- Red brick university
:"Redbrick and similar redirect here. For the building material, see
brick ."Red brick (or "redbrick") is a term used to refer to the six civic British universities founded in the major industrial cities of
England in the Victorian era which achieved university status beforeWorld War II . Modern usage of the term also sometimes refers to the members of theRussell Group of universities founded between 1850 and 1960, although the terms are by no means mutually inclusive.The civic universities
The English
civic university movement developed out of various19th century privateresearch andeducation institutes inindustrial cities. The 1824 Manchester Mechanics' Institute formed the basis of the Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST), and thus lead towardsThe University of Manchester proper. TheUniversity of Birmingham has origins dating back to the 1825Birmingham Medical School . TheUniversity of Leeds also owes its foundations to a medical school; the 1831Leeds School of Medicine . TheUniversity of Bristol began with the 1876 Bristol University College, theUniversity of Liverpool with a University College in 1881, and theUniversity of Sheffield with a University college in 1897. TheUniversity of Birmingham was the first to receive official university status on the 24 May 1900.The six civic universities were: [ [http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/staff/ppd/Newstaffinduction/AhistoryoftheHEenvironment/ A history of the HE environment | Staff | University of St Andrews ] ]
*University of Birmingham ; Royal Charter granted in 1900.
*University of Bristol ; Royal Charter granted in 1909.
*University of Leeds ; Royal Charter granted in 1904.
*University of Liverpool ; Royal Charter granted in 1903.
*University of Manchester ; formed in 2004 by the dissolution ofVictoria University andUMIST .
*University of Sheffield ; Royal charter granted in 1905.These universities were distinguished by being non-collegiate institutions that admitted men without reference to religion or background and concentrated on imparting to their students "real-world" skills, often linked to engineering. In this sense, they owed their heritage to
University College London and to theHumboldt University of Berlin , both of which emphasised practical knowledge over the academic sort. This focus on the practical also distinguished the red brick universities from the ancient English universities of Oxford and Cambridge and from the newer (although still pre-Victorian) University of Durham, collegiate institutions which concentrated on divinity, the liberal arts and imposed religious tests (e.g. assent to theThirty-Nine Articles ) on staff and students. Scotland's ancient universities (St Andrews, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh), usually grouped with Dundee (which was originally part of St Andrews - see below), were founded on a different basis.Origins of the term
The term "red brick" or "redbrick" was first coined by a professor of Spanish (
Edgar Allison Peers ) at theUniversity of Liverpool to describe these civic universities (under the pseudonym "Bruce Truscot" in his 1943 book "Redbrick University").cite book | last = Peers | first = Edgar Allison | title = Redbrick University | date = 1943 ] cite book | last = Peers | first = Edgar Allison | title = Redbrick University Revisited | publisher = Liverpool University Press | date = 1996 | id = ISBN 0853232598] His reference was inspired by the fact thatThe Victoria Building at the University of Liverpool (which was designed byAlfred Waterhouse and completed in 1892) is built from a distinctive red pressedbrick , with terracotta decorative dressings.On this basis the University of Liverpool, which was itself originally part of the aforementioned Victoria University (together with Owens College in Manchester), can be argued to be architecturally the "original" red brick university.
Other institutions
The term has found more nebulous usage in recent years. Many institutions do, however, share similar characteristics to the original six civic universities. The
University of Reading , founded in the late 19th century as an extension college of Oxford, received its charter in 1926 and is therefore often classed as red brick. So too isQueen's University Belfast , which became a civic university in 1908, having previously been established in 1845 as a university college of theQueen's University of Ireland (which was later renamed asRoyal University of Ireland ). 'Red brick' is also used to describe many of the original constituent institutions of theUniversity of Wales ; Aberystwyth, Bangor, Swansea and Cardiff.Various other institutions with origins dating from the 19th and early 20th centuries, which later achieved university status prior to 1963, are loosely described as red brick. These may negate the architectural and pre-World War definition but are no less 'civic'. This broader designation includes institutions such as:
*
University of Exeter (originally an extension college of the University of London);
*University of Hull ;
*University of Leicester ;
*University of Newcastle (originally two extension colleges of the University of Durham)
*University of Nottingham ;
*University of Reading
*University of Southampton Certain consituent colleges of the
University of London , such asRoyal Holloway , share the hallmarks of traditional redbrick institutions, being literally Victorian 'red brick' in architecure and having achieved official university status before thesecond world war .The
University of Dundee , formerly University College Dundee, was founded in the late 19th century and then spent many years as a constituent college of theUniversity of St Andrews until it received its own charter. It shares features of both red brick and ancient Scottish institutions.Keble College, Oxford is notable for being both an architecturally Redbrick built college within theUniversity of Oxford and a red brick-style institution which places a similarly strong emphasis on engineering and sciences. It is also chronologically of the red brick era, having been founded in 1870.In 1963, the
Robbins Report recommended expansion of the British university system - the universities established after this report are often known as the "plate glass universities ".See also
*
Oxbridge
*University of Wales (the founding member of the federation are leading Research Universities in Wales as well as the United Kingdom}
*List of British universities
*Russell Group
*1994 Group
*Plate glass universities
*New universities References
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