Thank you very much for your replies. I understand that the Westminster College to which I refer is very close to Westminster Abbey in London, England. I would like to know what sort of college it was, i.e. Public School, Teacher Training College etc. I believe in the 1920s/30s it was attended by young men, I am not quite sure of what age.
Oxford is quite a ways outside the City of Westminster.
Westminster College began as a School of Hospitality in Vincent Square in 1910 when a committee of academics and hospitality representatives, which included Auguste Escoffier and Isidore Salmon, came together to develop a school for professional cookery.
September 2000 saw the merger of Westminster and Kingsway Colleges to form Westminster Kingsway College.
My nephew went to Westminster in London twenty five years ago for the sixth form, it was definitely within sound of the bells of Westminster Cathedral then.
That makes sense now dotty, I went to a meeting up there a few weeks back, it was in a beautiful old building, the Methodist Central Hall in Westminster.
There is a Westminster School (not college) located in the precincts of Westminster Abbey (not to be confused with Westminster Cathedral [RC]) which is a very old and reputable public school. The Deputy Prime Minister is an old boy.
yes same here count, i think the OP is looking for a private school for senior pupils which suggests the upper years of the public school as opposed to what we would consider a college.
Thank you for your varied comments. I seems to have discovered a numer of so-called 'Westminster' schools/colleges -- one which has moved, one which has amalgamated and one which had a meethodist connection. I had an uncle who in the 1920s went from a methodist-foundation grammar school to a 'college' in Westminster where I think he was preparing for teaching. (The methodist connection is interesting.) I am trying to establish which establishment it might have been.