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Woolton Hall, Manchester

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Woolton Hall
University of Manchester
The Main Building
The Arms of Lord Woolton
Arms: Sable on a Bend engrailed between two Garbs Or a Rose Gules barbed and seeded proper between two Lions rampant of the field.
LocationFallowfield Campus, Manchester, England
Established1959
Named forFrederick Marquis, 1st Earl of Woolton
ArchitectHubert Worthington
Website[1]

Woolton Hall is a traditional University of Manchester hall of residence situated within the Fallowfield Campus complex. Established in 1959 as a male-only hall (and remaining a men's hall until 1990) it was the last traditional catered hall of residence founded as part of the University of Manchester,[1] during a period of ambitious residential expansion for the university. Along with Hulme Hall, Dalton-Ellis Hall, Ashburne Hall, and St. Anselm Hall, Woolton is one of the five remaining traditional collegiate halls of residence at the University of Manchester. The hall is catered and contains a Junior Common Room.

The hall is catered with two meals served a day,[2] and made up of five residential blocks: Spencer, Lindsay, Morley, Cavendish and Ashley. Ashley is for postgraduates only.[3] They are situated around two quadrangles along with the main building, which contains the dining hall, kitchens, and common areas.

History

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Woolton Hall was built as part of an expansion in the provision of residence during the 1950s at the Victoria University of Manchester, when the then Vice-Chancellor declared that it was the aim of the university to: 'become ultimately, and as quickly as possible, a residential university'.[4] Woolton's architect was Hubert Worthington, who also designed the university Dental School, and whose brother Percy Worthington had designed the main library and two other halls of residence at Manchester - Hulme and Ashburne. As with other buildings of Worthington's, there are architectural puns on the name 'Woolton': the weathervanes feature sheep and lambs. It was named after Lord Woolton, then Chancellor of the university,[5] whose arms and coronet appear in architectural details around the hall, and opened by the Duke of Edinburgh in November 1959.[6] From 1959 to 1990 the hall was all male, and by the 1980s was considered a ‘secretive little bastion of misogyny’, in an era when other men's halls (such as Hulme and Dalton) were either mixing or merging with women's halls.[7] The Woolton JCR fought a protracted campaign through the late 1980s to remain a men's hall, by the end turning on the hall's own Warden, but in 1990 the hall became a mixed residence. Despite this its cliquish nature has remained to some extent, described by the Tab in 2015 as "a place reliant on cliques and hierarchy,"[8] though a 2022 review of halls from the Mancunion only mentioned that it was quieter than other Fallowfield halls, and had "a nice old-school vibe."[9] Plans to redevelop the Fallowfield Campus revealed by the university in 2023 likely propose the demolition of Woolton Hall.[10]

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References

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  1. ^ University of Manchester. "WELCOME TO YOUR NEW HOME: Woolton Hall".
  2. ^ University of Manchester. "Woolton Hall".
  3. ^ University of Manchester. "WELCOME TO YOUR NEW HOME: Woolton Hall".
  4. ^ University Grants Committee. (1957). Report of the Sub-Committee on Halls of Residence. London. HMSO. p.7.
  5. ^ "File: Woolton Hall".
  6. ^ Lowe, P. (2002). Manchester Academical Dress, a Guide and History. p.49
  7. ^ Pullan, Brian; Abendstern, Michele (2004). A History of the University of Manchester, 1973-90 (Illustrated ed.). Manchester University Press. pp. 285–288. ISBN 9781847795519. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  8. ^ Stella Wright. "What your halls say about you". The Tab.
  9. ^ Osman, E., & Baynes, A. "A Fresher's Guide to: Fallowfield halls". The Mancunion.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Aaron Morby. "Manchester Uni reboots 3,300-bed campus plan". www.constructionenquirer.com.