Borough status in the United Kingdom






Borough status in the United Kingdom is granted by royal charter to local government districts in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The status is purely honorary, and does not give any additional powers to the council or inhabitants of the district. In Scotland, similarly chartered communities were known as royal burghs, although the status is no longer granted.




Contents






  • 1 Origins of borough status


  • 2 Modern borough status


    • 2.1 England and Wales


      • 2.1.1 England


      • 2.1.2 Wales




    • 2.2 Northern Ireland




  • 3 See also


  • 4 References


    • 4.1 Sources


    • 4.2 Citations




  • 5 External links


  • 6 Sources





Origins of borough status



Until the local government reforms of 1973 and 1974, boroughs were towns possessing charters of incorporation conferring considerable powers, and were governed by a municipal corporation headed by a mayor. The corporations had been reformed by legislation beginning in 1835 (1840 in Ireland). By the time of their abolition there were three types:



  • County boroughs


  • Municipal or non-county boroughs

  • Rural boroughs


Many of the older boroughs could trace their origin to medieval charters or were boroughs by prescription, with Saxon origins. Most of the boroughs created after 1835 were new industrial, resort or suburban towns that had grown up after the industrial revolution. Borough corporations could also have the status of a city.


For pre-1974 boroughs, see Municipal Corporations Act 1835, Boroughs incorporated in England and Wales 1835–1882, Unreformed boroughs in England and Wales 1835–1886, Boroughs incorporated in England and Wales 1882–1974, Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840



Modern borough status



England and Wales


Borough status no longer implies a town or urban area. Outside Greater London, borough status is granted to metropolitan and non-metropolitan districts under the provisions of section 245 of the Local Government Act 1972. This section allows the council of a district to petition the monarch for a charter granting borough status. The resolution must have the support of at least two-thirds of the councillors. Having received the petition the monarch may, on the advice of the Privy Council, grant a charter whereupon:



  • The district becomes a borough

  • The district council becomes the borough council

  • The chairman and vice-chairman become entitled to the style mayor and deputy mayor of the borough, except in councils that have an elected mayor under the Local Government Act 2000.


Charters granted under the 1972 Act may allow the borough council to appoint "local officers of dignity" previously appointed by an abolished borough corporation. Examples include:




  • Honorary Recorder: some borough and city councils have the right to appoint a circuit judge or recorder appointed under the Courts Act 1971 as honorary recorder. Usually this is the senior judge in the council's area.


  • Sheriff: These are appointed in a number of boroughs and cities that were formerly counties corporate.


  • High Steward: originally a judicial office, often held by a peer, now entirely ceremonial.


There is no obligation on the council to appoint persons to these positions.


In some boroughs the mayor has the additional title as "Admiral of the Port", recalling an historic jurisdiction. The Lord Mayors of Chester and Kingston-upon-Hull are Admirals of the Dee and the Humber respectively, the Mayor of Medway is Admiral of the River Medway, and the Mayors of Poole and Southampton are Admirals of those ports.[1][2][3][4][5]


Privileges or rights belonging to citizens or burgesses of a former borough can be transferred to the inhabitants of the new borough.


Borough councils are permitted to pass a resolution admitting "persons of distinction" and persons who have "rendered eminent service" to be an honorary freeman of the borough. This power has been used to grant freedom not only to individuals, but to units and ships of the armed forces.



England


Borough charters granted under section 245 of the Local Government Act 1972 to metropolitan and non-metropolitan districts of England








































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Year of charter
Previous boroughs
Notes

Allerdale
4 June 1992[6]

Workington (1883)

Charter trustees for Workington had existed 1974 to 1982

Amber Valley
17 May 1989[7]
None


Ashford
1 April 1974[8][9]

Tenterden (reformed 1835)
Tenterden formed a town council in 1974

Barnsley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Barnsley (1869)


Barrow-in-Furness
1 April 1974[8][9]

Barrow-in-Furness (1867)


Basildon
26 October 2010[10][11]
None


Basingstoke and Deane
20 January 1978[12]

Basingstoke (reformed 1835)
Basingstoke had charter trustees 1974–1978

Bath
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Bath (reformed 1835)
Abolished 1996

Bedford

See North Bedfordshire

Berwick-upon-Tweed
1 April 1974[8][9]
Berwick-upon-Tweed (reformed 1835)
Abolished in April 2009. Civic functions transferred to Berwick-upon-Tweed Town Council.[13]

Beverley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Beverley (reformed 1835)
Renamed East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley 1981. Abolished 1996.

Birmingham
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
Birmingham (1838), Sutton Coldfield (1885)[14]


Blackburn
1 April 1974[8][9]

Blackburn (1851), Darwen (1878)
Renamed Blackburn with Darwen 1997

Blackpool
1 April 1974[8][9]
Blackpool (1876)


Blyth Valley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Blyth (1922)
Abolished in April 2009.[13]

Bolton
1 April 1974[8][9]

Bolton (1838)


Boothferry
28 April 1978[15]

Goole (1933)
Goole had charter trustees 1974–1978. Abolished 1996.

Boston
1 April 1974[8][9]

Boston (reformed 1835)


Bournemouth
1 April 1974[8][9]
Bournemouth (1890)


Bracknell Forest
27 April 1988[16]
None


Bradford
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Bradford (1847)


Brentwood
10 March 1993[17]
None


Brighton
1 April 1974[8][9]
Brighton (1854)
Abolished 1997.

Brighton & Hove
1 April 1997[18] (granted city status in 2000)

Formed from Brighton, Hove districts

Bristol
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
Bristol (reformed 1835)


Broxbourne
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Broxtowe
10 November 1977[12]
None


Burnley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Burnley (1861)


Bury
1 April 1974[8][9]

Bury (1876)


Calderdale
1 April 1974[8][9]

Halifax (1848), Brighouse (1893), Todmorden (1896)


Cambridge
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Cambridge (reformed 1835)


Canterbury
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Canterbury (reformed 1835)


Carlisle
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Carlisle (reformed 1835)


Castle Morpeth
1 April 1974[8][9]

Morpeth (reformed 1835)
Abolished in April 2009.[13][19]

Castle Point
1992[20]
None


Charnwood
1 April 1974[8][9]

Loughborough (1888)


Chelmsford
10 November 1977[12]

Chelmsford (1888)
Chelmsford had charter trustees 1974–1977

Granted city status in 2012



Cheltenham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Cheltenham (1876)


Cheshire East
2009[21]

Congleton, Crewe and Nantwich, Macclesfield
Created April 2009

Cheshire West and Chester
2009[21]

Chester, Ellesmere Port and Neston, Vale Royal
Created April 2009

Chester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Chester (reformed 1835)
Abolished April 2009

Chesterfield
1 April 1974[8][9]

Chesterfield (reformed 1835)


Chorley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Chorley (1881)


Christchurch
1 April 1974[8][9]

Christchurch (reformed 1886)


Cleethorpes
11 September 1975[22]

Cleethorpes (1936)
Cleethorpes had charter trustees 1974–1975. Borough abolished 1996

Colchester
1 April 1974[8][9]

Colchester (reformed 1835)


Congleton
1 April 1974[8][9]

Congleton (reformed 1835)
Abolished April 2009

Copeland
1 April 1974[8][9]

Whitehaven (1894)


Corby
28 October 1992[17]
None


Coventry
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Coventry (reformed 1835)


Crawley
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Crewe and Nantwich
1 April 1974[8][9]

Crewe (1877)
Abolished April 2009

Dacorum
10 October 1984[23]

Hemel Hempstead (1898)
Hemel Hempstead had charter trustees 1974–1984

Darlington
1 April 1974[8][9]

Darlington (1867)


Dartford
22 April 1977[24]

Dartford (1933)
Dartford had charter trustees 1974–1977

Derby
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status in 1977)

Derby (reformed 1835)


Doncaster
1 April 1974[8][9]

Doncaster (reformed 1835)


Dudley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Dudley (1865), Stourbridge (1914), Halesowen (1936)


Durham
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Durham and Framwellgate (reformed 1835)
Abolished April 2009. Charter Trustees established.[25]

East Staffordshire
11 May 1992[17]

Burton upon Trent (1878)

Charter trustees for Burton functioned 1974–1992.
They were formally abolished in 2003.

East Yorkshire

See North Wolds

East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley

See Beverley

Eastbourne
1 April 1974[8][9]

Eastbourne (1883)


Eastleigh
1 April 1974[8][9]

Eastleigh (1936)


Ellesmere Port
1 April 1974[8][9]

Ellesmere Port (1955)
renamed Ellesmere Port and Neston 1976. Abolished April 2009.

Elmbridge
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Epsom and Ewell
1 April 1974[8][9]

Epsom and Ewell (1937)


Erewash
1975

Ilkeston (1887)
Ilkeston had charter trustees 1974–1975

Exeter
1 April 1974[8][9](and city status)

Exeter (reformed 1835)


Fareham
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Fylde
1 April 1974[8][9]

Lytham St. Annes (1922)


Gateshead
1 April 1974[8][9]

Gateshead (reformed 1835)


Gedling
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Gillingham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Gillingham (1903)
Abolished 1996

Glanford
1 April 1974[8][9]
None
Abolished 1996

Gloucester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Gloucester (reformed 1835)


Gosport
1 April 1974[8][9]

Gosport (1922)


Gravesham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Gravesend (reformed 1835)


Great Yarmouth
1 April 1974[8][9]

Great Yarmouth (reformed 1835)


Grimsby
1 April 1974[8][9]
Grimsby (reformed 1835)
Renamed Great Grimsby 1979, abolished 1996.

Guildford
1 April 1974[8][9]

Guildford (reformed 1835)


Halton
1 April 1974[8][9]

Widnes (1892)


Harrogate
1 April 1974[8][9]

Harrogate (1884)


Hartlepool
1 April 1974[8][9]

Hartlepool formed 1967 from Hartlepool (1850), West Hartlepool (1887)


Hastings
1 April 1974[8][9]

Hastings (reformed 1835)


Havant
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Hereford
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Hereford (reformed 1835)
Abolished 1998

Hertsmere
15 April 1977[24]
None


High Peak
1 April 1974[8][9]

Glossop (1866), Buxton (1917)


Hinckley and Bosworth
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Holderness
21 June 1977[26]

Hedon (1861) (formed a town council in 1974)
Abolished 1996

Hove
1 April 1974[8][9]

Hove (1898)
Abolished 1997

Hyndburn
1 April 1974[8][9]

Accrington (1878)


Ipswich
1 April 1974[8][9]

Ipswich (reformed 1835)


Kettering
1 April 1974[8][9]

Kettering (1938)


King's Lynn and West Norfolk

See West Norfolk

Kingston upon Hull
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Kingston upon Hull (reformed 1835)


Kingswood
20 May 1987[7]
None
Abolished 1996

Kirklees
1 April 1974[8][9]

Dewsbury (1862), |Huddersfield (1868), Batley (1868), Spenborough (1955)


Knowsley
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Lancaster
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Lancaster (reformed 1835)


Langbaurgh
1 April 1974[8][9]
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Redcar (incorporated in 1921)
Renamed Langbaurgh on Tees 1988

Renamed Redcar and Cleveland 1996



Leeds
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Leeds (reformed 1835), Pudsey(1889)


Leicester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Leicester (reformed 1835)


Lincoln
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Lincoln (reformed 1835)


Liverpool
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Liverpool (reformed 1835)


Luton
1 April 1974[8][9]

Luton (1876)


Macclesfield
1 April 1974[8][9]

Macclesfield (reformed 1835)
Abolished April 2009

Maidstone
1 April 1974[8][9]

Maidstone (reformed 1835)


Manchester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Manchester (1838)


Medina
1 April 1974[8][9]

Newport (reformed 1835), Ryde (1868)
Abolished 1995

Medway (1)
1 April 1974[8][9]

Rochester (reformed 1835), Chatham (1890)
Renamed Rochester-upon-Medway 1979, and awarded city status.

Abolished 1998



Medway (2)
1998
From Rochester upon Medway, Gillingham boroughs (q.v.)


Melton
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Middlesbrough
1 April 1974[8][9]
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Middlesbrough (incorporated in 1853)


Milton Keynes
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Newcastle-under-Lyme
1 April 1974[8][9]

Newcastle-under-Lyme (reformed 1835)


Newcastle upon Tyne
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Newcastle upon Tyne (reformed 1835)


Northampton[27]
1 April 1974[8][9]

Northampton (reformed 1835)


North Bedfordshire
1975

Bedford (reformed 1835)
Renamed Bedford 1992

North East Lincolnshire
1996
From Cleethorpes, Great Grimsby boroughs (q.v.)
Both former boroughs formed charter trustees

North Lincolnshire
1998
Formed from Boothferry, Glanford, and Scunthorpe boroughs (q.v.)
Scunthorpe's mayoralty is continued by charter trustees

North Tyneside
1 April 1974[8][9]

Tynemouth (1849), Wallsend (1901)


North Warwickshire
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


North Wolds
1 April 1974[8][9]

Bridlington (1899)
Renamed East Yorkshire 1981.

Abolished 1996



Norwich
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Norwich (reformed 1835)


Nottingham
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Nottingham (reformed 1835)


Nuneaton
1 April 1974[8][9]

Nuneaton (1907)
Renamed Nuneaton and Bedworth 1980

Oadby and Wigston
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Oldham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Oldham (1849)


Oswestry
1 April 1974[8][9]

Oswestry Rural Borough (reformed 1835)
Abolished in April 2009.

Oxford
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Oxford (reformed 1835)


Pendle
15 September 1976[22]

Nelson (1890), Colne (1895)


Peterborough
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Peterborough (1874)


Plymouth
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Plymouth (reformed 1835)


Poole
1 April 1974[8][9]

Poole (reformed 1835)


Portsmouth
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Portsmouth (reformed 1835)


Preston
1 April 1974[8][9] (granted city status in 2002)

Preston (reformed 1835)


Reading
1 April 1974[8][9]

Reading (reformed 1835)


Redcar and Cleveland

See Langbaurgh

Redditch
15 May 1980[28]
None


Reigate and Banstead
1 April 1974[8][9]

Reigate (reformed (1863)


Restormel
1 April 1974[8][9]

St. Austell with Fowey (formed 1968, including Fowey 1913)
Abolished in April 2009.

Ribble Valley
1 April 1974[8][9]

Clitheroe (reformed 1835)


Rochdale
1 April 1974[8][9]

Rochdale (1856), Heywood (1881), Middleton (1886)


Rochester upon Medway

See Medway (1)

Rossendale
1 April 1974[8][9]

Bacup (1882), Haslingden (1891), Rawtenstall (1891)


Rotherham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Rotherham, (1871)


Rugby
1 April 1974[8][9]

Rugby (1932)


Runnymede
20 January 1978[12]
None


Rushcliffe
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Rushmoor
1 April 1974[8][9]

Aldershot (1922)


St Albans
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

St Albans (reformed 1835)


St Edmundsbury
1 April 1974[8][9]

Bury St Edmunds (reformed 1835)


St Helens
1 April 1974[8][9]

St Helens (1868)


Salford
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Salford (1844), Eccles (1892), Swinton and Pendlebury (1934)


Sandwell
1 April 1974[8][9]

West Bromwich (1882), including since 1966 the former boroughs of Tipton (1938) and Wednesbury (1886);[29]Warley (1966), including the former boroughs of Smethwick (1899), Rowley Regis (1933), and Oldbury(1935)


Scarborough
1 April 1974[8][9]

Scarborough (reformed 1835)


Scunthorpe
1 April 1974[8][9]

Scunthorpe (1936)
Abolished 1996

Sedgefield
1996
None
Abolished April 2009. Mayoralty continued by Sedgefield Town Council[25]

Sefton
1975

Southport (1866), Bootle (1868), Crosby (1937)
All three towns formed charter trustees 1974–1975

Sheffield
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Sheffield (1843)


Shrewsbury and Atcham
1 April 1974[8][9]

Shrewsbury (reformed 1835)
Abolished in April 2009.[30]

Slough
1 April 1974[8][9]

Slough (1938)


Solihull
1 April 1974[8][9]

Solihull (1954)


Southampton
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Southampton (reformed 1835)


Southend-on-Sea
1 April 1974[8][9]

Southend-on-Sea (1892)


South Ribble
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


South Tyneside
1 April 1974[8][9]

South Shields (1850), Jarrow (1875)


South Wight
1974?
None
Abolished 1995

Spelthorne
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Stafford
1 April 1974[8][9]

Stafford (reformed 1835)


Stevenage
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Stockport
1 April 1974[8][9]

Stockport (reformed 1835)


Stockton-on-Tees
1 April 1974[8][9]
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Stockton-on-Tees (reformed 1835) and Thornaby-on-Tees (incorporated in 1892)


Stoke-on-Trent
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Stoke-on-Trent formed 1910, including boroughs of Hanley (incorporated in 1857), Longton (1865), Burslem (1878), Stoke-upon-Trent (1874).


Sunderland
1 April 1974[8][9] (granted city status in 1992)

Sunderland (reformed 1835)


Surrey Heath
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Swale
20 January 1978[12]

Faversham (reformed 1835), Queenborough-in-Sheppey (created 1968, including borough of Queenborough, reformed in 1885)
Queenborough-in-Sheppey formed charter trustees 1974–1977

Swindon

See Thamesdown

Tameside
1 April 1974[8][9]

Ashton-under-Lyne (1847), Stalybridge (1857), Hyde (1881), Mossley (1885), Dukinfield (1899)


Tamworth
1 April 1974[8][9]

Tamworth (reformed 1835)


Taunton Deane
1975

Taunton (1885)
Taunton had charter trustees 1974–1975

Telford and Wrekin
2002
None


Test Valley
22 October 1976[22]

Andover, Romsey, both reformed 1835
Andover had charter trustees 1974–1976. Romsey formed a town council.

Tewkesbury
1 April 1974[8][9]

Tewkesbury (reformed 1835)


Thamesdown
1 April 1974[8][9]

Swindon (1900)
Renamed Swindon 1997

Thurrock
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Tonbridge and Malling
12 December 1983[31]
None


Torbay
1 April 1974[8][9]

County borough of Torbay – created 1968, and including the borough of Torquay incorporated in 1892


Trafford
1 April 1974[8][9]

Stretford (1933), Sale (1935), Altrincham (1937)


Tunbridge Wells
1 April 1974[8][9]

Royal Tunbridge Wells (1888)

Charter trustees for Royal Tunbridge Wells existed from 1 April to 20 December 1974

Vale Royal
5 May 1988[16]
None
Abolished April 2009

Wakefield
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Pontefract (reformed 1835), Wakefield (1848), Ossett (1890), Castleford (1955)


Walsall
1 April 1974[8][9][32]

Walsall (reformed 1835)

Warrington
1 April 1974[8][9]

Warrington (1847)


Watford
1 April 1974[8][9]

Watford (1922)


Waverley
21 February 1984[31]

Godalming (reformed 1835)
Godalming formed a town council in 1974

Wellingborough
1 April 1974[8][9]
None


Welwyn Hatfield
2006
None


West Devon
27 April 1982[33]

Okehampton (reformed 1885)
Okehampton formed a town council in 1974

West Norfolk
30 June 1981[28]

King's Lynn (reformed 1835)
Renamed King's Lynn and West Norfolk 14 May 1981[28]

West Lancashire
2009[34]
None


Weymouth and Portland
1 April 1974[8][9]

Weymouth and Melcombe Regis (reformed 1835)


Wigan
1 April 1974[8][9]

Wigan (reformed 1835), Leigh (1899)


Winchester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Winchester (reformed 1835)


Windsor and Maidenhead
1 April 1974[8][9] (Royal Borough)

Windsor, Maidenhead, both reformed 1835


Wirral
1 April 1974[8][9]

Birkenhead (1877), Wallasey (1910), Bebington (1937)


Woking
1 April 1974[8][9]
none


Wokingham
2007[35]

Wokingham (reformed 1883)
Wokingham formed a town council in 1974

Wolverhampton
1 April 1974.[8][9] Granted city status 2000

Wolverhampton (1848). Had absorbed the borough of Bilston in 1967 (incorporated in 1938).


Worcester
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

Worcester (reformed 1835)


Worthing
1 April 1974[8][9]

Worthing, 1890


Wyre
1 April 1974[8][9]

Fleetwood (1933)


York (1)
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)

York (reformed 1835)
The District was abolished and replaced with a larger unitary authority in 1996

York (2)
1996 (and city status)
Created in 1996. Inherited traditions from the smaller York district.

Greater London is divided into thirty-two London boroughs. Their borough status dates from 1965, although each of them had previously included municipal, county or metropolitan boroughs:








































































































































































London borough
Previous boroughs
Notes

Barking

Barking (1931), Dagenham (1938)
Renamed Barking and Dagenham 1981

Barnet

Hendon (1932), Finchley (1933)


Bexley

Bexley (1937), Erith (1938)


Brent

Willesden (1933), Wembley (1937)


Bromley

Bromley (1903), Beckenham (1935)


Camden

Hampstead, Holborn, St Pancras all created 1900


Croydon

Croydon (1883)


Ealing

Ealing (1901), Acton (1921), Southall (1936)


Enfield

Southgate (1933), Edmonton (1937), Enfield (1955)


Greenwich (Royal Borough)

Greenwich, Woolwich both created 1900


Hackney

Hackney, Shoreditch, Stoke Newington all created 1900


Hammersmith

Hammersmith, Fulham both created 1900
Renamed Hammersmith and Fulham 1981

Haringey

Hornsey (1903), Wood Green (1933), Tottenham (1934)


Harrow

Harrow (1954)


Havering

Romford (1937)


Hillingdon

Uxbridge (1955)


Hounslow

Brentford and Chiswick, Heston and Isleworth both incorporated in 1932


Islington

Islington, Finsbury both created 1900


Kensington and Chelsea (Royal Borough)

Kensington, Chelsea both created 1900


Kingston upon Thames (Royal Borough)

Kingston upon Thames (reformed 1835), Malden and Coombe (1936), Surbiton (1936)


Lambeth

Lambeth created 1900


Lewisham

Lewisham, Deptford both created 1900


Merton

Wimbledon (1905), Mitcham (1934)


Newham

West Ham (1886), East Ham (1904)


Redbridge

Ilford (1926), Wanstead and Woodford (1937)


Richmond upon Thames

Richmond (1890), Twickenham (1926), Barnes (1932)


Southwark

Bermondsey, Camberwell, Southwark all created 1900


Sutton

Sutton and Cheam (1934), Beddington and Wallington (1937)


Tower Hamlets

Bethnal Green, Poplar, Stepney all created 1900


Waltham Forest

Leyton (1926), Walthamstow (1929), Chingford (1938)


Wandsworth

Battersea, Wandsworth both created 1900


Westminster (and city status)

Paddington, St Marylebone, Westminster all created 1900



Wales


Borough charters granted under section 245 of the Local Government Act 1972 to Welsh districts









































































































































































District
Year of charter
Previous boroughs
Notes

Aberconwy
1974

Conway (1885)


Afan
1974

Port Talbot (formed 1921, including borough of Aberavon, reformed 1861)
Renamed Port Talbot 1986

Arfon
1974

Caernarvon (reformed 1835), Bangor (reformed 1883)
Bangor and Caernarfon formed town councils

Blaenau Gwent
1975
None


Brecknock
1974

Brecon (reformed 1835)
Brecon formed a town council

Cardiff
1974 (and city status)

Cardiff (reformed 1835)


Colwyn
1974

Colwyn Bay (1934)


Cynon Valley
By November 1974
None


Delyn
1974

Flint (reformed 1835)
Flint formed a town council

Dinefwr
1974

Llandovery (reformed 1835)
Llandovery formed a town council

Islwyn
1974
None


Llanelli
1974

Kidwelly (reformed 1885), Llanelli (1913)
Kidwelly and Llanelli formed town councils

Lliw Valley
1974
None


Merthyr Tydfil
1974

Merthyr Tydfil (1905)


Monmouth
1988

Monmouth (reformed 1835), Abergavenny (1899)
Abergavenny and Monmouth formed town councils

Neath
1974

Neath (reformed 1835)
Neath formed a town council

Newport
1974 (granted city

status in 2002)



Newport (reformed 1835)


Ogwr
1974
None


Port Talbot

See Afan

Rhondda
1974

Rhondda (1955)


Rhuddlan
1974
None


Swansea
1974 (and city status)

Swansea (reformed 1835)


Taff-Ely
1974
None


Torfaen
1974
None


Vale of Glamorgan
1974

Cowbridge (1887), Barry (1938)
Cowbridge and Barry formed town councils

Wrexham Maelor
1974

Wrexham (1857)


Ynys Mon – Isle of Anglesey
1974

Beaumaris (reformed 1835)
Beaumaris formed a town council

The districts created in 1974 were abolished in 1996 by the Local Government (Wales) Act 1994. The 1994 Act amended section 245 of the Local Government Act 1972, allowing for the new unitary county councils established by the Act to apply for a charter in a similar manner to the old district councils. On receiving a charter a county became a "county borough".


Welsh unitary authorities granted a charter in 1996 bestowing county borough status











































































County borough
Previous boroughs
Notes

Aberconwy and Colwyn

Aberconwy, Colwyn
Renamed Conwy 1996

Blaenau Gwent

Blaenau Gwent


Bridgend

Ogwr


Caerphilly

Islwyn


Cardiff
Cardiff has the status of a "city and county" by letters patent

Conwy
See Aberconwy and Colwyn

Merthyr Tydfil

Merthyr Tydfil


Neath and Port Talbot

Neath, Port Talbot
Renamed Neath Port Talbot 1996

Newport

Newport
Became "city and county" in 2002

Rhondda Cynon Taff

Cynon Valley, Rhondda, Taff-Ely


Swansea
Swansea has the status of a "city and county" by letters patent

Torfaen

Torfaen


Vale of Glamorgan

Vale of Glamorgan


Wrexham

Wrexham Maelor



Northern Ireland


The privileges of borough status are that the council chairperson is called "mayor" and up to one quarter of councillors can be called "alderman", and the council can award freedom of the borough.[36][37] The Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 extinguished all the boroughs in Ireland except for ten. In what would in 1921 become Northern Ireland, there were two remaining municipal boroughs in 1840: Belfast (made a city in 1888) and Derry (officially Londonderry, and a city since 1604). Five towns with abolished corporations remained parliamentary boroughs until 1885 (Armagh, Carrickfergus, Coleraine, Dungannon, and Enniskillen) as did three (Downpatrick, Lisburn, and Newry)[38] where any corporation was defunct by 1801. Several of the urban districts in Northern Ireland created under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 later received charters granting borough status. The Local Government Act (Northern Ireland) 1972 replaced the multi-tier local government system with 26 unitary districts whose councils could retain the charter of a borough within the district; other districts later received borough charters in their own right. The 2015 local government reforms replaced the 26 districts with 11 larger districts. The "statutory transition committee" handling each council merger had the right to request transfer of borough status as in 1972,[39][40][41] and unionist-majority councils did so, while nationalist-majority councils chose not to apply.[42] There were complications where places had city status;[43][44] therefore Belfast, Derry and Lisburn's borough charters carried over automatically, without the need for the council to pass a resolution.[45] Although Newry received city status in 2002, Newry and Mourne District Council did not receive borough status. In 2015 its successor Newry, Mourne and Down District Council voted not to request borough status, the required two-thirds majority failing after opposition from Sinn Féin.[46]











































































































































Northern Ireland boroughs since 1840
2015 borough 1972–2015 borough pre-1972 borough Year of charter Notes

Antrim and Newtownabbey[47]

Antrim

1977

Antrim town's borough status was extinguished in 1840. It was Antrim's borough charter which the merged council opted to preserve in 2015.[47]
Antrim and Newtownabbey

Newtownabbey

1977


Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon[48]

Armagh

1997[49]

Armagh town already had city status granted by letters patent in 1994. Its previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. It was Armagh's borough charter which the merged council opted to preserve in 2015.[48]
Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon

Craigavon

Portadown, Lurgan
1947,[50] 1949


Belfast[45]

Belfast

Belfast
1613[51]
Charter reformed 1840. City status by letters patent of 1888.

Causeway Coast and Glens[52]

Ballymoney

1977

Causeway Coast and Glens

Coleraine

Coleraine
1928
Coleraine's previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. It was Coleraine's borough charter which the merged council opted to preserve in 2015.[52]
Causeway Coast and Glens

Limavady

1989


Derry and Strabane[45]

Derry

Londonderry
1604[53]
Charter reformed 1840. District and borough renamed Derry 1984; name of city remains Londonderry (see Derry/Londonderry name dispute).[54]

Lisburn and Castlereagh[45]

Castlereagh

1977
The new district council is called Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council.[55]
Lisburn and Castlereagh

Lisburn

Lisburn
1964.
Lisburn was granted city status by letters patent in 2002.

Mid and East Antrim[56]

Ballymena

Ballymena
1937

Mid and East Antrim

Carrickfergus

Carrickfergus
1939
Carrickfergus's previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. It was Carrickfergus's borough charter which the merged council opted to preserve in 2015.[56]
Mid and East Antrim

Larne

Larne
1938


Ards and North Down

Ards

Newtownards
1927
Newtownards' previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. The "North Down and Ards" statutory transition committee voted in 2014 to apply for borough status for the merged district council under the name "East Coast Borough Council",[57] but negative public reaction prompted a rethink,[58] and the name "Ards and North Down" was not finalised until 2016.[59] The charter transfer was delayed until after this.[60]

Ards and North Down

North Down

Bangor
1927
Bangor's previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. It was North Down's borough charter which the merged council opted to preserve in 2016.[60]


Dungannon and South Tyrone

1999
Borough status was simultaneous with 1999 renaming the district from "Dungannon".[61][62]Dungannon town's borough status was extinguished in 1840. Now in Mid-Ulster District.



Enniskillen
1949[63]
Previous borough status was extinguished in 1840. In 1967, Enniskillen Borough Council lost its administrative functions to Fermanagh County Council, but retained its ceremonial role.[64] The post-1972 Fermanagh District Council did not inherit Enniskillen's borough status. Since 2015 in Fermanagh and Omagh District.


See also


  • City status in the United Kingdom


References



Sources



  • DOENI (Department of the Environment (Northern Ireland)) (20 October 2014). "Draft Local Government (Transitional, Incidental, Consequential and Supplemental Provisions) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2014: Charters and Status: Consultation Document" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 April 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2016..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


Citations





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  20. ^ "The Civic Insignia". Castle Point Council. Archived from the original on 26 September 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2012.


  21. ^ ab "Orders approved at the Privy Council held by the Queen at Buckingham Palace on 10th December 2008". Orders in Council. Privy Council. 2008. Archived from the original on 27 March 2009. Retrieved 23 December 2008.


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  27. ^ "Northampton Charter". The Times. 29 November 1973. p. 4.


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  36. ^ DOENI 2014, p.4 §5


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  39. ^ DOENI 2014, pp.4–6 §§5,9,10


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  43. ^ COMMITTEE FOR THE ENVIRONMENT (1 October 2009). "Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill". Hansard. Northern Ireland Assembly. Retrieved 7 January 2016. Our difficulty is in relation to the cities. Some of the city statuses that have been awarded in the past refer to the borough, and some refer to the previous town. We are having a little difficulty in sorting out the legal implications of that.


  44. ^ "Local Government Bill: Informal Clause-by-clause Scrutiny". Hansard. NI Assembly. 30 January 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2016. While in some cases it is not going to have a major effect, in the case of, for example, the cities, particularly Lisburn, it could have a major effect on their status.


  45. ^ abcd "The Local Government (Transitional, Incidental, Consequential and Supplemental Provisions) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2015". legislation.gov.uk. pp. sec. 3(3)(a, b). Retrieved 7 January 2016.


  46. ^ "Borough Status Proposal For Newry Mourne And Down Council Collapses". Down News. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 7 January 2016.


  47. ^ ab "The adoption of Borough Status by Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council". Belfast Gazette. 17 April 2015.


  48. ^ ab "Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council". Belfast Gazette. 27 March 2015.


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  50. ^ "Crown Office". Belfast Gazette (1361): 179. 25 July 1947. Retrieved 8 January 2016.


  51. ^ Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in Ireland (1835). Appendix to the First Report ...: Southern, midland, western and south-eastern circuits, and part of the north-eastern circuit. p. 697. Retrieved 7 January 2016.


  52. ^ ab "CAUSEWAY COAST AND GLENS COUNCIL". Belfast Gazette. 10 April 2015.


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  55. ^ Hughes, Brendan (24 June 2015). "The new city of 'Lisburn and Castlereagh'". The Irish News. Retrieved 7 January 2016.


  56. ^ ab "NOTICE OF RESOLUTION OF BOROUGH STATUS". The Belfast Gazette. 13 March 2015.


  57. ^ "New name signifies a new beginning for local Council". Ards and North Down Borough Council. 17 December 2014. Archived from the original on 12 January 2015. Retrieved 7 January 2016. In the New Year the Council will formally apply for Borough status and will submit an application to the DoE to change the name to East Coast Borough Council with effect from 1 April 2015; until then the Council will be known as North Down and Ards District Council


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  60. ^ ab "Ards and North Down Borough Council". The Belfast Gazette (7794): 33, notice ID 2462059. 15 January 2016.


  61. ^ "Visits to District Councils (AQW 712/99)". Written Answers to Questions. Northern Ireland Assembly. 30 June 2000. Retrieved 2 August 2013.


  62. ^ "Change of District Name (Dungannon) Order (Northern Ireland) 1999 No. 426". legislation.data.gov.uk. 14 October 1999. Retrieved 2 August 2013.


  63. ^ "Crown Office". Belfast Gazette (1454): 99. 6 May 1949. Retrieved 8 January 2016.


  64. ^ County Fermanagh (Transfer of Functions) Order (Northern Ireland) 1967 (S.R. & O. (Northern Ireland) 1967 No. 60); see Stormont (15 March 1967). "County Fermanagh (Transfer of Functions) Order". Hansard. Parliament of Northern Ireland. pp. Vol.86 p.68. Retrieved 8 January 2016. The order provides for the transfer on 2nd June, 1967, of the functions, liabilities, property and staff of the borough and rural district councils to a reconstituted county council. ... The rural district councils will, in fact, be abolished. But the borough council, consisting in future of the 12 county councillors representing the area of the borough, will remain to exercise the ceremonial functions of the borough.




External links



  • Text of charter granted to Charnwood, 15 May 1974

  • Charters of Hereford


  • Minutes of Privy Councilheld on 14 March 2001, where approval was given for the grant of a charter to Telford and the Wrekin

  • Text of charter granted to West Devon, 26 April 1982



Sources



  • Local Government Act 1972

  • Local Government (Wales) Act 1994


  • Whitaker's Almanac 1975, 1986, 1995 editions


  • Local Government in England and Wales : A guide to the New System, HMSO, London 1974









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