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Tetley Hall was a catered hall of residence located in Headingley at the University of Leeds, England. It housed around 218 students in one main block, comprised of two sections, Woodhouse and Heathfield, two listed Victorian buildings, Moorfield Lodge and Moor Grange, and four additional houses, Burton Grange, Burton Lea, the Cottage, and Moor Road House. The site was sold for £8.1 million in 2006 and is no longer used for student housing. The last academic year to live there was 2005/06. In the first term of 2007/08 one of the houses, Moor Road House, was used as temporary accommodation due to the shortage of normal university accommodation.== History == The first owner of Moorfield Lodge was J.W. Oxley who inherited the property from his wife in 1867. Moor Grange was owned by William Hall who was prominent in the affairs of the Leeds School of Medicine. The University's Annual Report of 1949-1950 records the purchase of these houses with grounds of almost four acres, with the intention that they should be incorporated into a large hall of residence. Plans and estimates were approved for the conversion and in 1951 it was resolved to accept a recommendation by the Vice-Chancellor that it might be appropriate for the new hall to be named 'Tetley Hall' in recognition of the long standing association between the Tetley's family of Leeds Brewers and the University.
   Burton Grange was bought as an annexe in 1953 and plans were initiated for a large scale conversion and enlargement of the main buildings, in view of the increase in student numbers. Burton Lea was acquired in 1954 and, on the strength of a possible grant of £30,000, the enlargement of Tetley Hall got under way. The first stage - the new dining room block, to accommodate 85-100 students, was opened by the University Chancellor H.R.H. The Princess Royal in July 1958. By 1962 the Woodhouse and Heathfield wings were completed and, with 160 students, Tetley was the largest women's hall in the University. About this time the university planned to demolish Moorfield Lodge and Moor Grange and replace them by a further purpose-built block to complement the Woodhouse and Healthfield wings on the other side. However a timely conservation order placed on both Victorian properties by Leeds City Council prevented this happening. After the extensions had been completed in 1962 the grounds were remodelled and landscaped, effectively uniting the houses and the new blocks together as a single community

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