Homeless man takes ‘dream’ place at Cambridge University

Geoff Edwards (52) says his enrolment ‘is the first thing I am proud of in my life’

Geoff Edwards (52) has said it had always been his “dream” to attend Cambridge, considered one of the top universities in the world. File photograph: Getty Images
Geoff Edwards (52) has said it had always been his “dream” to attend Cambridge, considered one of the top universities in the world. File photograph: Getty Images

A 52-year-old man who spent most of his adult life sleeping rough and selling copies of the Big Issue magazine to help the homeless has enrolled at Britain's illustrious Cambridge University.

Geoff Edwards (52), says he left school at a young age with two qualifications and few ambitions, then ended up homeless in the city of Cambridge after work as a field labourer dried up.

Now Edwards is studying English literature, having completed a college course designed for adults who want to return to education or need extra qualifications to go on to university.

“I didn’t think of applying to Cambridge – I didn’t think Cambridge University would take someone like me, but my (course) tutor encouraged me to apply,” Mr Edwards said in a statement.

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“It is the first thing I am proud of in my life,” he said.

‘Dream’ to attend Cambridge

Mr Edwards said it had always been his “dream” to attend Cambridge, considered one of the top universities in the world.

The number of homeless people in Britain has soared past 300,000 – an increase of 4 per cent on last year – with one in 200 sleeping rough, the housing charity Shelter said this week.

Mr Edwards said selling the Big Issue – a magazine founded in 1991 to help the homeless earn a living – had helped give him back “a bit of self-respect”. – Thomson Reuters Foundation