University College, Dundee being the University of St Andrews at Dundee.
There was a growing insistence in the 1870s among Dundee's elite that the city both needed and was worthy of an institution of higher education. Early suggestions as to its form included an Institute of Adult Education run by the University of St Andrews or a University School of Medicine. The first proposal for a Dundee college was made in 1874, the market was tested by university extension lectures from St Andrews in 1875-6 and a Royal Commission report of 1878 recommended the establishment of a college affiliated to St Andrews University.
The final form of the college was determined by a deed of endowment of Miss Mary Ann Baxter of Balgavies and John Boyd Baxter of December 1881, by which a founding donation of 125,000 was pledged. University College, Dundee opened on 5 October 1883. Students were allowed to matriculate at St Andrews from 1885. The College was affiliated and partially incorporated into the University of St Andrews in 1897. In 1953 the teachers and students of all parts of the University in Dundee were formed into a society subsequently designated Queen's College. In 1967, in terms of a Royal Charter, Queen's College became the University of Dundee.
The college was originally housed in four town houses off Perth Road, converted in 1882. The first engineering laboratory and the Carnelly building opened in 1883 and the old Technical Institute in 1888. The Old Medical building was opened in 1904 on the site of the Free Kirk which had been converted as the first College hall in 1883. The campus gradually expanded north and west of the original site between Airlie Place and Park Place and up Smalls Wynd and Lane to Hawkhill. A large new block was built for the Conjoint Medical School on the northern edge of the university site in 1902-4. Ellenbank and Union Mount to the west of the original site were converted to university use in 1904-5 and the adjacent Engineering wing, Peters Laboratory and Carnegie building were opened around the Geddes Quadrangle in 1909. 1918 saw the opening of the Dental School and Hospital which was extended in 1967. The College of Education across Park Place to the east opened in 1920.
The Commission of 1878 recommended a college be established in Dundee to teach mathematical and physical and natural sciences and medicine, leaving the literary part of the Arts faculty to St Andrews. The deed of endowment provided for the erection of a comprehensive 'University College', providing courses for both sexes in a wide variety of subjects except divinity (forbidden by the non-conformist founder) and medicine (which would follow). After 1 October 1897 the college became subject to the academic control of the senate and its teaching staff was appointed by the St Andrews University Court. In an effort to avoid duplication the two Arts chairs (Classics and English) in University College lapsed into lectureships after the professors left in 1895 and 1901 respectively. The other Dundee chairs at this date were Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Engineering, Natural History, Anatomy and Physiology. A chair in Botany in the University replaced the College chair and teaching was in both Dundee and St Andrews. In 1898 the Conjoint School of Medicine was established at Dundee. The chairs of Surgery, Medicine, Midwifery and Gynaecology, Materia Medica and Pathology were established by Ordinance of the Commissioners under the Universities (Scotland) Act of 1889 and the appointments were made by Court. A new chairs of Bacteriology at Dundee was established by Court in 1921 but other appointments, such as Geology and Education were to the university as a whole. In 1899 Dundee began to teach law, thus providing legal instruction within the university for the first time since 1614. The courses in Law were extended to provide a complete curriculum leading to the B.L. degree in 1939. The centre for the training of graduate teachers established in 1900 was associated with a training college from 1905 situated in Dundee. The diploma in Education was introduced in 1919. The Dental hospital and school developed and the diploma and licence in dentistry were augmented with degrees in Dental Surgery from 1938.
The 1881 constitution of the college provided for trustees, governors, council and education board and was modelled on that of a joint-stock company. This structure did not fit into the administration of the wider university and their constitutional relationship became the pivot of the controversy between Dundee and St Andrews which lasted as long as the college was in existence. An important duty assigned to the University Commissioners of 1889 was to affiliate the University College as part of the University of St Andrews with one of the objects being the establishment a fully equipped conjoint University School of Medicine. The University Court under Principal Sir James Donaldson and the Council of the University College under Principal William Peterson reached an agreement to affiliate in 1890 but the practical outworking of this agreement resulted in much wrangling and litigation which reached as far as the House of Lords. The 1890 affiliation was declared invalid in 1895 but an 1896 union by Ordinance was pronounced lawful. The affiliation and partial incorporation of the college in the University of St Andrews was eventually effected on 1 October 1897, despite the efforts of the 3rd Marquis of Bute as Rector of St Andrews (1892-98).
The original Deed of Foundation and Endowment of University College remained in force despite its being at variance to the constitution of the University as a whole. The powers of the Council of University College and the Court of the whole university were contradictory and eventually an appeal was made to the Secretary of State for Scotland to investigate the situation. In 1949 Lord Cooper produced a scheme for a close integration of teaching and administration which, however, failed to secure the necessary support within the University under Principal Sir James Irvine and within University College under General Douglas Wimberley, Principal from 1946. Cooper recommended one academic body exercising the powers of the Senate on each side of the Tay and one financial body exercising the powers of the Court with access to the UGC, on each side of the Tay, and that studies in the two centres should be as far as possible complementary. He also proposed the abolition of the collegiate structure for the whole institution.
However, an inquiry and report was never going to resolve the problems and in 1951 a Royal Commission was appointed under Lord Tedder which declared that Cooper's proposals were impracticable. In 1953 the principal recommendations of the Royal Commission for a radical and complex re-organisation received legislative sanction in the University of St Andrews Act. This Act dissolved the governing bodies of University College and placed its property and endowments in the hands of a reorganised University Court. The teachers and students of all parts of the University in Dundee were formed into a society subsequently designated Queen's College.
From the guide to the Records of University College, Dundee, being the University of St Andrews in Dundee., 1871-1953, (University of St Andrews)
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creatorOf | Records of University College, Dundee, being the University of St Andrews in Dundee., 1871-1953 | University of St Andrews |
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associatedWith | Baxter John Boyd 1796-1882 | person |
associatedWith | Baxter Mary Ann 1801-1884 | person |
associatedWith | University College, Dundee 1881-1953 | corporateBody |
associatedWith | University of Dundee | corporateBody |
associatedWith | University of St Andrews | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Wimberley Douglas Neil 1896-1983 Major General and Principal of College, 1946-54 | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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Dundee, Angus, Scotland |
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Higher education institution |
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