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St Martin's College

Coordinates:54°53′28″N2°55′14″W / 54.8912°N 2.9206°W /54.8912; -2.9206
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the university in Washington state, seeSt. Martin's University. For the art college, seeSaint Martin's School of Art andCentral Saint Martins. For the school in Malta, seeSt. Martin's College (Malta).

54°53′28″N2°55′14″W / 54.8912°N 2.9206°W /54.8912; -2.9206

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St Martin's College
MottoScio cui credidi (I know Him in whom I have believed)
TypeHigher Education College
Active1964–2007
Location
Lancaster, Ambleside, Carlisle, Whitehaven, Barrow and London
,
Websitewww.cumbria.ac.uk
Map

St Martin's College was a Britishhigher education college with campuses inLancaster,Ambleside andCarlisle, as well as sites inWhitehaven,Barrow andLondon. It provided undergraduate and postgraduate courses in the arts, humanities, business studies, teacher training, health and social care. In 2006 the college was granted the power to award its own degrees (prior to this they were accredited byLancaster University). On 1 August 2007, the college merged with other institutions to form theUniversity of Cumbria.

History

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St Martin's College opened in 1964, founded by theChurch of England as a college of education to train teachers, one of only two church colleges to be established in the 20th century. Built on the former site ofBowerham Barracks, the college opened with 89 students. The college was officially opened bythe Queen Mother in 1967.

The college is named afterSt Martin of Tours, a Roman soldier who tore his cloak in two to clothe a naked beggar and later had a vision of Christ wearing the cloak. It is significant because just as St Martin renounced his life as a soldier after this to take on a life of caring and teaching, Bowerham Barracks left behind its military past to become a Church College.

The college's founder principal was Dr Hugh Pollard, who stayed with the college until his retirement in 1976. He had overseen the college’s establishment and led it through its formative years. The student population had grown to 700 students by the time of Dr Pollard’s retirement.

He was replaced by Robert Clayton, who had been previously principal ofMatlock College inDerbyshire. During his time in charge, the college branched out into Health, Radiography and Nursing courses, areas that would form a substantial part of the college’s provision from then on. In 1989, Mr Clayton announced his intention to retire. His replacement was Dr Ian Edynbry, formerly Vice-Principal ofWorcester College of Higher Education and Assistant Principal atMiddlesex Polytechnic.

Dr. Edynbry was to oversee the college’s greatest expansion to date, as St Martin’s started to establish campuses in Cumbria. In 1996,Charlotte Mason College in Ambleside became part of St Martin’s College to become its first campus in Cumbria.

This was soon followed in 1998 by the college’s acquisition of Carlisle’s former City General Hospital and City Maternity Hospital (originally aWorkhouse) on Fusehill Street. The college had been active in Carlisle since 1995, since its takeover of theLakeland College of Nursing. The Carlisle Campus has subsequently been redeveloped with modern facilities including en-suite student accommodation, a sports complex and most recently the Learning Gateway, a building kitted out with state-of-the-art IT to aid flexible and distributed learning.[1]

It was left to Edynbry's successor to take these new campus developments forward, as he announced he was to retire earlier than expected in 1997. The new Principal wasProfessor Chris Carr, whose previous role was as Pro-Vice Chancellor ofUniversity of Central Lancashire. Professor Carr took on the challenge of bringing cohesion to a diverse and multi-campus institution, whilst encouraging further diversification and expansion. Developments have been constant on each campus during that time, with new sports complexes built in Carlisle and Lancaster, a new library named theCharlotte Mason Library on the Ambleside Campus and new en-suite halls of residence built on the Carlisle Campus. The Alexandra Building was opened on the Lancaster Campus in 2004, a teaching and learning block with dedicated facilities for the arts.

As of 2005, over 11,500 students studied at St Martin’s College, which employed over 1000 staff. The college had a substantial national reputation in teacher training and nursing, as the largest provider of teachers in the UK and a major provider of Health Care Practitioners in the North and North-West.

Academic portfolio

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The college had a significant undergraduate and postgraduate portfolio with degrees accredited byLancaster University. As the largest provider of Higher Education in Cumbria, St Martin’s College offered a wide range of courses from the traditional academic subjects to Sport Studies,British Psychological Society (BPS) accredited Psychology, Information Technology and Environmental Management, to name just a few.

Locations

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The college was located in the historic cities ofLancaster andCarlisle and in theLake District. There are a wide range of clubs, bars and other activities available, as well as a variety of outdoor activities in the Lake District.

New buildings including a new library and learning resource centre inAmbleside, a modern sports centre in Carlisle and purpose built teaching facilities in Lancaster were added in the 2000s, totalling over £20 million.

Merger

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Main article:University of Cumbria

St Martin's College,Cumbria Institute of the Arts and the Cumbrian sites of theUniversity of Central Lancashire (UCLan) in Carlisle and Penrith amalgamated to form the University of Cumbria on 1 August 2007. This was instigated by a HEFCE (Higher Education Funding Council for England) report by Sir Martin Harris, published in September 2005, which recommended the amalgamation of the two institutions (UCLan's involvement came about after the report was published) to best serve the higher education needs ofCumbria.

Campus closure

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On 1 December 2009, it was announced that theAmbleside Campus would be 'mothballed' at the end of July 2010, and would no longer take new undergraduate students. The action by the University of Cumbria, if seen through, would have ended over 175 years of heritage[2] and a protest was held on 1 December 2009 by the student body, with more actions following[3] by students, the townspeople of Ambleside.Tim Farron MP also voiced his support for the campus and students.[4][5][6]

"Hundreds of local people have signed this petition and that shows how committed the community is to stopping this closure from happening. Now that the issue has national attention, I hope that the University will take notice of level of protest against this proposal and will reconsider their decision to downgrade Ambleside Campus..."

Tim Farron, speaking in the Commons.

In July 2011, the university announced a plan to reopen the Ambleside campus and increase student numbers, and this began in 2014.[7] The campus now runs a variety of environmental, forestry, business and outdoor education courses.[8]

References

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  1. ^"Fusehill Street - Learning Gateway".my.cumbria.ac.uk. Retrieved16 April 2023.
  2. ^"County university opens its doors". BBC News. 1 August 2007. Retrieved5 August 2007.
  3. ^"Facebook Petition Group". Facebook. Retrieved12 January 2009.
  4. ^"Tim Farron presenting rational argument to UoC Chancellor, to keep Ambleside open". Tim Farron. Retrieved12 January 2009.
  5. ^"MP Recruits New Students In Fight To Save Ambleside Campus". Tim Farron. 22 September 2008. Retrieved1 August 2013.
  6. ^"MP Takes Ambleside Campaign To Westminster". Tim Farron. 10 November 2008. Retrieved1 August 2013.
  7. ^Eve, Kelly (28 September 2011)."Cumbria university plan to reopen mothballed Ambleside campus".News and Star. Archived fromthe original on 17 March 2014.
  8. ^"Courses by location - Ambleside". University of Cumbria. Archived fromthe original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved6 September 2015.

External links

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