LAW - Faculty of Law - 1908-1910; 1917-1965; 1988-1993

This series comprises Faculty Records (1908-1910; 1917-1965; 1988-1991) including minute books of the Faculty Board and Committees; material relating to Chairs and Lectureships (1908-1910), Minute book of the A F Warr Memorial (1908-1910),Publications of the Faculty of Law (1979, 1985).

Archive level description: Sub-sub fonds
Physical Description:10 series
Languages:English
Subjects:
Summary:This series comprises Faculty Records (1908-1910; 1917-1965; 1988-1991) including minute books of the Faculty Board and Committees; material relating to Chairs and Lectureships (1908-1910), Minute book of the A F Warr Memorial (1908-1910),Publications of the Faculty of Law (1979, 1985).
Date:1908-1910; 1917-1965; 1988-1993
Reference Number:LAW
Arrangement:

Arranged into two broad sections:

  • Faculty Records
  • Records Relating to Staff and Students
Related Material:Records of the Liverpool Board of Legal Studies are held by the Liverpool Law Society, comprising Minute Books (1941-1975), Annual Reports and Statement of Accounts (1941-1963).The Papers of Walter Lyon Blease (Chair of Law 1919-1949) are available at D55
Biographical/Administrative Information:In the Charter of 1903 establishing the University provision was made for a Faculty of Law (clause 1). Prior to this provision, the direction of legal studies in University College was made by a Board of Legal Studies, established in 1886 initially with representatives of the College, the Law Society, and the Law Students' Association on the Board. Lectures in law were given in the College as early as 1882-3, by Frederick Pollock, and in 1883 and 1884 F.W. Maitland gave further courses of lectures. W. Lyon Blease was appointed Queen Victoria Chair of Law, and F. Raleigh Batt Chair of Commercial Law in 1919. The curriculum was strongly focussed on professional training and centred on the Law Society's Library in Cook Street. Blease and Batt were not full-time Professors, although they were both very involved in Senate business. In 1924, Betram B. B. Benas submitted to the Standing Commitee of Convocation a plan for the teaching of law on humanistic lines; the plan was unsuccessful, but an Honours school for Jurisprudence was established in the Faculty of Arts in 1927. Moves to increase the University's control over the teaching of law, suggested by McNair in 1939, began in 1942 after a Joint Committee recomendation that was opposed by Batt. However, the University gave the Law Society notice to terminate the agreement concerning the Board of Legal Studies at the close of the 1944-1945 session and arrangements were made to move the Faculty to the University precinct at the beginning of the following session. The Faculty occupied buildings around Abercromby Square and Chatham Street; the Law Society library as used by the Faculty was lost during war-time bombings although over time a new library was built up. The curriculum was revised in the late 1960s-early 1970s, the most noticeable change being the replacement of the study of Roman Law with the study of the English Legal system, Common Market Law, Revenue Law and Welfare Law. A third Chair in law was established in 1965 due to an increase in student numbers.