University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript. The Northern Polytechnic opened in Holloway with aid from the City Parochial Foundation and substantial donations from the Worshipful Company of Clothworkers in 1896. Under the terms of its Royal Charter, its objective was “to promote the industrial skill, general knowledge, health and well-being of young men and women belonging to the poorer classes of Islington [and] to provide for the inhabitants of Islington and the neighbouring parts of north London, and especially for the Industrial Classes, the means of acquiring a sound General, Scientific, University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript, Technical and Commercial Education at small cost.” By 1911, five-year University of London evening degrees were available. The modernist Cecil Stephenson was appointed Head of Art in 1923 and, from 1925, University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript, courses were recognised by the Royal Institute of British Architects.
The North-Western Polytechnic was eventually opened by HRH The Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII) at Prince of Wales Road, Kentish Town in 1929. University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript. The Polytechnic later acquired premises at St. Pancras, Highbury (Ladbroke House) and Nos. 207–225 Essex Road. Concentrating on social sciences, humanities and arts, by 1967, University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript, when the printing department transferred to the London College of Printing (a founding member of the London Institute), the North-Western was the largest polytechnic in London. The Polytechnic of North London was founded by the 1971 merger of the Northern and North-Western polytechnics. University of North London fake certificate, fake degree, fake diploma, fake transcript. Its first Director was Terence Miller, former principal of the University of Rhodesia. Until the passing of the Education Reform Act 1988, it came under the control of the Inner London Education Authority, part of the then Greater London Council.