We are in the grounds of the Independent College in Whalley Range and the year is 1934.
Our picture is a postcard which “R” says “is a new view of the college which I thought you might like to see.
It gives rather a good view of the grounds I think.”
He was writing to Mr and Mrs Nelson of Garston Old Road in Liverpool and he went on to say that he had “managed a good spot of work,” and was looking forward to “seeing something of a friend of mine who is preaching at Ormskirk on Sunday.”
There is nothing more to help us with the identity of “R” but given that the college had been built “educate young men of decided piety and competent talents for the Christian ministry,”* I think we can be fairly confident he was destined for a religious career.
By the time “R” was doing his spot of work the college had been open for 92 years and had continued “the preparation of young men for the ministry of the Independent church”** carrying on the work of the Blackburn Independent Academy which had opened in 1816.
Such independent establishments had been necessary by the ban on dissenters from attending universities. So here along with the study of theology students “will have the opportunity of gaining philosophical and scientific knowledge, in addition to the classics and mathematics.”
There were to be two resident professors and about fifty-two students the cost was to be met by public subscription and the hope was that this would in time be met by endowments.
The original design was for a gothic style building with a tall tower and a principal front 261 feet in length including two professors’ houses at either end with cloisters in between serving as an arcade in which the students can take exercise in wet weather. There were to be three stories surmounted by battlements about 40 feet high.
“The arrangements in the interior of the College, forming a communication with different suites of rooms, are well designed and exceedingly simple consisting of corridors running the extreme length of the front and of either wing. The lower story of the building which is sufficiently high above the ground to ensure dryness is intended entirely for servants, and the corridor which connects the different offices runs along the main building.
Entering the College by the broad flight of steps in the basement of the tower we come to the entrance hall on the second or main floor which is a lofty room about 36 feet by 32 and open to the roof.”***
And I suppose this description would have been recognised by “R” as well as the countless other students who continued to study there until its closure in 1980.
Later; more stories and pictures of the college.
Pictures; of the college in 1934 from the Lloyd Collection The Assembly Hall and grounds from The Lancashire Independent College, 1843-93
* resolution of the committee held in the vestry of the Mosley Street Chapel, Manchester February 1816, and quoted by Thompson, Joseph, in The Lancashire Independent College, 1843-93, Manchester 1893 Memorial Volume, p18
** The Manchester Guardian 1842
*** The Manchester Guardian 1842
Excellent piece and I’m looking forward to another open day to see the latest refurbishments.
ReplyDeleteAs boys we used to go into the grounds up to the windows and knock on them where the students were studying jump down the enbankment and hide on our backs. There was always a mist surrounding the College in the autumn and winter and the students couldn't see us. Our miss spent boyhood.
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