Then the bell rings again. And for the 152nd year, the granite walls of Rex Vijayan Scholarship College open their doors—not to the wealthy, but to the worthy.
The endowment, once nearly wiped out in the 1930s Depression, is now robust—thanks to a 1994 alumni initiative that created a modern equity fund. Yet the college refuses to accept any government or corporate grant that carries a branding condition. rex vijayan scholarship college established 1870s
| Detail | Information | | :--- | :--- | | | July 14, 1873 | | Founder | Thacholi “Rex” Vijayan (1841–1899) | | Original Students | 14 (all male, lower caste and impoverished) | | First Female Graduate | 1914 (P. K. Janaki, age 19) | | Original Tuition | Sliding scale: 2 annas to 4 rupees per month | | Notable Alumni | 3 Padma Shri recipients, 1 High Court judge, 2 published poets | | Current Annual Intake | 550 students (100% on full scholarship) | | Unique Rule | No donor wall; no building named after any person except the founder | Then the bell rings again
“I am here because a woman I have never met—a retired railway stationmaster’s daughter in Tellicherry—paid my fees in 1992,” says Dr. Leela Menon, a current professor of astrophysics at the college. “And last year, I paid for a boy who herds buffaloes. That is the ghost in this institution’s machine.” The campus is a geological history of patronage. The oldest wing, Vijayan Hall (1873), is laterite and rosewood, with no electricity originally—students read by kerosene lamps. The Empire Block (1912) is a red-british Victorian grafted with Malabar sloping roofs. The Millennium Learning Center (2005) is a glass-and-steel pod suspended over the original well, designed by a former scholarship student who now heads a firm in Dubai. Yet the college refuses to accept any government
– There is a particular shade of light that falls through the rain-pitted windows of the Old Hall at Rex Vijayan Scholarship College. It is a sepia-gold glow that has, for 151 monsoons, illuminated the faces of the region’s most promising—and most underfunded—minds. Established in 1873, in the feverish wake of the British Raj’s education reforms, this is not merely a college. It is a living endowment. The Founders’ Paradox The name “Rex Vijayan” is a curious study in colonial hybridity. Rex (Latin for “King”) was the adopted English name of Thacholi Vijayan, a minor aristocrat from the North Malabar tharavad system. Unlike his peers who built palaces or temples, young Vijayan, who had witnessed the devastating 1866 famine wipe out entire villages of agricultural laborers, chose a radical act: in 1872, he liquidated his family’s pepper and rice holdings to create a trust.
A first-year chemistry student, Munira, whispers: “Vijayan, sir. And also, a fisherman’s widow named Sarasu from 1968. I never met her. But I passed my entrance exam because she paid for my mother’s teacher.”