Thouron Award
The Thouron Award is a postgraduate scholarship established in 1960 by Sir John R. H. Thouron, K.B.E., and Esther du Pont Thouron. It is generally regarded as one of the most prestigious and competitive academic awards globally, alongside the Oxford Rhodes and Stanford Knight-Hennessy Scholars programs. It was created to strengthen the "special relationship" between the United States and the United Kingdom through educational exchange between British universities and the University of Pennsylvania. Through the programme the Thourons sought to nourish and develop Anglo-American friendship by ensuring that, in the years to come, a growing number of the leading citizens of these two countries would have a thorough understanding of their trans-Atlantic neighbours. In the years since its founding, the Thouron Award has sponsored programs of graduate study for more than 650 fellows, known as Thouron Scholars.[1]
Graduates of British universities receive support for up to two years of study – in any degree course – at the University of Pennsylvania, and Penn graduates may study at any university in the U.K. with up to two years of support. The Award, among the most generous exchange fellowships in the world, pays tuition and a stipend that covers room, board, and such extras as entertainment and travel.[2]
History
[edit]In the autumn of 1960, three British students, a geologist, an economist and a landscape architect, began their courses of study at the University of Pennsylvania as the first Thouron Fellows. In 1961, two graduates of the University of Pennsylvania arrived in the United Kingdom, an economist to the London School of Economics and a classicist to Balliol College, Oxford, as the first Fellows from the United States. Since that time over 500 Fellows have been selected.
Thouron Fellows have pursued degrees in a wide variety of fields. British Fellows have studied in all of the graduate and professional schools of the University of Pennsylvania. American Fellows have attended some 53 British educational institutions, with Cambridge, Oxford, and the University of London attracting the majority of the Penn students.
Thouron Prize
[edit]The Thouron family has also established a Thouron Prize for Summer Study at Pembroke College in the University of Cambridge for undergraduate students. The award is granted to eight or nine rising juniors and seniors from Harvard, Yale, and Penn, with typically three students selected from each university.[3]
The students receive a full scholarship to travel and spend two months studying at the University of Cambridge in the Pembroke-King's Programme. The Thouron Prize covers the full cost of the program. In addition, recipients are given a seminar series from Sir Roger Tomkys, a former Master of Pembroke College.[4] Competition for the prizes is often fierce, and the universities typically have their own mechanism for initial nomination. Nominees are then passed onto the consideration of members of the Thouron family, who personally hold interviews with all the nominees before coming to a final decision.
The Thouron Prize is sometimes seen as the sophomore/junior analog of the Rhodes or Marshall Scholarships; however, the latter can only be applied to during one's senior year and typically cover two years of graduate study rather than one undergraduate summer.[5]
Similar to the goals of the other British fellowships, the Thouron Prize endeavors to give undergraduates "an understanding of both shared and differing aspects of British and American culture."[3] At least one student who won the undergraduate Thouron Prize later went on to win the graduate Thouron Award as well.[6] At least three Thouron Prize winners have also gone on to win the Rhodes Scholarship.[7][8] [9]
Notable Thouron Scholars
[edit]- Kenneth Baer – Director of communications, Obama’s Office of Management and Budget
- Janice R. Bellace, after earning her undergraduate degree (Bachelor of Science in Economics] from Penn's Wharton School in 1974 and JD in 1977 from Penn Law, she used her Thouron Award (1977 through 1979) to earn M.Sc. in Industrial Relations from the London School of Economics, and has been a Wharton Professor of Legal Studies and Director of Penn's The Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business as well as founding President of Singapore Management University
- Norman Blackwell – Head of the Downing Street Policy Unit
- Francis Campbell – British diplomat
- Jay Clayton, after graduating University of Pennsylvania summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering in 1988, used Thouron Award for post-graduate study in the United Kingdom from 1988 through 1990 where he received a Bachelor of Arts (promoted to a Master of Arts, per tradition) in economics from the University of Cambridge in 1990, and then graduated with a JD, cum laude and Order of the Coif, from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, in 1993, and, as of August 2020, is Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission
- Sir Robert Cooper – British diplomat and political strategist
- Hugh F. Durrant-Whyte – Roboticist
- Jennifer Egan – Pulitzer prize-winning author
- Rick Gekoski – Writer
- Rose George - British journalist and author
- Josh Gottheimer – Author, lawyer, speechwriter, Congressman for New Jersey's 5th congressional district
- Hugh Gusterson – Anthropologist
- Simon Hirst – Former investment banker and CEO of Durlacher Corporation. Current Steering Committee member of Artisan Capital Ventures
- Robert Jenrick - British politician
- Paul Judge - English businessman and political figure; benefactor of Cambridge Judge Business School
- John J. Leonard – MIT professor
- Frank Luntz - used Thouron Award (1984 through 1987) to earn DPhil in campaign technology from University of Oxford and, as of 2020 (after past stints teaching at University of Pennsylvania where Dr. Luntz earned BA in Political Science and Harvard University where he was a fellow at Kennedy School), he is teaching at New York University in United Arab Emirates and Verbum Dei High School in Compton area of Los Angeles and also continues to be political and business pollster
- Terah Lyons – Founding Executive Director of the Partnership on AI
- Justin Marozzi – British travel writer
- Robert McCrum – British journalist and editor
- John A. Moran, Esquire, after being educated at Trinity College Dublin used Thouron Award (1986 through 1987) to obtain LLM degree from Penn Law and certificate in business from Wharton School of Finance and went on to practice law at Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, and become: (1) CEO of Zurich Capital Markets, (2) CEO of Zurich Bank, (3) Head of Wholesale Bank Supervision Central Bank of Ireland, (4) Secretary General in charge of Department of Finance of Republic of Ireland, and (5) member of Board and Director of Risk Policy Committee of European Investment Bank
- Sir Michael Jonathan Moritz, KBE – Billionaire Welsh businessman
- Brent Neiman – Professor of economics, University of Chicago
- Peter Norris – Non-executive chairman of the Virgin Group
- Philip Norton, Baron Norton of Louth, Professor at Hull University and member of UK House of Lords
- David C. Parkes – Harvard professor of computer science
- Adrian ‘Gus’ Pope, Esquire, after being educated at University of Edinburgh used Thouron Award (1985 through 1986) to obtain LLM degree from Penn Law and went on to become global managing partner and head of the investment funds practice of largest law firm in Cayman Islands, Maples and Calder
- Michelle Peluso – CEO of Gilt Group, former CEO of Travelocity
- John Quelch – Harvard professor
- Peter Roth, – High Court justice, after being educated at St Paul's School, London, reading history at New College, Oxford, used his Thouron Award (1976 to 1977) to obtain his LLM from the University of Pennsylvania Law School
- Dick Sabot – Economist and Internet pioneer
- Frances Stead Sellers - Journalist at The Washington Post
- Omari Simmons – Professor, Wake Forest School of Law
- Eugene Stelzig, Distinguished Teaching Professor of English Emeritus, SUNY Geneseo; literary scholar and poet
- Richard Stevenson – Chief Washington correspondent, New York Times
- Heath Tarbert - Nominee for Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Markets and Development for the U.S. (2017)[10]
- Sir David Watson – Oxford professor, principal of Green Templeton College, Oxford
- Bee Wilson – British food writer
References
[edit]- ^ "A Life-Changing Opportunity". The Thouron Award. 2011. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
- ^ "The Daily Pennsylvanian". The Daily Pennsylvanian. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
- ^ a b "Office of International Programs, Faculty of Arts & Sciences, Harvard University >". Fas.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
- ^ "Programs>Brochure>Center for International and Professional Experience". Cie.yale.edu. 2011-12-01. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
- ^ "The John Thouron Prize For Summer Study at Pembroke College, Cambridge University | Competitions | Fellowships | Academics | Yale College". Yale.edu. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
- ^ "The Daily Pennsylvanian". The Daily Pennsylvanian. Retrieved 2012-07-26.
- ^ "11 Yalies win prestigious scholarships for study 'across the pond'". Yale News. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
- ^ "final winners bios 2017" (PDF). Rhodes Trust. Retrieved 2017-11-22.
- ^ Ellis, Lindsay (November 20, 2017). "Native Houstonian Xavier Gonzalez named Rhodes scholar". Houston Chronicle. Houston. Retrieved September 17, 2023.
- ^ "President Donald J. Trump Announces Intent to Nominate Heath P. Tarbert to the Department of the Treasury". whitehouse.gov. Retrieved Sep 11, 2020 – via National Archives.