Scottish Agricultural College , who helped found the Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture In 1899, Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College's agriculture department amalgamated with the Scottish Dairy Institute to form the West of Scotland Agricultural College. Originally based in
Blythswood Square,
Glasgow, the institution began moving to Ayrshire when in 1927 the
Auchincruive estate in the parish of
St Quivox near
Ayr was left to the college by the late John Hannah of
Girvan Mains. In 1974, the Blythswood Square site was closed. The Edinburgh and East of Scotland College of Agriculture was formed in 1901 and carried out experimental work in
agriculture and
animal breeding in south-east
Scotland. Academic
Robert Wallace helped found the college, having set up the
bachelor's degree programme in agriculture during his time as a professor at the
University of Edinburgh. Its main premises were in
George Square,
Edinburgh, and these were expanded in 1904 to a design by
Thomas Purves Marwick architects. The college also had experimental grounds at Pinkie Hill Farm,
Inveresk. In 1913, the college and the University of Edinburgh formed the joint committee on research in animal breeding which would research genetics. , who ran the Aberdeen joint committee for research into animal nutrition The Aberdeen and North of Scotland College of Agriculture began in 1904 through grants from benefactors including the
University of Aberdeen. Initially classes were delivered at
Marischal College and these were then delivered at
581 King Street after 1969. Classes were then moved to a new teaching campus at the Craibstone Estate established in 1999, a site which the college had purchased in 1914 for research and fieldwork. Nutritional physiologist
John Boyd Orr, later a president of the
National Peace Council and winner of the 1949
Nobel Peace Prize, ran the institution's joint committee for research into animal nutrition with the University of Aberdeen. As technical colleges to transfer the growing scientific knowledge of agricultural issues to farmers and the general public, the three Scottish agricultural colleges were among ten central institutions noted in 1906 as providing technical instruction and sound scientific instruction meeting the "continuation class code" set of regulations drawn up in 1901. The company Scottish Agricultural Colleges was established in 1987 to provide direct management of advisory and veterinary functions of the regional colleges. In 1990, the West of Scotland Agricultural College was merged with the East of Scotland College of Agriculture and the North of Scotland College of Agriculture into the Scottish Agricultural College, a single
higher education and
research institution specialising in
agriculture. The institution's three main divisions offered research, education and consultancy. The new specialist institution was one of the largest of its type in Europe and the largest in the UK. The institution offered undergraduate and postgraduate programmes from its three campuses in Ayr, Aberdeen and Edinburgh, as well as training and online study on topics including the environment, business, leisure, agriculture, horticulture and science.
Barony College Before it became a college, the 300 acre Barony estate had a varied existence. It was an elegant home, a home for the elderly, a wartime army training camp and, up until 1947, a prisoner of war camp. In 1949 Dumfries County Council education department purchased the estate with the purpose of turning it into an agricultural school. The Barony Farm School opened in 1953, with a class of 46 boys aged 14 to 15 years. Day release classes in agriculture and engineering began in 1962. In 1972, the school became Barony Agricultural College and, over the 1970s, courses on offer expanded to include NC awards in agriculture, fish farming, forestry, countryside rangers, horticulture, animal care, veterinary nursing and equine studies. By this time, most students at the college were studying full time. A new teaching block, complete with a large sports hall, multigym and bar, was opened in 1992. The new millennium brought extra investment in animal care and veterinary nursing, an equine unit and a forestry technology centre. The dairy technology centre with a robotic milking system was opened in 2006.
Oatridge College Oatridge Agricultural College was established as a residential further education college specialising in agriculture and rural skills training in
Ecclesmachan,
West Lothian in 1969, with an initial intake of 45 residential students and 100 day students. The college was local-authority owned by
West Lothian District Council, having been established by a consortium of the district councils of West Lothian, Midlothian, East Lothian, Peebles, Roxburghshire, Selkirkshire and Berwickshire. The courses were initially taught in temporary accommodation on the farm site. New college buildings, workshops and accommodation were officially opened by
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1974, and provided facilities for courses in agriculture, agricultural engineering, green keeping, horse care and forestry. The Scottish Technical Education Consultative Council had made recommendations in 1967 around establishing regional farm centres. The college had started classes about twenty years earlier, with student numbers rising from 100 to around 2000 by 1972. A 350-acre farm was attached to the college and it offered courses such as hill-farming and shepherding. Construction of a golf course began in 1995 with attention given to both the quality of the course and consideration of the local environment; the course was Geo Certified in 2013.
SRUC A proposal to merge the Scottish Agricultural College with Barony College, Elmwood College and Oatridge College was put to public consultation between March and May 2012. Education Secretary
Mike Russell voiced support for the merger in June 2012, and Scotland's Rural College formally came into existence on 1 October 2012. The work of the Scottish Agricultural College in education and training, research and development and consultancy services, would be continued by the newly-merged institution. Scotland's Rural College was given the initialism SRUC upon its founding, as it would be working towards gaining the status of a
university college with degree awarding powers. Professor Wayne Powell was appointed to serve as principal of SRUC in April 2016. In 2022, SRUC's application for degree awarding powers was approved to advance to the scrutiny stage by the
Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education advisory committee. This involves a minimum of 12 months of scrutiny, with the result of the application expected no earlier than summer 2023. ==Campuses==