the university's administration and the vice-chancellor's offices.
=== School of Physical Education ===
Frederick Annesley Michael Webster (27 June 1886 - 11 April 1949), of Bradwell Juxta Coggeshall in north-west Essex, with Evelyn Montague, an athlete who competed in the much-heralded 1924 Summer Olympics, started an AAA summer school at Loughborough, from August 18 1934. It was the first summer school for athletics in the UK. Tutors on the course included the sprinter Harold Abrahams and javelin thrower Jock Dalrymple. At the summer school on August 12 1938, Lord Burghley attended, with Austrian coach Franz Stampfl, giving a hurdling display.
The first Loughborough College Stadium was opened on the afternoon of Tuesday June 1 1937, by Clarence Bruce, 3rd Baron Aberdare, the chairman of the National Advisory Council for Physical Education, with Lt-Col R E Martin, the chairman of Leicestershire County Council. The stadium was the first in the UK for all track and field events, built on eight acres, and built by students, who were paid with only a cup of tea. A new School of Athletics, Games and Physical Education would begin later in September 1937. It was founded by F.A.M. Webster; his son, Richard Webster (athlete), had competed in the 1936 Berlin Olympics, coming sixth in the pole vault.
=== From college to university ===
An experienced educationist, Herbert Haslegrave took over as college principal in 1953. By increasing breadth and raising standards, he gained the institution the status of Colleges of Advanced Technology in 1958. He persuaded the Department of Education to buy further land and began a building programme.
In 1963, the Robbins Report on higher education recommended that all colleges of advanced technology be given university status. Loughborough College of Technology was granted a Royal Charter on 19 April 1966, and became Loughborough University of Technology (LUT), with Haslegrave as its first vice-chancellor. It gradually remodelled itself in the image of the plate glass universities of …