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South Nottingham College was founded in 1970 in West Bridgford, while Castle College Nottingham was founded on 1 June 2006 from the merger of Broxtowe College and The People's College in Nottingham. The People's College was the oldest further education college in England, having been founded in 1847. Following a public consultation, which ran ...
Central College Nottingham was formed in 2012. New College Nottingham (NCN) was established in 1999. It has around 3,500 students, and about 900 apprentices. The Confetti Institute of Creative Technologies was established in 1994, and has since been bought by Nottingham Trent University. [5]
In 1947, after declining an offer from Charterhouse School, Hallward applied to become principal of University College, Nottingham, which, when his term began the following year, had received full university status. He immediately began enlarging and developing the campus from 122 to 400 acres and enhancing the quality of teaching.
He was five years a pupil at the People's College, Nottingham, and emigrated to New Zealand in 1863 with his brother William Leys and his parents, who joined the great Nonconformist movement to establish a special settlement at Albertland, north of Auckland. [2]
The college was established as the London College of Divinity in 1863. [4] It was founded by the Reverend Alfred Peache and his sister, Kezia, who had inherited their businessman father's fortune [5] in 1858. [6] The college was established to provide an evangelical theological education to men who could not go to university.
People's College, College Street, Nottingham 1881, 1891–92 and 1897 all additions [7] with Jolley; Paton House, University of Nottingham 1881 [7] with Jolley; Miss Cullen's Almshouses, Nottingham 1882–83 [13] with Jolley; Hart, Fellow's and Company Bank, Bridlesmith Gate, Nottingham 1884 [7] with Jolley
This is a list of notable people with a Wikipedia page, who have been or are associated with Nottingham and district (postcodes NG1–NG16), arranged by category and date of birth. Entries are in birth order. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB) is pay-walled.
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