Tuesday 29 September 2015

John Henry Brookes


John Henry Brookes, the University’s spiritual founder, died 40 years ago today. Join us as we look back at his extraordinary life and achievements.



























In 1928 John Henry Brookes arrived in Oxford as the newly appointed head of the School of Arts. Starting with two staff and 90 students, he went on to expand and transform the institution, and with it Oxford’s educational landscape.

His commitment to ‘education for livelihood’ was behind his vision for the School then, and it remains at the heart of Oxford Brookes’ ethos to this day. Our newest building bears his name in ongoing recognition of this legacy.

To learn more about John Henry Brookes, from how he cycled between 19 teaching locations to why he attended 17 retirement parties and how he led the way to Headington’s ‘promised land’, browse a selection of articles from our interactive timeline

For the full story, Bryan Brown’s new biography of John Henry Brookes can be purchased online from Amazon and Blackwell’s, and is in stock at both the Brookes and Oxford branches of Blackwell’s.


Thursday 24 September 2015

Oxford Brookes and OBN’s ‘BioTuesday’

Milly Farrell, Research and Consultancy Support Officer in the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, reports on the event.


On Tuesday 15 September, as part of our 150th anniversary celebrations, Oxford Brookes hosted a ‘BioTuesday’ event in collaboration with the Oxfordshire Bioscience Network (OBN). OBN formed at Oxford Brookes as a spin out in 2008 and is now a thriving company, supporting and bringing together the UK’s emerging life sciences companies, corporate partners and investors. The evening was also an occasion to celebrate the soon-to-be completed Bioinnovation Hub facilities at Brookes which are underway in the Tonge building.

The event had an excellent turnout from Brookes Health and Life Sciences staff and students. OBN support staff were also on hand to attend and support our team in organising the occasion. We also welcomed a wide range of professionals working in local bioscience industry. For many, this was the first time they had visited the new John Henry Brookes Building, which marks Brookes' ambition to play a leading role in creating the skilled workers of the future, for companies such as those within the life sciences cluster and beyond.  

        Main speakers (left to right): Jon Rees, Linda King, Nigel Groome, Victor Bolanos Garcia, Robert Possee and Matthew Frohn

The first half of the event involved a series of talks documenting various Brookes success stories; from multi-million pound licensing deals, spin-outs, graduate entrepreneurs, investors and of course OBN. The event opened with a welcome from Professor Linda King, PVC in Research and Knowledge Transfer at Oxford Brookes. This was followed by a series of talks and a panel debate, all hosted by Matthew Frohn, Partner at Longwall Ventures and a Brookes Bioscience alumnus. 

Our main speakers and panellists included: Professor Nigel Groome, Emeritus Professor, Oxford Brookes University; Professor  Robert Possee, Founding Director, Oxford Expression Technologies; Dr Jon Rees, Founding CEO, OBN; Dr Victor M Bolanos-Garcia, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Biochemistry, Oxford Brookes University. The key topics discussed included Brookes' plans to support young SMEs, how the University partners with SMEs, the history of Brookes Life Sciences commercial success, and its core ambition to provide the “next generation” of scientists and technically qualified staff.


The second half of the event involved a bustling networking session in the Abercrombie Atrium, where all attendees took the opportunity to network and further discuss the various topics raised during the panel session. We have had some excellent feedback on the event, which looks set to be the first occasion of many as the Brookes Bioinnovation Hub continues to grow and link with the biosciences sector.

Wednesday 16 September 2015

Alumni celebrations

Last Friday around one hundred former students from our predecessor institutions took part in a very special commemorative event on our Headington campus.


The afternoon was an opportunity to celebrate our anniversary with alumni from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s, from institutions including the Oxford Schools of Technology, Art and Commerce, Lady Spencer-Churchill College, Singletree, Westminster College and Dorset House. They were joined by Vice Chancellor Professor Alistair Fitt, former Vice Chancellor Professor Sir Clive Booth, and Deputy Lord Mayor Cllr Colin Cook.



Festivities started with a performance of ‘Educating Oxford’ by Flintlock Theatre. The short play tells the story of the institution from its origins as the Oxford School of Arts to the present day, drawing on original documents and alumni testimonies to chart its evolution, struggles and triumphs.


After the play guests were invited to an afternoon tea reception, when their achievements and contribution to Oxford were recognised in speeches by the Vice Chancellor and Deputy Lord Mayor. As well as the chance to catch up with old friends and meet fellow alumni, a specially curated display of items from the University’s archives offered more opportunities for reminiscing and sharing memories.
 


Later this month we will be welcoming more alumni to our next anniversary event, the Reminiscence Ball. For more information on alumni events and how to get involved, visit the alumni website.

Friday 11 September 2015

From elementary typography to digital publishing

A century of printing, bookbinding and publishing education


As this weekend's Oxford Open Doors celebrates 'books, libraries and printing' in the city, we look at the role Brookes and its predecessor institutions have played in providing training for the book industry for the last hundred years.

When John Henry Brookes was appointed as the new head of the Oxford School of Arts in 1928, he immediately set down to work on introducing two new courses: architecture and printing. The school had offered limited instruction in printing before the First World War, with elementary and advanced typography listed in the 1911 prospectus for the Oxford City Technical School (below). Previous attempts at introducing full professional training for the printing trade had however stalled.



This changed with John Henry Brookes’s intervention, orchestrated before he’d even taken up his post. A meeting with Dr John Johnson, who as Printer to the University headed the University Press, and Mr Cameron, Secretary of the City of Oxford Education Committee, secured support for the creation of a printing department. Dr Johnson’s backing was instrumental: not only was the Press the main employer in the sector, it also lent the School premises and equipment, and even provided teachers.

Despite the school’s limited resources, John Henry Brookes would have been keen to develop vocational training for a growing local industry. The city had been a centre for printing since the 15th century, with a press becoming firmly established in the 1580s to serve the needs of the university. First set up in the Sheldonian Theatre, the university’s print shop moved to the Clarendon Building in the eighteenth century, and to its current home in Walton Street in 1830. It continued to dominate the local printing industry into the 20th century, but small printing presses also thrived. By 1901, 28 firms of printers employed 639 people in Oxford, while in 1911 the university press alone had a workforce of 750, making it the city’s largest single employer. In the 1930s printing in Oxford started to be overtaken in size by the motor industry, but it was still growing at a faster rate than anywhere else in the country, employing 1,600 people.

1931-32 Year Book and Report

The courses in the new Department of Printing were designed to meet the needs of this expanding workforce. The year book for 1931-32 reports that there were 76 students in that session, including 43 compositors and readers, 13 machine-minders, 14 bookbinders and six designers. The publication also showcases many examples of their work, as does the 1929 prospectus.

The Juxon Street premises of the Department of Printing

In 1945 the department moved to new premises in Juxon Street. The building offered limited facilities, and was described in dire terms in Proof, the department’s student newspaper, in its first issue in 1955. The ‘”prison” by the canal’, with its ‘musty, cramped “classroom”’, ‘rickety, rusty stairway’ and ‘gloomy atmosphere’ had by then just been vacated as the department moved again, to more spacious accommodation on Cowley Road.


The printing workshop in Cowley Road

It had also invested in ‘modern and comprehensive new machinery and equipment’, as highlighted in the 1953 prospectus. Day and evening classes sought to meet the training needs of printing apprentices and journeymen, but also of those in administrative posts. This included instruction in hand composition, letterpress machine work, typographic design, lettering and layout, linotype composition, monotype keyboard, monotype caster, bookbinding, costing and estimating. Students were encouraged to sit external examinations of the City and Guilds of London Institute in Typography, Typographic Design and Bookbinding, for which the school was an examination centre.



Despite this dedication to providing vocational training to an important local industry, trade printing courses moved to Reading in 1968. The change was the result of rationalisation called for by the Pilkington Report. By then however the college had broadened the scope of its printing education with the introduction of the first full-time publishing qualification in British higher education. A leaflet from 1962 gives an overview of the new three-year Diploma in Publishing: “the course consists of the study of design and practice in all printing methods with the theory and science of a complex and rapidly developing industry.” In addition to training in design and printing, the course included business subjects and a work placement in a publishing office.



The diploma set the foundation for the development of publishing education, and in 1982 the Oxford Polytechnic introduced the country’s first undergraduate degree course in publishing. The Observer newspaper welcomed the news, seen as a sign that publishing would no longer be the preserve of the 'gentlemanly amateur with nothing but flair'.



Teaching and research in publishing continued to go from strength to strength, and 1994 saw the launch of the Oxford International Centre for Publishing Studies at Oxford Brookes University.The department now offers a BA in Publishing Media and MAs in Publishing, Publishing and Language, Digital Publishing, International Publishing, and Book History and Publishing Culture. Bookbinding instruction also still takes place at Brookes, with an evening course led by Ian Ross, who has taught here since 1962 and had bindings commissioned by John Henry Brookes. 

Visit us on Saturday and Sunday (12-4pm) on our Headington Campus to find out more about Brookes' history.

Tuesday 8 September 2015

Open Doors, 12-13 September

On Saturday and Sunday Oxford Brookes is opening its doors to visitors for Oxford Open Doors, the annual weekend organised by Oxford Preservation Trust for local residents to explore their city.


The new John Henry Brookes Building on our Headington campus will be the main focus of the event, open on both Saturday and Sunday from 12pm to 4pm. There will be guided tours on the hour at 1pm, 2pm and 3pm to learn more about the award-winning architecture and sustainable design of the building, as well as the chance to look around the spaces in your own time. 



In the anniversary space in the Abercrombie Atrium you’ll be able to explore our interactive timeline and enter our history quiz. We’ll also set up a selfie space with period costumes so you can take a few snaps with an 1865 flavour. You should also make sure you pick up a free copy of our anniversary book and have a look at ‘Snapshot Relit', an artwork created from photographs of visitors to our 2014 Live Friday event.



A selection of historical documents and artefacts will also be out to view outside the Library in a display curated by Brookes' archivist. With items from several collecting themes, the exhibition will offer a glimpse of the wealth of materials held by Brookes as well as insight into the institution’s history – including its role in providing training for Oxford's printing industry.

Another fantastic way to learn more about our history is to go along to the performance of ‘Educating Oxford’ by Flintlock Theatre. The play was commissioned last year to celebrate Brookes’ anniversary. Anna Glynn, Co-artistic Director of Flintlock Theatre, drew on original sources to write the 30-minute play, making the most of students’ recollections, speeches, and the soundtrack of each generation. The performance is at 12pm on Saturday, and booking is essential.



In addition to these activities on campus, two Brookes academics will share their expertise with talks held at other venues. In line with this year’s Open Doors theme of ‘books, libraries and printing’, Angus Phillips, Head of the School of Arts and Director of the Oxford International Centre for Publishing Studies, will be speaking on ‘Turning the page – the evolution of the book’, at Blackwell’s in Broad Street on Thursday 10 September at 7pm. And on Sunday 13 September at 2pm Professor Gary Browning will give a talk on ‘Iris Murdoch – unity, difference and late modernity’ at St Anne’s College, where Iris Murdoch was a student.

For more information about events throughout the city this weekend, visit the Oxford Open Doors website.