The wooden panel in the reception area of the Richard Hoggart Main building of Goldsmiths ‘They Died For Freedom and Honour’ commemorates staff and students
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The wooden panel in the reception area of the Richard Hoggart Main building of Goldsmiths ‘They Died For Freedom and Honour’ commemorates staff and students
A group of the first women staff for the new Goldsmiths’ College opening in September 1905 were photographed at one of the entrances to the
Goldsmiths’ historian Professor Tim Crook relates twenty short stories about the university’s history you may or may not know about in four sentence narratives. This
Goldsmiths’ first Warden standing middle among male lecturers 1905. Vice-Principal for men students Professor Thomas Raymont is seated centre bearing the thick bushy moustache. Image:
Armistice Day- the eleventh day of the eleventh month symbolises the UK’s immeasurable losses to armed conflict in the Great War of 1914 to 1918.
Goldsmiths as a university was conceptualised, developed and founded during the years 1903, 1904 and 1905. In 1903 the Goldsmiths’ Company in the City of