Dani Coyle (2021, MSt Gender Studies)

In 2022 Dani was awarded a Master’s Prize for her advocacy for the Intersex community in Oxford and beyond and for her role in fostering a welcoming community for all at Pembroke, regardless of sex characteristics or gender. Dani has been profiled in the media for her work in education and advocacy, and produces a podcast to spread awareness and celebrate the successes of the intersex community.

Chimdinma Okpalauko

Chimdi has shown great leadership and generosity supporting diversity and racial equality in Oxford: she has served as Vice-President of the Oxford African and Caribbean Society, part of the University’s Race and Equality Task Force, a Senior Access and Outreach Ambassador, a member of BlackPembroke, and spoke at a Black History Month event with the British Chamber of Commerce in Japan and the University of Oxford Japan Office.

Dr Elisabeth Kendall

Dr Kendall has been a member of the community as an undergraduate, alumna, College lecturer, and then Senior Research Fellow. In 2022 she became Mistress of Girton College, Cambridge. She has received international recognition for her research into militant jihad groups, delivering hundreds of guest lectures, appearing in media broadcasts worldwide, and working with major international organisations.

Frederic Aranda

While an undergraduate here, Frederic Aranda used the College’s photographic dark room to develop photographs of friends and tutors. He has since built a dynamic and successful photography career, with subjects including Margaret Thatcher, Ian McKellen, Marcus Rashford and Vivienne Westwood. He has received multiple awards and in 2022 had two portraits hung in the National Portrait Gallery.

Samuel Johnson (1709 – 1784)

‘Dictionary Johnson’, a name earned from his famous A Dictionary of the English Language (1755), was a critic, biographer, essayist, poet and lexicographer, and one of the most significant literary figures of his time. Although a lack of funds had prevented him finishing his degree, he would later describe his time at Pembroke as influential and formative, laying the groundwork for his career.

Henry Hayes

A striking photograph of Henry Hayes appears at the front of an album of portraits compiled by Pembroke student George Hodgkinson (1856). Unlike the other students and academics featured, Henry was a College servant. He was with Pembroke for nearly 70 years. In this and his other long-serving role as parish clerk at St Aldates, Henry’s dedication to the corner of Oxford he called home is clear.

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