Sheffield School of Medicine was founded in 1828, followed in 1879[13] by the opening of Firth College, which developed out of the Cambridge University Extension Movement scheme, by Mark Firth, a steel manufacturer, to teach arts and science subjects.[14] Firth College then helped to fund the opening of the Sheffield Technical School in 1884 to teach applied science, the only major faculty the existing colleges did not cover. The Sheffield Technical School was found to arouse local concern about the need for technical training, particularly steelmaking in Sheffield, and the school moved to St George's Square in 1886.[14] The three institutions merged in 1897 to form the University College of Sheffield by Royal Charter.[14] Sheffield was the only large city in England without a University. Steelworkers, coal miners, factory workers and the people of Sheffield donated over £50,000 in 1904 to help found the University of Sheffield.[15]
Royal charter
It was originally envisaged that the University College would join Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds as the fourth member of the federal Victoria University. However, the Victoria University began to split up as independent universities before this could happen and so the University College of Sheffield received its own Royal Charter on 31 May 1905 and became the University of Sheffield. In July 1905, Firth Court on Western Bank was opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. St George's Square remained the centre of departments of Applied Science, and the departments of Arts, Medicine and Science moved to Western Bank.[14] Sheffield is one of the six red brick universities, the civic universities founded in the major industrial cities of England.
Development since 1905
In 1905, there were 114 full-time students, and the first Hall of Residence (Stephenson Hall) and library (Edgar Allen library) had been established by then. The number of students increased to a short-lived peak of 1000 in 1919. During World War I, some of the academic subjects and courses were replaced by teaching of munitions making and medical appliances production.[14] Rather than from a single centre, the university has expanded since the 1920s from two ends, the Firth Court on Western Bank and the Sir Frederick Mappin Building on the St George's site.[6]
In 1943, the University Grants Committee announced that universities in the UK should look forward to expansion in the years after the World War II.[6] Sheffield predicted a 50% increase in student population but the university was unprepared for such growth. There was pressure on the university to expand since the student numbers had increased from around 1000 to 3000 by 1946.[6] The university announced proposals for development in 1947, which emphasised the need for new departments, medical school, library, administration building, halls of residence, as well as the completion of the Western Bank Quadrangles and the extension of the Students’ Union.[6]
The university then grew slowly until the 1950s and 1960s when it began to expand rapidly. Many new buildings (including the Main Library and the Arts Tower) were built and older houses were brought into academic use. Student numbers increased to their present levels of just under 26,000. At the same time in the 1950s, the university was expanding at other sites, including the St Georges area.[6] From the 1960s, many more buildings have been constructed or extended, including the Union of Students and St George's Library. The campus master plan proposed in the 1940s was completed by the 1970s, and the university required a new development plan.[6]
The 1980s saw the opening of many new buildings and centres, such as the multi-purpose Octagon Centre and the Sir Henry Stephenson Building. The university's teaching hospital, Northern General Hospital, was also extended.[6] In 1987 the University began to collaborate with its once would-be partners of the Victoria University by co-founding the Northern Consortium; a coalition for the education and recruitment of international students.[14]
1990s onwards
The university continued to expand in the 1990s. New premises were opened for School of the Clinical Dentistry, the Division of Education, and the Management School.[6] In 1995, the University took over the Sheffield and North Trent College of Nursing and Midwifery, the St George's Hospital was extended and a new building at the Northern General Hospital has been constructed, which greatly increased the size of the medical faculty. In 2005, the South Yorkshire Strategic Health Authority announced that it would split the training between Sheffield and Sheffield Hallam University – however, the University decided to pull out of providing preregistration nursing and midwifery training due to "costs and operational difficulties".[16]
In the 21st century, the University opened many more major buildings, such as the Jessop Building, the Soundhouse, Jessop West and the Information Commons. The Arts Tower building, the Students' Union and University House buildings, the Sheffield Bioincubator and University Health Centre were also refurbished.[14] A new six-storey building, the Diamond, was opened on 28 September 2015.[17] In February 2016, the university started to work with Sheffield City Council to transform public spaces around the campus.[18] The £8 million project includes building and improving pedestrianisation, crossings, cycle routes, as well as greening the campus.[18][19]
Buildings and locations
Main (Western Bank) campus
The University of Sheffield is not a campus university, though most of its buildings are located in fairly close proximity to each other. The centre of the University's presence lies one mile to the west of Sheffield city centre, where there is a mile-long collection of buildings belonging almost entirely to the University. This area includes the Sheffield Students' Union (housed next door to University House), the Octagon Centre, Firth Court, the Geography and Planning building, the Alfred Denny Building (housing natural sciences, the Departments of Animal and Plant Sciences and Biology, and including a small museum), the Dainton and Richard Roberts Buildings and the Hicks Building.
The Grade II*-listed library and Arts Tower are also located in this cluster.[20] A concourse under the main road (the A57) allows students to easily move between these buildings.
Amongst the more recent additions to the universities estate are The Information Commons, opened in 2007, The Soundhouse (2008) and the Jessop West building (2009), the first UK project by renowned Berlin architects Sauerbruch Hutton.[21] In addition, throughout 2010 the Western Bank Library received a £3.3m restoration and refurbishment, the University of Sheffield Union of Students underwent a £5m rebuild, and work commenced on a multimillion-pound refurbishment of the grade II* listed Arts Tower to extend its lifespan by 30 years.[22]
The Octagon Centre
The Octagon Centre is a multi-purpose conference centre and music venue situated at the Western Bank campus, and is joined by a skyway to University House. The Octagon Centre comprises an eight-sided auditorium with a capacity of 1600, offices, meeting rooms, and a lounge with bar and patio.[23] The Octagon Centre consists of a main auditorium known as the Convocation Hall, with offices and meeting rooms in corridors across two floors at a lower elevation on the southern side of the building, and a bar lounge. All of these areas are connected by a foyer entrance block. The building is connected to University House by a footbridge, offering access to University House's catering facilities.
Firth Court and Alfred Denny Building
Firth Court is the main administrative centre for the University of Sheffield, stands at the heart of the University precinct on Western Bank. It originally housed the Arts, Science and Medicine departments, while it is currently home to the Department for Molecular Biology and Biotechnology and Biomedical Science. The building was opened by King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1905, and is named after Mark Firth.[14]
The Rotunda, located to the left of Firth Court, is the Registrar and Secretary's Office.[24] It was formerly the Edgar Allen Library, opened 26 April 1909 by Prince and Princess of Wales.[25]
Alfred Denny Building, a red brick building named after the first Professor of Zoology at the department, is linked to Firth Court via the Addison Building. The building houses the Biomedical Science, Animal and Plant Science Departments including its associated museum, Disability and Dyslexia Support Service, and the Perak Laboratories.[26]
Dainton and Richard Roberts Buildings
The Dainton Building, houses the Department of Chemistry and Faculty of Sciences, is named after Sheffield academic chemist and university chancellor Frederick Sydney Dainton. The East Wing of Dainton Building was renamed Richard Roberts Building after Nobel Laureate and University graduate Richard Roberts.
Hicks Building
The Hicks Building is a building named after William Mitchinson Hicks, a British mathematician and physicist who spent most of his career at Sheffield, contributing to the development of the university. It houses the departments of Physics and Astronomy, the Chemistry and Physics Workshop and the School of Mathematics and Statistics. The Building is in three sections, including a taller building clad in red-brick, a shorter fully linked section clad in blue tiles and glass, and a section facing the University Concourse.
Arts Tower and Western Bank Library
The Arts Tower is a Grade II* listed building opened in 1966.[27] It was the tallest in Sheffield from 1965 to 2010, and is the tallest university building in the UK.[28] The building, previously housed several academic departments, is now mainly an administration block. The Arts Tower houses one of Europe's few surviving examples of a Paternoster lift.[29] A bridge at the mezzanine level links the tower to Western Bank Library. The two buildings are intended to be viewed together.[30] Formerly known as the University Library, the Western Bank Library was the main library of the University of Sheffield until the Information Commons was established. The Grade II*-listed library is home to 25,000 rare books and 150 special collections.[31]
St George's
To the east lies St George's Campus, named after St George's Church (now a lecture theatre and postgraduate residence). The campus is centred on Mappin Street, home to a number of University buildings, including the Faculty of Engineering (partly housed in the Grade II-listed Mappin Building) and the University of Sheffield School of Management and Department of computer science. The University also maintains the Turner Museum of Glass in this area. The University recently converted the listed old Victorian Jessop Hospital for Women buildings into the new home of the Department of Music. The adjacent Edwardian buildings and a large vacant plot of land opposite St George's Church are awaiting development as and when funding permits.
The formerly grade II listed Edwardian wing of the Jessop Hospital was replaced by a new £81 million building for the Faculty of Engineering which opened in September 2015, named The Diamond. It houses lecture theatres, laboratories, workrooms and other facilities for the teaching of engineering, .[32][33]
Sir Frederick Mappin Building
The Sir Frederick Mappin Building is a grade II-listed building in an area known as the St George's Complex. The building houses much of the Faculty of Engineering and St George's IT centre.[28] The oldest part of the building, the former Technical School, now lies in the centre of the building. The extensive Mappin Street frontage includes the main entrance, the John Carr Library and Mappin Hall, and is connected to the Technical School by a bridge.
St George's Church
St George's Church is a building built in the Perpendicular style. It was the first of three commissioners' churches to be built in Sheffield under the Church Building Act 1818. The church closed in 1981 and was acquired by the University. It was converted for use as a lecture theatre in 1994.[34]
West of the main campus
Further west lies Weston Park, the Weston Park Museum, the Harold Cantor Gallery, sports facilities in the Crookesmoor area, and the Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health around the Royal Hallamshire Hospital (although these subjects are taught in the city's extensive teaching hospitals under the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, and throughout South Yorkshire and North East Lincolnshire). It is in this area that the new £12m Sheffield Institute for Translational Neuroscience (SITraN), opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in November 2010, is located.[35]
Libraries and museums
The University has currently six libraries, they are: the Information Commons, Western Bank Library, Health Sciences Libraries (Royal Hallamshire Hospital and Northern General Hospital), St. George's Library and IC in the Diamond.[36][37] The University of Sheffield Library is a member of Research Libraries UK.[38]
The Western Bank Library has an Exhibition Gallery.[39] The Gallery space enables collections from the University Library and the National Fairground Archive to be displayed in controlled conditions.[40]
The Alfred Denny Museum is a museum operated by the University.[41] It was established in 1905, and was located in Firth Court then moved to Alfred Denny Building.[42] The Museum has specimens from all major phyla, and two letters written from Charles Darwin to Henry Denny. Many of the specimens have been collected since the 1900s, but much of the information about the collection was lost during World War II.[43]
The Turner Museum of Glass houses the University's collections of 19th and 20th century glass.[44] It contains mainly from major European and American glassworkers and examples from ancient Egypt and Rome. It is in the Hadfield Building. It was founded by W E S Turner[44][45] of the University in 1943. One of the exhibits is the wedding dress of Helen Nairn (Turner's wife) which is made of glass fibre. This has been selected as one of the items in the BBC's A History of the World in 100 Objects.[46]
The Traditional Heritage Museum (THM) was part of the National Centre for English Cultural Tradition opened to the public in 1985.[47] It was created by Prof Widdowson in 1964 and was run by volunteers and students.[48] The THM housed collections including a replica kitchen from the 1920s, reconstructed workshops and retail shops, such as Pollard’s tea and coffee.[47] The University decided to close the Museum in 2011 because the building could not afford continued public access.[47][49]
Manvers campus
The Manvers campus, at Wath-on-Dearne between Rotherham and Barnsley, was where the majority of nursing was taught, but this has now been mothballed.
Gallery
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University Arms
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Broad Lane Court
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Bartolomé House, Sheffield Law School
Organisation
Faculties and departments
The University has five faculties plus an International Faculty in Thessaloniki, Greece.[50]
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School of Architecture
The Sheffield School of Architecture is one of the longest established architecture schools in the UK, opening in 1908, and was located in the tower of Firth Court. It was soon moved to the Sunday School in Shearwood Road and is located on the top 6 floors of the Arts Tower since 1965.[51]
The School has courses accredited by the Architects Registration Board (ARB) and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), and has an active student society (SUAS). In the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014, Sheffield School of Architecture ranked 4th in the UK.[52]
Management School
Established in 1986, Sheffield University Management School is an AMBA, AACSB and EQUIS accredited business school. It is one of 60 business schools in the world to have achieved triple accreditation.[53]
In 2013 the school moved into newly refurbished facilities close to the University of Sheffield campus and Broomhill. It now has dedicated learning and teaching space, a courtyard, dedicated café and Employability Hub.[54]
Medical School
Sheffield Medical School was founded in 1828. It operated independently as the Sheffield School of Medicine until its mergers with Firth College in 1879 and with Sheffield Technical School in 1884.[55]
The Medical School is one of 32 bodies entitled by the General Medical Council (GMC) to award medical degrees in the United Kingdom. The GMC is the body responsible for registering doctors to practise medicine as well as regulating medical education and training in the United Kingdom.[56]
Governance
There are several bodies which govern the University, including the University Executive Board, the Court, the Council and the Senate.
The University Executive Board, whose members are: Vice-Chancellor, five Faculty Pro-Vice-Chancellors, two Institutional Pro-Vice-Chancellors (Research and Innovation, and Learning and Teaching), Registrar and Secretary, chief financial officer (CFO), and Director of Human Resources.
The Court is a large body which fosters relations between the University and the community, and includes lay members, many of whom are University alumni. Ex-officio members of the Court include all the MPs of Sheffield, the Bishops of Sheffield and Hallam, and the Chief Constable of South Yorkshire Police.[57] It also includes representatives of professional bodies such as the Arts Council, Royal Society and the General Medical Council.[58] Court meets annually to receive reports from the Council, the Senate and the Students' Union. It serves many official functions including Chancellor election.
The Council manages the University's business side (finance and property).[57] Council membership comprises a majority of non-executive lay members. The Senate manages the academic side of the University. It is the highest academic authority of the University, and is chaired by the Vice-Chancellor. It is also responsible for the regulation of the students' discipline.[57]
Vice-Chancellors
- 1905: Charles Eliot
- 1913: Herbert Fisher
- 1917: William Ripper (acting)
- 1919: William Henry Hadow
- 1930: Sir Arthur Pickard-Cambridge
- 1938: Irvine Masson
- 1953: John Macnaghten Whittaker
- 1965: Arthur Roy Clapham (acting)
- 1966: Hugh Robson
- 1974: Geoffrey Sims
- 1991: Gareth Roberts
- 2001: Bob Boucher
- 2007: Sir Keith Burnett
Finances
The universities annual income for 2014–15 was £560.6 million of which £144.1 million was from research grants and contracts, with an expenditure of £539.3 million resulting in a surplus of £21.3 million. Its endowment was £39.0m. [1]
Coat of arms
The arms of the University blazoned Azure, A gold-edged book inscribed with the Latin Disce Doce (Learn and Teach), A sheaf of eight silver arrows on either side (from the arms of the city), The Crown of Success and The White Rose of York, with a scroll carrying the motto Rerum cognoscere causas (To Discover the Causes of Things; from Virgil's Georgics II, 490), which was also the motto of Firth College.[59] The University's logo, consists of a redrawn version of the Coat of Arms and the name of the institution, is introduced in 2005, the centenary year of the University. However, the Coat of Arms remains the official heraldic symbol of the University, and should not be confused with the logo.[59]
Branding
The brand (encompassing the visual identity) is centred on the theme of "discovery", led by the Latin motto from the coat of arms "Rerum Cognoscere Causas" – "to discover the causes of things". It has been applied across print, screen and other areas such as signage, vehicle livery and merchandising. The project was key to the University's Marketing Department receiving "HEIST Marketing Team of the Year, 2005".[60]
The University's fonts are Stephenson and Blake. Both serif font Stephenson and sans serif font Blake are modified versions of a typeface designed by Sheffield company Stephenson & Blake Co.[61][62]
Academic profile
Reputation and rankings
National rankings | |
---|---|
Complete (2025)[63] | 28 |
Guardian (2025)[64] | 41 |
Times / Sunday Times (2025)[65] | 24 |
Global rankings | |
ARWU (2024)[66] | 101–150 |
QS (2025)[67] | 84 |
THE (2025)[68] | 97 |
The university has been described by The Times as one of the powerhouses of British higher education.[69] The University is a member of the Russell Group, the European University Association, the Worldwide Universities Network and the White Rose University Consortium.[70][71][72]
The QS World University Rankings 2015-16 placed Sheffield as the 80th university worldwide and 16th in the UK.[73]
The university has won Queen's Anniversary Prizes in 1998, 2000, 2002 and 2007.[74] In 2011, Sheffield was named 'University of the Year' in the Times Higher Education awards.[11] The latest Times Higher Education Student Experience Survey 2014 ranked the University of Sheffield 1st for student experience, social life, university facilities and accommodation, among other categories.
The university is also in the UK's 9-17 bracket of universities according to the Shanghai Jiao Tong University's ranking of the top 500 universities worldwide.[75] The university's business school is one of only five Russell Group business schools to have the internationally recognised Triple Crown accreditation.[76]
Research partners
Major research partners and clients include Boeing, Rolls Royce, Siemens, Unilever, Boots, AstraZeneca, GSK, ICI, and Slazenger, as well as UK and overseas government agencies and charitable foundations.[citation needed]
The university also works with local small and medium enterprises through the dedicated physical spaces at the Sheffield Bioincubator and Kroto Innovation Centre.[77][78]
For many years the University has been engaged in theological publishing through Sheffield Academic Press and JSOT Press.
The university is a partner organisation in Higher Futures, a collaborative association of institutions set up under the government's Lifelong Learning Networks initiative, to co-ordinate vocational and work-based education.[79]
As well as the research carried out in departments, the university has 84 specialised research centres or institutes.[80] The last Teaching Quality Assessment awarded Sheffield University grades of "excellent" in 29 subject areas, a record equalled by only a few other UK universities.[81]
Involvement with the arms trade
The University of Sheffield's Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre is run in partnership with Boeing, which conducts research projects funded by arms manufacturers such as BAE Systems.[82] In 2008, the University partnered with BAE Systems to launch a new Centre for Research in Active Control which aimed to improve the stealth of BAE Systems' submarines.[83] In 2012 the Students Union voted in favour of the University ending all links with the arms trade.[84]
Student life
Students' Union
The University of Sheffield Students' Union was founded in 1906 and consists of two bars (Bar One – which has a book-able function room with its own bar, The Raynor Lounge – and The Interval); three club venues (Fusion, Foundry and Studio); and coffee shops, restaurants, shops, and the student run cinema Film Unit. There is also a student radio station called Forge Radio and a newspaper called Forge Press, which are run under the umbrella of 'Forge Media'. The Union has nearly three hundred student societies and nearly fifty sports teams. Sheffield University Football Club has been established for many decades and has previously competed in the FA Amateur Cup and FA Vase.
In November 2009 a development project began to redevelop the Students' Union building, funded by £5m by the HEFCE, which was completed and re-opened in September 2010. Works centred on improving circulation around the building by aligning previously disjointed floors, improving internal access between the Union building and neighbouring University House, and constructing a new entrance and lobby that incorporates the university's traditional colours of black and gold. During 2012–13 the Students' Union went under a further redevelopment costing £20 million which led to the refurbishment of the University House. University House, which was one of the first glass curtain walled buildings in the world when it was completed in 1963, has now been integrated with the University's Students' Union in one single building.[85]
Student accommodation
The University halls of residence comprises two separate sites, Ranmoor/Endcliffe, and City[86]
Varsity sports
The annual "Varsity Challenge" takes place between teams from the University and its rival Sheffield Hallam University starting from 1996.[87] Varsity is divided into winter and summer competitions.[87] The University has 26 varsity sports (sports contested in varsity). The University sports colours are black and gold. The University of Sheffield won the Varsity competition in 2013, beating Sheffield Hallam University for the first time in ten years.[88] It extended the new found winning streak to four years in a row; winning again in 2014, 2015 and 2016.[89][90]
People associated with the university
Nobel prizes
The University's Faculty of Science is associated with six Nobel laureates, two for the Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology:
- 1945 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (joint award) Howard Florey, for his work on penicillin[91]
- 1953 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Hans Adolf Krebs, "for the discovery of the citric acid cycle in cellular respiration"[92]
And four to its Department of Chemistry:
- 1967 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (joint award), George Porter, "for their work on extremely fast chemical reactions" (see Flash photolysis)[93]
- 1993 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (joint award), Richard J. Roberts, "for the discovery that genes in eukaryotes are not contiguous strings but contain introns, and that the splicing of messenger RNA to delete those introns can occur in different ways, yielding different proteins from the same DNA sequence"[94]
- 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (joint award), Sir Harry Kroto, "for their discovery of fullerenes"[95]
- 2016 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (joint award), Sir James Fraser Stoddart, "for the design and synthesis of molecular machines"[96]
Notable alumni
Academics
- Freda Briggs, Emeritus Professor, University of South Australia, child protection expert
- Paul Curran, Vice-Chancellor, Bournemouth University (BSc Geography 1976)
- Paddy Nixon, Vice-Chancellor & President, Ulster University (PhD 1994)
- Stuart Palmer FREng, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, University of Warwick
- Michael Sterling, Vice-Chancellor, University of Birmingham (BEng Electronic and Electrical Engineering 1967, PhD 1971)
- George Martin Stephen, High Master, St Paul's School (PhD)
- John Sutton, Sir John Hicks Professor of Economics, London School of Economics
Business people
- Richard Cousins, CEO of Compass Group world's largest foodservice company
- Hussain Dawood, Chairman of Dawood Hercules Corporation Limited, Engro Corporation Limited
- John Devaney, Chairman, Marconi PLC
- Jeremy Grantham, Co-founder of GMO asset management
- Penny Hughes, former president of Coca-Cola Enterprises (UK) (BSc (Hons) Chemistry)
- Sir Peter Middleton, Camelot Barclays Chairman
- Edward H Ntalami, Chief Executive, Capital Markets Authority, Kenya
- Jim O'Neill, Head of global economic research, Goldman Sachs and coined the thesis of BRIC countries
- Richard Simmons, CEO Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE)
Lawyers
- David Childs, Managing Partner of Clifford Chance
- Mohammad Qasim Hashimzai, Deputy Minister of Justice, Afghanistan
- Md. Muzammel Hossain, Chief Justice of Bangladesh
- Henry M. Joko-Smart, former Sierra Leonean Supreme Court Justice
- Sir Maurice Kay Lord Justice of Appeal
- Sir Paul Kennedy, Lord Justice of Appeal, Interception of Communications Commissioner
- Sir Nigel Knowles, CEO of the Anglo-American law firm DLA Piper
- Dame Julia Macur, Lord Justice of Appeal
- Sir Alistair MacDuff, High Court of Justice of England and Wales
- Dame Anne Rafferty, Lord Justice of Appeal
- Tommy Sihotang, Indonesian Lawyer
- Arifin Zakaria, Chief Justice of Malaysia
In November 2013, for the first time in history, the Court of Appeal had an all-Sheffield alumni bench. The judges sitting were Lord Justice Maurice Kay (LLB Law, 1964; PhD Law, 1971 and Hon LLD, 2003), Lady Justice Anne Rafferty (LLB Law, 1971 and Hon LLD, 2005) and Lady Justice Julia Macur (LLB Law, 1978).[97] This event was also extremely significant because outside Oxford and Cambridge, Sheffield now has the record for the highest number of graduates appointed to the bench above any other UK University.
Authors
- Lindsay Ashford, author[98]
- Lee Child, novelist (LLB)[99]
- Nicci Gerrard, author
- Joanne Harris, author (later became faculty)
- Brooke Magnanti a.k.a. "Belle de Jour", author
- Hilary Mantel author (LLB), two times Booker Prize winner[99]
- North Morgan, author
- Jack Rosenthal, playwright
- John Thompson (poet) (1938–1976), Canadian poet
Media and Artists
- Carol Barnes, ITN Newsreader
- Lucie Cave, journalist, editor of Heat magazine
- Peter Cheeseman, theatre director, leading pioneer of theatre-in-the-round and documentary drama
- Stephen Daldry, stage and film director
- Chris Fawkes, BBC Weather forecaster
- Martin Fry, lead singer of ABC[99]
- Eddie Izzard, comedian
- Tim Key, comedian, poet, recipient of the Edinburgh Comedy Award 2009
- Sid Lowe, The Guardian, journalist
- Joseph Marcell, actor
- Paul Mason, BBC Newsnight
- John O'Leary, Times Higher Education Supplement editor
- Rachel Shelley, actress (BA (Hons) English and Drama)
- Linda Smith, comedian
- Dan Walker, sports journalist
- Andrew Wilson, Sky News News Presenter and former foreign correspondent
- Frank Worrall, The Sun, author and journalist
Pioneers
- Amy Johnson, pilot (BA (Hons) Economics, 1926)[99]
- Roy Koerner, Polar Explorer
- Helen Sharman, first British astronaut (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1984)[100]
- Eric Moxey, bomb disposal expert and inventor of the Fuze Extractor [101]
Politicians
- Nicholas Liverpool, 6th President of Dominica
- Nurettin Canikli, Incumbent First Deputy Prime Minister of Turkey in Binali Yaldrim's Cabinet, former Minister for Customs and Trade, Turkey
- Jean-Paul Adam, Minister for Foreign Affairs (Seychelles)
- Peter Adams, Canadian politician
- Jonathan Arnott, UK Independence Party MEP
- Kevin Barron, Labour MP
- Gerry Bermingham, Labour MP
- Jake Berry, Conservative MP
- David Blunkett, MP for Sheffield Brightside and former Home Secretary
- Sarah Champion Labour MP
- David Clark, Baron Clark of Windermere, Labour peer
- Serge Joyal, Canadian Senator
- Judith Kirton-Darling, Labour Member of the European Parliament
- Anne Main, Conservative MP for St Albans
- Brian Millard, leader of Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council from 2005 to 2007
- Fenella Mukangara, Minister of Information, Culture and Sports, Tanzania
- Hugo Antonio Laviada Molina, Mexican politician
- Philip Norton, Baron Norton of Louth, Conservative peer & academic
- Steve Reed, Labour MP
- Onkar Sahota, Labour London Assembly Member for Ealing and Hillingdon
- Kadi Sesay, Minister of Trade and Industry, Sierre Leone
- Graham Stringer, Labour MP
- Sir Chung Sze-yuen, former Convenor of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
- Ann Taylor, Baroness Taylor of Bolton, Labour MP for Bolton West and Dewsbury, subsequently a life peer and former minister at the Ministry of Defence
- Montfort Tadier, Jersey Politician
- Eric Graham Varley, former Labour Cabinet minister
- Sir Frederick Archibald Warner, diplomat & Member of the European Parliament
Public servants
- Maggie Atkinson, Children's Commissioner for England
- Lim Neo Chian, former Chief of Singapore Army
- Sir Michael Carlisle, Senior Civil Servant
- Major-General Andrew Farquhar, British Army
- Sir Vincent Fean, British diplomat
- Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Commissioner, London's Metropolitan Police Service
- Sir Ken Jones, Deputy Commissioner of Victoria Police, Chief Constable, Sussex Police
- Vanessa Lawrence, Ordnance Survey Director-General
- Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Montgomery, Director General, UK Border Force
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Stuart Peach, Chief of the Defence Staff, UK
- Crispian Strachan, Chief Constable of Northumbria Police
- Phil Wheatley, Director-General HM Prison Service
- Khalid S. Al-Ageel, General Secretary of the High Commission for Industrial Security, Saudi Arabia
Clergy
- Wesley Carr, Dean of Westminster Abbey
- John Chew, Bishop of Singapore
- Glenn Davies, Archbishop of Sydney
- Jan McFarlane, Bishop of Repton
- Tony Nichols, Bishop of North West Australia
- John Parkes, Bishop of Wangaratta
- Martyn Percy, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford
- Henry William Scriven, Bishop of Pittsburgh
- Stephen Smyth, General Secretary of Action of Churches Together in Scotland (2007–2014)
- Martyn Snow, Bishop of Leicester
- Alan Winton, Bishop of Thetford
Scientists
- Sir Donald Bailey, civil engineer and inventor of the Bailey bridge
- Sir Harold Kroto, Nobel Prize-winning chemist (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1961; PhD, 1961–1964)
- Sir Hans Kornberg, biochemist, Master of Christ's College Cambridge
- Sir Richard Roberts, Nobel Prize-winning geneticist (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1965; PhD, 1968)
Sports people
- Zara Dampney, beach volleyball player
- David Davies, The Football Association Chief Executive
- Jessica Ennis, Olympic Gold Medalist, heptathlete[99]
- Catherine Faux, triathlete
- Tony Miles, the United Kingdom's first chess grand master
- C R Roberts, athlete
- Tim Robinson, England International Cricketer
- David Wetherall, footballer
- David Wetherill, Paralympic table tennis player
Notable academics
- Francis Berry, poet and literary critic
- Peter Blundell Jones, Professor in Architecture
- Sir Anthony Bottoms, Professor of Criminology
- Angela Carter, author (1976–1978)
- Henry Coward, conductor
- Danny Dorling, former professor of Geography
- Sir Bernard Crick, former Professor of Politics
- Sir Graeme Davies, Vice-Chancellor University of London
- Charles Eliot, diplomat, Vice-Chancellor
- Sir William Empson, poet (The School of English names its facilities after him)
- Lilian Edwards, Professor of Internet Law
- Howard Florey, Nobel Prize winner, Joseph Hunter Professor of Pathology
- Andrew Gamble, political economist, Professor of Politics
- Joanne Harris, author (2000; was also a student)
- Peter Hill, well-known pianist and expert on the works of Olivier Messiaen
- Sir Robert Honeycombe, metallurgist
- David Hughes, astronomer, Asteroid 4205 is named in his honour.
- Dame Betty Kershaw, Dean of the School of Nursing
- Sir Ian Kershaw, historian
- Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, Nobel Prize-winning biochemist (1935–1954)
- Stephen Laurence, philosopher and cognitive scientist
- Sir Colin Lucas, historian, chair of the board of the British Library
- Peter Maitlis FRS, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry
- David Marquand, politician
- Edward Mellanby, Professor of Pharmacology, discoverer of Vitamin D
- Lord Morris, Professor of English
- Douglas Northcott FRS, Professor of Mathematics
- Lord Porter, Nobel Prize-winning chemist (1955–1966)
- Sir David Read, Emeritus Professor of Plant Science
- Lord Renfrew, archaeologist
- Sir Gareth Roberts, Vice-Chancellor
- William Sarjeant, geologist
- Noel Sharkey, broadcaster, Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, Professor of Public Engagement
- Sir J. Fraser Stoddart, chemist
- Stephen Stich, Honorary Professor of Philosophy
- Charles Stirling FRS, Professor of Chemistry
- Grenville Turner FRS, Professor of Physics
- W E S Turner (1881–1963), Professor of Glass Technology and founder of the museum which bears his name
- Sir James Underwood, Joseph Hunter Professor of Pathology and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine
- Yorick Wilks, Professor of Artificial Intelligence
- Peter Willett, Professor of Information Science
- Sir Michael Woodruff, Transplant surgeon
See also
References
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Further reading
There are two official histories of the university:
- Arthur W. Chapman (1955) The Story of a Modern University: A History of the University of Sheffield, Oxford University Press.
- Helen Mathers (2005) Steel City Scholars: The Centenary History of the University of Sheffield, London: James & James.