Bertrand Hallward
Bertrand Hallward (24 May 1901 – 17 November 2003) was the first Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nottingham.
Hallward was a pupil at Haileybury College, an undergraduate at King's College, Cambridge, and a Classics don at Peterhouse, Cambridge, prior to becoming headmaster of Clifton College (1938–1948). During the war he was forced to take the school into wartime exile in Bude, North Cornwall, where it nevertheless flourished under his leadership and came top of the national academic league tables.
In 1948 he became the first Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nottingham and in his seventeen years there he created a great university on a large campus, building many halls of residence on the collegiate principle as well as academic and administrative departments. He was also an outstanding judge of academic and teaching ability and he appointed many distinguished staff.
In 1965 he retired and spent much of the next ten years with his wife on board their ocean-going yacht 'Delphis' in the Mediterranean. He lived to be 102 and was still a major force as a character and an intellect well into his late nineties.[1]
The Hallward Library of the University of Nottingham is named after him. Also, subsequent to his death, a girl's boarding house at Clifton College was established and named after him (Hallward's House).[2][3]
Academic offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Norman Whatley |
Headmaster of Clifton College 1938-1948 |
Succeeded by Henry Desmond Pritchard Lee |
Preceded by (new creation) |
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Nottingham 1948–1965 |
Succeeded by Frederick Dainton |