Bedder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The term "bedder" is short for "bedmaker" and is the official term for a housekeeper in a college of the University of Cambridge.[1] The equivalent at the University of Oxford is known as a "scout".[2] The equivalent at Trinity College, Dublin was known as a "skip", until the practice was abandoned in the early 1970s.[3] The colleges of the University of Durham have also replicated the Oxbridge model and refer to housekeeping staff as bedders.[4] There is no equivalent at the vast majority of other British or American universities, though the universities of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton have previously offered similar positions to care for their students' needs.
In early times, bedders were often employed directly by students and fellows rather than the college, but they are now part-time college employees. An edict of the University of Cambridge issued in 1635 banned bedders aged under fifty, although this policy has long since been abandoned. Until the late Victorian age, women could not become undergraduates, and there were even regulations preventing Fellows from marrying, so the edict may have been intended to leave bedders beyond suspicion of any impropriety. Rumours persist that there was once a broader "Bedder Test",[5] but there is no evidence that colleges ever preferred women of unappealing mien.[1]
Historically, a gyp (undergraduate's manservant) supplemented the role of the bedder at Cambridge, Durham, and other institutes of education.[6]