Shuttleworth College was founded in 1944 as part of the Richard Ormonde Shuttleworth Remembrance Trust.
Richard Ormonde Shuttleworth, the owner of the
Old Warden Estate in
Bedfordshire,
England was killed in 1940 while serving with the
Royal Air Force. He had a keen interest in farming and estate management; after his death, his mother Dorothy Clotilda Shuttleworth established a
trust in his memory. The two principal objectives of the Trust were the establishment of the college at Old Warden Park in Bedfordshire and the development of the
Shuttleworth Collection – the unique museum of veteran aeroplanes, cars and other vehicles situated next to the park. The college enrolled its first students in 1946 and soon established its place as a national centre for agricultural education. The existing buildings at Old Warden Park provided teaching and residential facilities in the early years of the college. From 1960 to 1990 the college campus was extended by the provision of specialist teaching facilities including lecture theatres, laboratories and a conference hall, plus machinery,
livestock and
agronomy teaching centres. Residential accommodation was also added for 150 students to supplement that available in existing rooms at the park. In 1988 the college joined
Cranfield University, at the time Cranfield Institute of Technology. In 1996, all operations of Shuttleworth College were formally merged with Cranfield's
National College of Agricultural Engineering at
Silsoe, Bedfordshire, and the Old Warden campus was closed. However, the Shuttleworth Trust re-established the college in 1997, in partnership with
Writtle College. Since this time Shuttleworth College has generally been a provider of further education. In August 2009, Shuttleworth left Writtle College, and became part of
Bedford College. ==Curriculum==