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Swanley Horticultural College, founded in , was a college of
horticulture Horticulture (from ) is the art and science of growing fruits, vegetables, flowers, trees, shrubs and ornamental plants. Horticulture is commonly associated with the more professional and technical aspects of plant cultivation on a smaller and mo ...
in
Hextable Hextable is a village and civil parish in the Sevenoaks District of Kent, England. It lies north of Swanley and south of Dartford. History The origin of the village name goes back to Anglo-Saxons, Saxon times. Its first documented appearanc ...
, Kent, England. It originally took only male students but by 1894 the majority of students were female and it became a women-only institution in 1903.


Early history

The college was registered as The Horticultural College and Produce Company, Limited on 30 January 1889. Businessman Arthur Harper Bond (1853–1940) described how he had wished to "do something in the way of applying scientific principles to fruit-growing" and met a man who offered "his" property at Swanley as its base. Bond occupied the property to set up "the Horticultural College", but it later transpired that the property belonged to naval architect and politician Edward Reed. Bond bought it from Reed as "the only way to extricate myself from a difficult position and save my pet scheme from extinction". The college's lecture theatre was the saloon designed by Reed for SS ''Bessemer'', which had been built to swing on
gimbal A gimbal is a pivoted support that permits rotation of an object about an axis. A set of three gimbals, one mounted on the other with orthogonal pivot axes, may be used to allow an object mounted on the innermost gimbal to remain independent of ...
s in an attempt to relieve sea-sickness at the request of
Henry Bessemer Sir Henry Bessemer (19 January 1813 – 15 March 1898) was an English inventor, whose steel-making process would become the most important technique for making steel in the nineteenth century for almost one hundred years. He also played a sig ...
: Reed had installed it as a
billiards Cue sports are a wide variety of games of skill played with a cue stick, which is used to strike billiard balls and thereby cause them to move around a cloth-covered table bounded by elastic bumpers known as . Cue sports, a category of stic ...
room adjacent to the main house. The objectives stated in the initial company memorandum of association included "the training of pupils in agriculture and horticulture, and in all matters connected with the cultivation and utilization of land for horticultural farming, grazing, gardening or other purposes either at home or abroad". Within the college's first month a woman had enquired about admission, but the college did not initially admit women. Alderman Emma Cons and her friend Ethel Gertrude Everest spent a few weeks in 1890 working at the college alongside the male students to demonstrate that women could cope with the physical labour, and in May 1891 Cons called a meeting in London at the Women's London Gardening Association's premises, at which the prospectus for the "Ladies' Branch" (later the "Women's Branch") of the college was drawn up. A residential hostel for women students, "South Bank" in Swanley run by Elizabeth Watson, opened in 1891, and the first female student, Mrs Benison, joined the college on 13 June 1891. By 1896 there were more female students than male, and in 1902 the board agreed to restrict admission to women students only: the last male student finished his studies in 1903.


College history

The first woman principal was Fanny Wilkinson from 1904 to 1916 and 1921 to 1922. Two of the college's first graduates, Annie Gulvin and Alice Hutchins became the first women gardeners at
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is a non-departmental public body in the United Kingdom sponsored by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. An internationally important botanical research and education institution, it employs 1,10 ...
. Later graduates were Brenda Colvin and
Sylvia Crowe Dame Sylvia Crowe, DBE (15 September 1901 – 30 June 1997) was an English landscape architect and garden designer.Hal Moggridge"Crowe, Dame Sylvia" (1901–1997) Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; access ...
. Frances Micklethwait was Principal at Swanley in 1922, where she had once been a student. She had previously been a chemist at University College, London. In 1939 with the outbreak of war the college and its students were evacuated to
Sutton Bonington Sutton Bonington () is a village and civil parish lying along the valley of the River Soar in the Borough of Rushcliffe, south-west Nottinghamshire, England. The University of Nottingham has the Sutton Bonington Campus, a site just to the nor ...
in
Nottinghamshire Nottinghamshire (; abbreviated ''Notts.'') is a ceremonial county in the East Midlands of England. The county is bordered by South Yorkshire to the north-west, Lincolnshire to the east, Leicestershire to the south, and Derbyshire to the west. Th ...
, then the premises of the Midlands Agricultural and Dairy College, but they returned to Swanley in September 1942. The college was hit by
Luftwaffe The Luftwaffe () was the aerial warfare, aerial-warfare branch of the before and during World War II. German Empire, Germany's military air arms during World War I, the of the Imperial German Army, Imperial Army and the of the Imperial Ge ...
bombs on 1 March 1944, causing considerable damage to Hextable House.


Merger and current use

In 1945 the college was merged with South Eastern Agricultural College, and as
Wye College The College of St Gregory and St Martin at Wye, commonly known as Wye College, was an education and research institution in the village of Wye, Kent. In 1447, Cardinal (Catholic Church), Cardinal John Kempe founded his chantry there which also ...
became part of the University of London, finally closing in 2009. The Kent Horticultural Institute was established at Hextable in 1949 and later merged with the Kent Farming Institute to form Hadlow College, established in 1968, which traces its origins back to include Swanley. The college's botany laboratory building is now used as a local heritage centre, and the gardens form a public park.


References


Further reading

* {{coord missing, Kent Agricultural universities and colleges in the United Kingdom Former women's universities and colleges in the United Kingdom Defunct universities and colleges in England Further education colleges in Kent 1889 establishments in England