, Roehampton, London Whitelands College is one of the oldest
higher education institutions in England (predating every university except
Oxford,
Cambridge,
London and
Durham). It was founded in 1841 by the
Church of England's
National Society as a
teacher training college for women. A flagship women's college of the Church of England, it was the first college of higher education in the UK to admit women. Associated with it was Whitelands College School, which opened in 1842; indirectly, this continues as
Lady Margaret School. The college was originally based in, and named after, a Georgian building, Whitelands House, on
King's Road,
Chelsea. The original house was demolished and rebuilt in 1890 to meet the requirements of a growing number of students. In 1918
Winifred Mercier was appointed as the principal. The college continued to grow from 180 to 230 although the premises were noisy and the leases needed renewing. Mercier persuaded the Church of England that they should fund new buildings. In 1930, Mercier and the students moved to new premises designed by
Sir Giles Gilbert Scott in
Southfields, near
Putney. (The Chelsea building was sold to the
British Union of Fascists to be their national headquarters, becoming known subsequently as the "Black House".) The new Whitelands College was formally opened by
Queen Mary in 1931. The extensive campus was expanded over the following years, with additional residential and academic buildings constructed on site. During the Second World War, the students of Whitelands College were evacuated to
Homerton College, Cambridge;
Bede College, Durham; and
Halifax, Yorkshire. Whitelands became coeducational in 1965. The college remained in Putney until 2005, when it relocated to
Parkstead House, a
Grade I listed neo-classical
Palladian villa on a 14-acre site overlooking
Richmond Park, in
Roehampton: the house was originally built in the early 1760s for the
2nd Earl of Bessborough, and was extended and renamed Manresa House after becoming a
Jesuit novitiate in the mid-nineteenth century. The main vacated building on the Southfields site was subsequently converted into luxury housing. ==University status==