Leeds Trinity opened in 1966 as two
Roman Catholic teacher training colleges for
Yorkshire – Trinity College for women and All Saints College for men. At the time there was a great demand for new teachers in Britain due to the
post-war baby boom. Located near these halls was a convent occupied by the
Sisters of the Cross and Passion. All Saints College, meanwhile, was built on the south side of the campus, with four halls constructed for male students: Fountains and Rievaulx (after
Fountains and
Rievaulx Abbeys), St Albans (
Alban), and Ripon (
Wilfrid,
Bishop of Ripon). Both colleges appointed separate principals: Augusta Maria, a
Manchester University physics graduate and former deputy head of a Grammar School, was put in charge of Trinity College, while Andrew Kean, a Deputy Director of the Leeds University Institute of Education, became the first principal of All Saints. The colleges merged in 1980 to form Trinity and All Saints College, with one principal appointed for the new unified college – biochemist Dr Mary Hallaway. In November 1970 Kean informed the governors that the colleges should diversify and offer other courses in order to survive – although the driving purpose of the institution would remain as preparing Catholic teachers for Catholic schools. As a result, new academic divisions were introduced including Humanities, Modern Languages, Mathematics and Sciences and Social and Environmental Sciences, enabling students to specialise in another subject in addition to their teacher training. The
Postgraduate Certificate in Education was introduced for prospective secondary school teachers. After the merger in 1980, the college was forced to justify courses deemed uneconomical. Consequently, course content was modified and efforts made to increase student numbers without diluting the college's Catholic identity. However, cuts still forced the closure of the Linguistic and Arts departments, with the Music, Science and Drama departments eventually meeting the same fate. Despite this student numbers gradually increased over the remainder of the decade. During the 1990s Trinity & All Saints once again found itself in challenging circumstances. It faced increased competition from newer universities such as
Lincoln,
Huddersfield, and
Leeds Metropolitan – all of which had been granted university status in 1992. In November 2012, following the government's announcement that the qualifying threshold for university title will be lowered from 4,000 to 1,000 students, it was announced that it would be recommended to the Privy Council that 10 institutions, including Leeds Trinity, should be granted university status. The change of title was made in December 2012. In 2016 Leeds Trinity marked its 50th anniversary by holding a Mass at
Westminster Cathedral. A series of high-profile guest lectures was announced. Among them was
Nobel Peace Prize winner
Mairead Maguire, who delivered a talk about her experiences during
The Troubles. ==Campus and facilities==