The scheme ultimately proved to be a failure. In consequence of a letter addressed by the king to Archbishop
George Abbot, collections in aid of the institution were made in all the dioceses of England, but the amount raised was small, and hardly covered fees due to the collectors. After Sutcliffe's death the college sank into insignificance, and Charles I in 1636 refused to revive the moribund institution.
William Laud thought of it as "controversy college", and he disliked public disputation as divisive. An engraving representing the building project, which was only very partially carried through, is in the second volume of
Francis Grose's
Military Antiquities (1788).
Daniel Featley was provost in 1630 as Sutcliffe's successor. William Slater was provost from 1645. The fourth and last provost was Samuel Wilkinson. The College was dissolved in the
Interregnum, by 1655. ,
Military Antiquities. Nothing of the buildings now remains. For a while, though, there was activity and interest in the premises.
Francis Kynaston wanted to move his
royal academy there, at a point when there were only two resident fellows. This royal grant was apparently reversed (or repurchased for a sum never handed over). After proposals including an observatory, supported by
John Flamsteed but vetoed by
Christopher Wren in favour of
Greenwich, the site was devoted to
Chelsea Hospital later in the reign of Charles II, with the old name still used in the following years. The king had wanted to keep open the chance of using the site also as a barracks for a
standing army. The situation was resolved only when
Stephen Fox, the major benefactor to the Hospital, put up £1,300 of his own money for its purchase, and made a deal with the Royal Society through the good offices of
John Evelyn. ==Notes==