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  1. West Hartlepool was a predecessor of Hartlepool, County Durham, England. It developed in the Victorian era and took the name from its western position in the parish of what is now known as the Headland . The former town was originally formed in 1848 as an accompanying settlement for nearby railway and docks, which brought and exported coal from ...

  2. Hartlepool Art Gallery. Hartlepool Art Gallery is an art gallery in Hartlepool, County Durham, England. [2] The gallery opened in 1996 (28 years ago). It is located in Church Square within Christ Church, [1] a restored Victorian church, built in 1854 and designed by the architect Edward Buckton Lamb (1806–1869). [3]

  3. The West Hartlepool College of Art remained there until the building was completely destroyed by fire in 1966. The new College of Art and Design opened on the same Church Square site in 1968, where it remains to this day – a true School of Art in every sense of the word.

  4. North East England’s only specialist art and design college enjoys a distinguished history through its two predecessor colleges, Middlesbrough College of Art and West Hartlepool School of Art. © Copyright Dave Bevis and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

    • West Hartlepool College of Art wikipedia1
    • West Hartlepool College of Art wikipedia2
    • West Hartlepool College of Art wikipedia3
    • West Hartlepool College of Art wikipedia4
  5. The development of West Hartlepool was an initiative of Ralph Ward Jackson, who founded the West Hartlepool Dock Company and opened the Coal Dock to the south west of Old Hartlepool in 1847. The new town was outside the old borough boundaries of Hartlepool, but rapidly grew to overtake its older neighbour in size; by the 1880s West Hartlepool was twice the size of Old Hartlepool. [3]

  6. Details about Hartlepool College Of Art/ Cleveland College Of Art And Design. The current College of Art and Design opened in September 1969. However the College of Art (or Government School of Art as it was then called) was first opened in Church Street Atheneum in 1874.