Jump to content

Lincoln College, Lincolnshire

Coordinates: 53°13′52″N 0°32′07″W / 53.2310°N 0.5352°W / 53.2310; -0.5352
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Gainsborough College)

Lincoln College
Address
Map
Monks Road

,
Lincolnshire
,
LN2 5HQ

England
Coordinates53°13′52″N 0°32′07″W / 53.2310°N 0.5352°W / 53.2310; -0.5352
Information
TypeCollege of Further and Higher Education
Established1932
Local authorityLincolnshire
Department for Education URN130762 Tables
OfstedReports
Chief ExecutiveMark Locking
Age15+
Enrolment13,318 (Feb 2011)
Websitehttp://www.lincolncollege.ac.uk/

Lincoln College is a predominantly further education college based in the City of Lincoln, England.

The college's main site is on Monks Road (B1308), specifically to the north, and to the south of Lindum Hill (A15). It was formerly known as the Lincoln College of Technology and was one of the sites for North Lincolnshire College.

Satellite sites

[edit]

The college also has sites in Gainsborough, and also in Newark-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire (since merging with the former Newark and Sherwood College in 2007[1]).

The two branch sites are branded as Gainsborough College and Newark College respectively.

More than 11,000 students are enrolled across the three sites, making it one of the largest educational establishments in the county of Lincolnshire.[citation needed] The college closed its small fourth campus in Louth, Lincolnshire in 2005.[citation needed]

Gainsborough

[edit]

The site was known as Gainsborough College of Further Education, on Morton Terrace. The County Technical College was built from 1938, with a new grammar school.[2] The land was bought by Lincolnshire County Council from Sir Hickman Beckett Bacon, High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in 1887.[3] It opened in June 1941.[4] At a meeting of Lincolnshire County Council, on Tuesday 17 June 1975, the name was changed from County Technical College.[5]

The Secretary of State for Education, Sir Keith Joseph, visited the college and the grammar schools on Friday 18 June 1982, after visiting Lincoln. He had a buffet lunch prepared by college catering students. Fred Rickard also attended, the director of education for Lincolnshire. [6] Fred Rickard died in May 2010, and had joined Lindsey County Council in 1967, having taught in Leicestershire schools until 1970, becoming director of education in 1978, when aged 50;[7] he was educated at Devonport High School for Boys and the University of Leicester.[8]

The merger with Lincoln was proposed in September 1986, due to the lower birth rate meaning that there was less 16 year olds by the early 1990s.[9] Staff at Gainsborough thought it would mean the closure of the site.[10] The combined site started on 1 September 1987.[11]

History

[edit]
The buildings of the City School, a former grammar school on Monks Road, now the Gibney Building part of the college built in 1885 as the School of Science and Art

The college was earlier known as Lincoln Technical College and built on Cathedral Street in 1932.[citation needed]

It became Lincoln College of Technology in the early 1970s, then administered by the City of Lincoln Education Committee. In the mid-1980s the college piloted the Technician Engineering Scholarship Scheme (TESS), funded by the Engineering Industry Training Board, a scheme for women.[12]

Two new blocks were added between 1976 and 1978, for business and management studies.[13]

North Lincolnshire College (known as NLC from 1989) was created on 1 September 1987 by Lincolnshire County Council from combining the Lincoln site with Gainsborough College of Further Education and part of the Louth Further Education Centre.[citation needed]

It previously had its headquarters on Cathedral Street until 1993. In the early 1990s it offered degrees and HNDs in Business Studies, Electronics, and Computer Studies in conjunction with Nottingham Trent University, becoming an associate college in 1994. In 1997 the Principal, Allan Crease, in a speech to the Association of Colleges criticised the means of funding from the Further Education Funding Council for England (FEFC), where money was allocated by numbers at the college, and staff received less pay than those at school.[citation needed]

In the late 1990s the University of Lincoln was being developed, subsuming Lincoln College of Art, and offered similar courses to the college, but the university was not fully built until the mid-2000s. In the late 1990s the college had a student population of around 15,000 and over 20,000 by 2001.[citation needed]

It soon after changed its name to Lincoln College, not least because North Lincolnshire was an area not covered by the college. From 2010 it was funded by the East Midlands LSC, based in Leicester, although the local LSC office was based nearby on Kingsley Road in North Hykeham.[14]

Principals

[edit]
  • Geoffrey Church, from the early 1960s until 1981[15]
  • In around October 1988, the college principal 53-year-old Arthur Ridings, of Southrey, became Director of Education for Lincolnshire. Fred Rickard had left in May 1985 as the county Director of Education, being replaced by Derek Esp, former deputy director for Somerset, who retired in March 1988, being briefly replaced by his deputy David Chrisp, of Wellingore. Mr Ridings had been principal of Beeston College of Further Education from 1973, then principal of Lincoln College of Technology for five years from 1981, then headed the team that former North Lincolnshire College. He attended Leigh Grammar School, in Lancashire where he was the county triple jump champion, and studied Maths and Physics at the University of Nottingham,[16] where he captained the athletics team, and played rugby for the university and the English Universities team.[17] Mr Ridings left the county council at the end of April 1994, to help launch the new University College of Lincolnshire, with Nottingham Trent University. The new university was planned to become independent in 2000, with around 5000 students.[18] He moved to Spridlington in 1994, when at the time his wife was head of the college in Louth.[19] Arthur Ridings was replaced as county director of education in 1994 by Norman Riches, who stayed until March 2000.[20]

Buildings

[edit]
The new Deans Sport & Leisure centre

Eight different buildings make up Lincoln College's main site, including the Abbey, Gibney, Sessions, Bishops and Cathedral Buildings. Bishops Building, located to the back of the site, contains a technology school. This has electronics courses including BTEC National Diploma Electrical and Electronic Engineering course.

City of Lincoln School

[edit]

Part of the college, the Gibney Building, is the site of the former City School, previously the Lincoln Technical School, which for a time became the headquarters of the Lincoln Archaeological Trust in the early 1970s.

From November 1940, boys from the Bablake School in Coventry were evacuated to the City of Lincoln School for two and a half years. Girls from Bablake School were evacuated to South Park High School for Girls (now Priory LSST). Roundhay Grammar School had been evacuated to Lincoln School (now LCHS) on Wragby Road.

The school had around 600 boys in the 1960s. Former members of this school have their City School Lincoln Association.[citation needed]

Curriculum

[edit]

The automotive technology program at Lincoln College includes training in fuel systems, electrical systems, driving diagnostics and transmissions, and techniques to install, repair and maintain vehicles. There are higher education courses in Computing Higher National Diplomas in Internet and Computer Science & NVQ in Logistics Operations Management. Instructors are certified through the Automotive Service of Excellence (ASE).[21] areas. The college has higher education links with universities including the University of Lincoln and Nottingham Trent University.[citation needed]

Alumni

[edit]
Reception entrance

City Grammar School

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2007 merger". Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved 23 July 2007.
  2. ^ Lincolnshire Standard Saturday 17 September 1938, page 10
  3. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 10 March 1938, page 1
  4. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 12 June 1941, page 2
  5. ^ Retford News Friday 20 June 1975, page 1
  6. ^ Gainsborough Evening News Wednesday 23 June 1982, page 1
  7. ^ Skegness Standard Friday 17 February 1978, page 11
  8. ^ Spalding Guardian Friday 4 August 1978, page 11
  9. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Monday 8 September 1986, page 5
  10. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Wednesday 10 September 1986, page 7
  11. ^ Retford News Friday 4 September 1987, page 3
  12. ^ "Trained Engineers and Technicians". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 15 February 1989.
  13. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 27 November 1980, page 1
  14. ^ "Lincolnshire and Rutland LSC" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  15. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Wednesday 15 July 1981, page 12
  16. ^ Lincolnshire Free Press Tuesday 20 September 1988, page 9
  17. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 24 September 1981, page 11
  18. ^ Horncastle News Thursday 23 June 1994, page 16
  19. ^ Horncastle News Thursday 8 September 1994, page 7
  20. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Monday 16 May 1994, page 9
  21. ^ "Lincoln College UK - Logistics Program". www.edumaritime.net.
  22. ^ "Passed/Failed: An education in the life of Jason Bradbury, author of". The Independent. 31 March 2010. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  23. ^ "Ms Karen Lee MP". parliament.uk. UK Parliament. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  24. ^ "Commander John Wilson". The Daily Telegraph.
  25. ^ "Politics". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
[edit]