Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chelsea College of Science and Technology was established as a College of Advanced Technology on a single site on the corner of Manresa Road and King's Road, Chelsea, London SW3, as part of the University of London in 1966. In 1969 it expanded into new premises on Hortensia Road Chelsea to house the Departments of Zoology and Botany and ...
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. Actions Read; Edit; ... Chelsea College of Science and Technology#Chelsea College, University of London Act 1969;
Chelsea College of Arts is a constituent college of the University of the Arts London, a public art and design university in London, England. It offers further and higher education courses in fine art , graphic design , interior design , product design , and textile design up to PhD level.
Chelsea College may refer to: Chelsea College (17th century), a polemical college founded in London in 1609; Chelsea College of Art and Design; Chelsea College of Science and Technology, in London; Chelsea College of Aeronautical and Automobile Engineering, in Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex, now part of Greater Brighton Metropolitan College
Catholic University College, Kensington; Cavendish College London; Chelsea College (17th century) Chelsea College of Science and Technology; College for Civil Engineers; College of St Mark & St John; Crystal Palace School
Birmingham College of Advanced Technology was the first to be so designated, in 1956. [ 1 ] Originally under the control of local education authorities, on 1 April 1962 the CATs were removed from local authority control and became autonomous national institutions funded directly by the Ministry of Education . [ 2 ]
In 1970 the School of Art and Brighton College of Technology merged to form Brighton Polytechnic. [8] What became known as The Chelsea College of Physical Education opened in 1898 in London under the headship of Dorette Wilkie. A two year course was offered where teachers were taught to teach. [9] The college moved to Eastbourne in 1947. [10]
In 1946 the institutions were united as The College of Aeronautical and Automobile Engineering. [4] They returned to new premises at 102 Sydney Street SW3 in 1952. When Stanley Coryton Hugh Roberts (known as "C H") died in September 1957 there were more than 400 students training at his institution in Chelsea.