UK Government announces 46 winners of Marshall Scholarships

Washington : The 46 recipients of the 2021 Marshall Scholarships have been unveiled today by the British government. The winners, considered to be among the best and brightest university students and recent graduates in the United States, were chosen following a rigorous selection process and will begin graduate studies at many of the UK’s top academic institutions beginning in September 2021.

For the first time in the program’s 66-year history, the incoming class will be majority-minority with 52% reflecting minority communities across the United States, including a record number of Black and Latinx scholars. A majority of the class are female scholars and six are first-generation college students.

“Marshall Scholarship classes traditionally represent a diverse mix of cultural, academic, institutional and socio-economic backgrounds, but the 2021 class is truly ground-breaking,” said Dame Karen Pierce, British Ambassador to the United States, “This class, one of the most diverse and inclusive in the program’s history, is a wonderful mirror of modern American society and demonstrates the vital role that the Marshall Scholarship continues to play in maintaining a vibrant US-UK relationship.”

Overall, the 2021 class represents a wide range of academic backgrounds and includes activists for social justice, an elected public official, entrepreneurs, journalists, scientists, and artists. Several scholars will be pursuing degrees related to the urgency of Climate Change and Renewable Energy and will arrive in the UK two months before the country hosts the COP26 Climate Summit in Glasgow, Scotland in November 2021.

“Throughout the life of the Program, Marshall Scholars have regularly pursued academic disciplines which reflect contemporary issues and priorities” said Christopher Fisher, chair of the Marshall Commission. “With this new class, we see Scholars continuing to search for a better understanding of today’s world and how best to meet tomorrow’s challenges. In the face of the most pressing current crisis – the COVID-19 pandemic – we see dozens of Marshall Scholars contributing to finding a solution to the associated health, social and economic challenges, whether in the laboratory, in the hospital or in the formulation of policy and practical responses.

Despite the disruption caused by the pandemic, the program received a record 1,190 applicants from top undergraduate students representing institutions across the United States. Of the 35 US institutions represented in the class, nearly half are from state or public universities, alongside two winners from the US Naval Academy and the US Military Academy. Connecticut College and Georgia State University will send Marshall Scholars to the UK for the first time ever, while Hamilton College and the University of Tennessee each won their first scholarship in over three decades.

The program is principally funded by the British Government, but also benefits from generous support through partnership arrangements with world-leading British academic institutions, allowing winners to pursue graduate degrees in almost any academic subject at any university in the UK. The 2021 class will take up their studies at 14 different institutions across the UK beginning in September next year, ranging from the London School of Economics & Political Science to Queen’s University Belfast in Northern Ireland.

The scholarship program also continues to receive generous support from the Association of Marshall Scholars (AMS), the official alumni organisation of the Marshall Scholarship. The British Schools & Universities Foundation (BUSF) also provides generous support and funds for a scholarship.

The full list of 2021 winners of the Marshall Scholarship are:

Student US University UK University
A’dryanna Jenkins Penn State University University of Cambridge
Alexander Sojourney Arizona State University Goldsmiths, University of London
Amber Stanford Georgetown University University of Bristol
Ann Monk Connecticut College School of Oriental & African Studies
Anna Landre Georgetown University London School of Economics & Political Science
Annah Chollet University of Pennsylvania University of Oxford
Brent Strong Michigan State University University of Glasgow
Caroline Yuk University of Alabama University of Oxford
Chimene Ntakarutimana University of Kentucky University College London
Claire Petersen Northwestern University University of Cambridge
Colton Botta North Carolina State University University of Edinburgh
Cullen Chosy Stanford University University of Cambridge
Daniel Dominguez Colorado State University University of Glasgow
Essence Lotus New York University Goldsmiths, University of London
Evelyn Wong Harvard University University College London
Frishta Qaderi Brown University University of Oxford
Humza Jilani Harvard University University of Oxford
Isaiah Fleming-Klink Georgetown University University of York
Ishmael Maxwell Carleton College Queen’s University Belfast
John McHugh Indiana University University of Oxford
Jorge Ledesma Harvard University University of Oxford
Josie Campbell University of Tennessee Royal Academy of Music
Katherine Collins Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Cambridge
Kayla Matteucci Fordham University University of Cambridge
Keerthana Annamaneni Yale University University of Oxford
Kendall Gardner Tulane University London School of Economics & Political Science
Kiki Gilbert Princeton University University of Cambridge
Langdon Ogden United States Military Academy King’s College London
Leah Trotman Agnes Scott College London School of Economics & Political Science
Madeline Fox University of Pittsburgh University of York
Malak Kudaimi University of California – Irvine London School of Economics & Political Science
Marla Odell Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Cambridge
Marquis Palmer Hamilton College School of Oriental & African Studies
Matthew Salah Swarthmore College University of Leeds
Max Hammer University of Michigan – Ann Arbor University of Edinburgh
Maya Ravichandran Rutgers University University of Oxford
Naomi Murray University of California – Davis University College London
Nataliya Stepanova University of Maryland – College Park University of Edinburgh
Nicholas Shafer University of California – Berkeley University of Oxford
Nitheyaa Shree Ramesh Georgia State University University of Bristol
Patrick Clinch University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill University of Oxford
Quinn O’Loane United States Naval Academy University of York
Sejehari Saulter-Villegas New York University University of Bristol
Valencia Scott University of California – Davis University of Oxford
Yareqzy Munoz University of Pennsylvania University of Manchester
Yumna Navqi Penn State University London School of Economics & Political