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Fylde College

Fylde College
Fylde Accomodation - Mae Reddaway.jpg
Accommodation at Fylde College
Fyldewindmill.png
Fylde College logo
University University of Lancaster
Motto In arvo quaerere verum (Latin)
Motto in English "Seek Truth in the Field"
Established 1969
Named after The Fylde
Principal Jean Bennett
JCR President Harvey Messenger
Dean Stacey Spencer
Undergraduates 1,150
Newspaper The Windmill
Website Fylde College

Fylde College is a constituent college of the University of Lancaster, in Lancashire, England. The college was the sixth of the university’s colleges. Construction of the college buildings began in 1968 and the college began accepting students in 1969. The College officially opened in 1971 and celebrated its 40th birthday in October 2011. The college is named after the Fylde area of Lancashire.

Talks of forming a sixth college in Lancaster University started in October 1968. A group of young lecturers formed "College 6", which they envisaged as a commune style College where students could have more influence over their college. The College officially came into being on 1 August 1969.

The first intake of students was planned for 1970, however, by 1968 the first phase of Furness College was completed ahead of schedule and £125,000 under budget so the University re-allocated this to the ‘Sixth College Project’ to build Blocks 3–7.

These blocks were erected within just 12 months allowing it to offer accommodation to its first students from October 1969, a year ahead of schedule. The Assembly governed the College from Furness borrowing Bowland's JCR.

The lecturers advertised places for existing Lancaster second and third year students who wished to become part of their commune college. The ultra-left wing of the University took up their offer. Following the left-wing ethos of the founding lecturers the College formed an assembly with 68 elected positions rather than a JCR as in other colleges. Further, the students rejected the University’s plan to name the newly constructed Fylde residence blocks after areas of Lancashire, preferring names such as Lenin and Guevara. As a compromise the blocks were instead simply given numbers.

The College received four more blocks in 1970 and a College Building in 1971. More blocks were added to the College over the years; blocks 10–12 in the early 1980s and blocks 14 – 16 in the early 1990s.

Fylde had a reputation as the socialist college. Its original second and third year students were inspired by the events of May 1968 to seize the opportunity to make a socialist commune. In 1969 The Queen came to open The County College. As she passed through Alexandra Square, the first Chairman of the College Assembly, Bill Corr, invested a Malayan toad Archduke of Lancaster. Over-eager press coverage saw this as a scandal. Further, its College building was never formally ‘opened’ in 1971, as planned, as the Minister for Higher Education was advised not to attend the opening as Fylde students had threatened to demonstrate about the level of grants on that day.


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