Marshall Scholarships were created by the British Parliament when the Marshall Aid Commemoration Act was established on July 31, 1953. The scholarships serve as a living gift to the United States of America in recognition of the post World War II European recovery effort most commonly known as the Marshall Plan.
Widely considered among the most prestigious awards a graduating American undergraduate can receive, the Marshall Scholarships serve to provide highly qualified students with two fully funded years of study, with a possible third year extension, at any university in the United Kingdom. In addition to pure academic pursuits, the program serves to provide the future leaders of America with an insight into the "British ideals and way of life" and strengthen the "unique relationship" that exists between the United States and the United Kingdom.
Although the Marshall Scholarships share much in common with the Rhodes Scholarships (restricted to just Oxford University), the major difference centers on a Marshall Scholar's freedom to attend any UK university including the ability to attend a different university each year during a scholar's tenure. A significant portion of scholars choose to attend either Oxford, Cambridge, or one of the major London institutions, but during the past 50 years scholars have attended a wide range of universities throughout the UK. Also, since its inception the Marshall Scholarship has been open to both men and women, while the Rhodes scholarship only became open to women beginning in 1977 following the passage of the British Sex Discrimination Act of 1975. The first class of Marshall Scholars, which began academic study in the fall of 1954, consisted of eight men and four women selected from a pool of 700 applicants.
With these objectives in mind, the selection criteria are set out to select roughly 40 scholars each year from an extremely competitive pool of America's top undergraduate students. The selection process is run through the eight major British Embassy and Consulate Regions in the United States (Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Houston, Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, and Washington DC). Selection committees, consisting of former scholars and other distinguished individuals, centered in each region receive applications consisting of personal statements and essays which are used to select a short list of candidates for interviews. The committee then interviews each of the finalists prior to making the final decisions on the year's awards. Although most of the responsibility for selecting the recipients is in the hands of the committee, a few formal guidelines have been outlined in the official selection criteria. Most notably:
and
Now, over 50 years after the British Parliament created the program, the Marshall Scholarships have had a clear impact on the world and in particular the special relationship that exists between the US and UK. Marshall Scholars can be found as CEOs, on the Supreme Court, as members of Congress, in Presidential Cabinets, as university Presidents, Pulitzer Prize winning authors, and leaders in a wide range of academic and professional disciplines.
Data provided by the British Embassy.
| Total # | ||
|---|---|---|
| Harvard | 239 | |
| Princeton | 112 | |
| Yale | 101 | |
| Stanford | 74 | |
| MIT | 51 | |
| Brown | 42 | |
| UC Berkeley | 30 | |
| US Military Academy (West Point) | 29 | |
| Cornell | 27 | |
| Dartmouth | 25 | |
| Columbia | 24 | |
| Illinois | 21 |
Education in the United States | Financial aid | Scholarships | Universities in the United Kingdom
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"Marshall Scholarship".
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