Sponsors Type
Foundation
Country
United Kingdom
Grant Type
Fellowship/Scholarship/Dissertation
 Contact Info
Phone
01383 724 990
Address
Andrew Carnegie House, Pittencrieff Street, Dunfermline, KY12 8AW
Last modified on 2025-03-26 04:10:25
Description
**What we do** **We support individuals to access higher education through our grant programmes and drive improvement of the higher education system through strategic projects and partnerships.** **The Trust's purpose is to secure social and economic benefits by supporting access to and improvement of the higher education system in Scotland** Our Royal Charter, which was last updated in 2024, confers wide powers on our Trustees to determine the appropriate use of the Trust’s income in line with this purpose. We are currently going through a period of review and reflection to inform the development of a new Strategic Plan for the Trust for 2026-31 which will ensure that we can maximise the legacy of our founder while remaining relevant to the current landscape. [Read More](https://carnegie-trust.org/update-from-the-trust/) **Our history** The Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland was established as an independent not-for- profit foundation in 1901, through an initial endowment of $10 million in bonds, donated by the philanthropist and industrialist Andrew Carnegie. The Trust was founded by a Trust Deed in the summer of 1901 and incorporated by Royal Charter in 1902. In the Trust Deed, Carnegie defined its purpose as: “to support the improvement and expansion of the Universities of Scotland and the provision of support for those ‘deserving and qualified’ students attending these universities for whom the payment of fees might act as a barrier.” By 1910, the Trust covered the costs of tuition fees for around half of the student body of the four Scottish universities (Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and St. Andrews). During the first half of the 20th Century, the Trust also funded a broad range of activities including the construction of lecture theatres, laboratories, university libraries and student residences. As the availability of public funding for tuition fees and capital development increased in the second half of the century, the Trust continued to provide grants for tuition fees to those who were ineligible for public support, focusing on those facing financial hardship. It also continued to support to the advancement of knowledge in universities through research grants, scholarships and fellowships including new grant schemes for expeditions and publications. Over its 125 years, the Trust has supported over 70,000 individuals to access higher education in colleges and universities through tuition fee payments and many more through research and publication grants and scholarships. This funding has transformed lives. You can read more about our grantees in our Alumni Stories catalogue. In 2023 we commissioned Dr Catriona Macdonald, Reader in Late Modern Scottish History at the University of Glasgow, to research the Trust’s contribution to the development of higher education in Scotland and the impact of our grants. Catriona’s research will be shared as part of an exhibition in our 125th anniversary year and through blogs on our website.
Sponsor Relationship

  Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland is not a part of any other sponsors in our database.


  No sponsor in our database are part of Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland.

Most Recent Grants from This Sponsors
The Carnegie PhD Scholarships fund postgraduate research leading to a PhD at an eligible...
Added on 2021-12-08T05:11:51Z
This merit-based Scholarship promotes postgraduate exchanges between American and Scottish...
Added on 2021-12-08T04:57:16Z
Vacation Scholarships enable undergraduate students to develop their research skills through a...
Added on 2021-12-08T04:44:17Z
Our Undergraduate Tuition Fee Grants are aimed at individuals from low-income households who are...
Added on 2021-12-08T04:34:12Z
Deadline Approaching Grants
No grants from this sponsor have deadline within a month period.