Student clubs
The inaugural meeting of the JCR occurred in 1967 and involved the only two existing colleges, Bowland and Lonsdale.
Student clubs were also widespread during the early existence of the University. The Film Society boasted that “for half a crown”, you could watch anything ranging from The Grapes of Wrath to A Hard Day’s Night. There was also a Marxist Discussion group for the more left-wing political brains and the Conservative and Unionist Association which was one of the first clubs to be formed at Lancaster. University politics were hotly debated.
There was also the 64 Society Debating Club, departmental groups such as the Historical and Biological Society, Scottish Country Dancing and musical groupings such as the Choral Society (for “whether you think you don’t sing or whether you’re sure you do”). For the student interested in doing something more physical during their spare time, there were also numerous clubs and associations to choose from including golf, lawn tennis, rugby and athletics. The Mountaineering Club was active in the late 1960s and assured any potential members that “you could do worse than enjoy a leisurely day out with the Mountaineering Club…at least you’ll spend Sunday evening in a different pub than normal.” For those more interested in less taxing sports, there was also a Tiddlywinks Club, an apparently competitive sport that required “teamwork, guile, resilience at the knees, gamesmanship and co-ordination between the eye, thumb and the index finger.” The Rag Association was also very popular with students.
In addition to the activities of the student societies and consistent with the collegiate system upon which the University was based, the social life of the early students tended to revolve around the activities organised by individual colleges. Band nights were very popular, but one former member of Pendle recalled that there were only a few electrical sockets by the door of Pendle bar. This meant that long reams of electrical cable were stretched across the room; unsuspecting musicians that didn’t cut the rug often had their wires unplugged mid rendition with a simple yank of the power cords! The Great Hall also staged concerts by nationally known groups including Roxy Music, Dire Straits, Mike Oldfield and Eric Clapton, but because of fire regulations and increasing costs of touring, such gigs died out in the 1980s.
The Philanthropy, Alumni and Supporter Engagement team is responsible for maintaining links and networks between our graduates, as well as fundraising. Most colleges run their own alumni associations as well.