London Borough of Harrow explained

Official Name:London Borough of Harrow
Settlement Type:London borough
Image Blank Emblem:London Borough of Harrow logo.svg
Blank Emblem Type:Council Logo
Blank Emblem Size:150px
Motto:Salus populi suprema lex
(The well-being of the people is the highest law)[1]
Subdivision Type:Sovereign state
Subdivision Name:United Kingdom
Subdivision Type2:Constituent country
Subdivision Name2:England
Subdivision Type3:Region
Subdivision Name3:London
Subdivision Type4:Ceremonial county
Subdivision Name4:Greater London
Established Title:Created
Established Date:1 April 1965
Seat Type:Admin HQ
Seat:Civic Centre
Station Road
Harrow
Government Type:London borough council
Governing Body:Harrow London Borough Council
Leader Title2:London Assembly
Leader Name2:Krupesh Hirani AM for Brent and Harrow
Leader Title3:MPs
Leader Name3:Gareth Thomas
Bob Blackman
David Simmonds
Leader Title4:Council leader
Leader Name4:Cllr Paul Osborn (Conservative)[2]
Area Total Km2:50.47
Area Rank: (of)
Population Rank: (of)
Population Density Km2:auto
Timezone:GMT
Utc Offset:±00:00UTC
Timezone Dst:BST
Utc Offset Dst:+1
Postal Code Type:Postcodes
Postal Code:,,
Area Code:020
Iso Code:GB-HRW
Blank1 Name:ONS code
Blank1 Info:00AQ
Blank2 Name:GSS code
Blank2 Info:E09000015
Blank Name Sec2:Police
Blank Info Sec2:Metropolitan Police
Website:http://www.harrow.gov.uk/

The London Borough of Harrow is a London borough in northwest London, England; it forms part of Outer London. It borders four other London boroughs Barnet to the east of ancient Watling Street (now the A5 road), Brent to the southeast, Ealing to the south and Hillingdon to the west and the Hertfordshire districts of Three Rivers and Hertsmere to the north. The local authority is Harrow London Borough Council. The London borough was formed in 1965, based on boundaries that had been established in 1934. The borough is made up of three towns: Harrow, Pinner and Stanmore, but also includes western parts of Edgware.

History

The area of the modern borough broadly corresponds to the three ancient parishes of Harrow on the Hill, Great Stanmore and Little Stanmore (also known as Whitchurch), all of which were historically in the county of Middlesex. Harrow on the Hill was the largest of the three parishes. Pinner was a chapelry of Harrow on the Hill until 1766 when it was made a separate parish.[3]

The central part of the parish of Harrow on the Hill was made a local board district in 1850, with an elected board overseeing public health and responsible for the provision of infrastructure. The local board district covered the original hilltop village and the adjoining hamlets of Roxeth, Sudbury and Greenhill.[4] Greenhill subsequently developed into the modern town centre of Harrow following the opening of Harrow-on-the-Hill station there in 1880.[5]

Such districts were reconstituted as urban districts under the Local Government Act 1894, which also said that parishes could no longer straddle district boundaries.[6] The parts of the old parish of Harrow on the Hill outside the urban district were therefore split into three new parishes called Harrow Weald, Wealdstone and Wembley (the latter now part of the London Borough of Brent). Wealdstone and Wembley were both made into urban districts at the same time.[7] [8]

The urban district was significantly enlarged by the Middlesex Review Order 1934 to take in the neighbouring urban district of Wealdstone and the parishes of Harrow Weald, Pinner, Great Stanmore and Little Stanmore. The urban district was renamed from 'Harrow on the Hill' to just 'Harrow' as part of the 1934 expansion. Harrow Urban District was incorporated as a municipal borough on 4 May 1954.[9] At the 1961 census, the borough had a population of 209,080, making it the most populous local government district in the administrative county of Middlesex.[10]

In 1965 the borough was transferred from Middlesex to Greater London under the London Government Act 1963. It kept the same boundaries, but was renamed the London Borough of Harrow, becoming one of the 32 London Boroughs. It was the only London borough which comprised a single pre-1965 district with no changes to its boundaries.[11] There has since been an adjustment to the borough's northern boundary, where the village of Elstree straddled Harrow and Hertfordshire; on 1 April 1993 Elstree was placed entirely in Hertfordshire (and its district of Hertsmere).[12]

Governance

See main article: Harrow London Borough Council. The local authority is Harrow Council, which meets at the Harrow Arts Centre in Pinner and has its main offices at the Council Hub on Kenmore Avenue in Wealdstone.[13] [14]

Greater London representation

Since 2000, for elections to the London Assembly, the borough forms part of the Brent and Harrow constituency.

Demographics

Location

Its site on and near the green belt and ease of access to central London (20 minutes by train to Marylebone and 12 minutes to Euston via West Midlands Trains) make Harrow a convenient place to live. Rising property prices in all London areas have helped to see a large increase in property redevelopment of its existing Edwardian and 1920s to 1940s housing stock.

Ethnicity

Harrow is a diverse borough, having 63.8% of its population from the BME (Black and Minority Ethnic) communities, with the largest group being of Indian ethnicity (specifically those from Gujarat and South India). The borough can also claim to have the largest concentration of Sri Lankan Tamils in the UK and Ireland as well as having the highest density of Gujarati Hindus in the UK.[15]

Ethnic GroupYear
1971 estimations[16] 1981 estimations[17] 1991 census[18] [19] 2001 census[20] 2011 census[21] 2021 census[22]
Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%Number%
White

Total

95.8%164,78185%149,68973.4%121,54358.77%100,99142.07%95,23336.46%
White: British103,207 49.90% 73,826 30.8% 53,567 20.51%
White: Irish9,057 4.38% 7,336 3.0% 5,608 2.15%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller181 0.07% 179 0.07%
White: Other9,279 4.49% 19,648 8.2% 34,458 13.19%
Asian or Asian British

Total

22,22311.4%42,73221%61,314 29.65% 101,808 42.2% 118,152 45.23%
Asian or Asian British: Indian17,5159%33,24616.3%45,310 21.91% 63,051 26.3% 74,744 28.62%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani1,3952,4064,3172.09% 7,797 3.2% 10,264 3.93%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi290552953 0.46% 1,378 0.5% 1,820 0.70%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese1,0031,8542,567 1.24% 2,629 1.0% 2,784 1.07%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 2,0204,67410,734 5.19% 26,953 11.2% 28,540 10.93%
Black or Black British

Total

4,7242.4%7,6643.8%12,703 6.14% 19,708 8.1% 19,151 7.33%
Black or Black British: African9411,7315,656 2.73% 8,526 3.5% 10,584 4.05%
Black or Black British: Caribbean2,8571.5%4,5372.2%6,116 2.96% 6,812 2.8% 6,514 2.49%
Black or Black British: Other Black9261,396931 0.45% 4,370 1.8% 2053 0.79%
Mixed or British Mixed

Total

5,840 2.82% 9,499 3.8% 9,833 3.76%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 1,371 0.66% 2,344 0.9% 2,187 0.84%
Mixed: White and Black African 633 0.31% 1,053 0.4% 1,104 0.42%
Mixed: White and Asian 2,018 0.98% 3,417 1.4% 3,140 1.20%
Mixed: Other Mixed 1,818 0.88% 2,685 1.1% 3,402 1.30%
Other: Total 2,2081.1%3,7141.8%2,847 1.38% 7,050 2.8% 18,836 7.21%
Other: Arab 3,708 1.5% 6,239 2.39%
Other: Any other ethnic group 2,847 1.38% 3,342 1.3% 12,597 4.82%
Ethnic minority: Total 4.8%29,15515%54,11026.6%85,271 41.23% 138,065 57.93% 165,972 63.54%
Total 100%193,936 100%203,799100%206,814 100.00% 239,056 100.00% 261,205 100.00%

Wards with the highest white British population were:

The lowest wards meanwhile were:

Since 2005, on the last Sunday in June Harrow Council hosts Under One Sky - Harrow's largest festival, to celebrate and the joint communities of Harrow. This has a programme of dance, world music, sports activity, youth music, spoken word, free children's activity, a carnival parade, information and stalls, health promotion, a world food zone and outside radio broadcast.

Religion

Harrow is the most religiously diverse local authority area in the UK, with a 62% chance that two random people are from different religions, according to Office for National Statistics, October 2006.[23] According to the 2011 census, 25.3% of Harrow's population identified themselves as Hindu - the highest in the UK. A large number of Jewish people live in Stanmore and Hatch End. The Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue boasts the largest membership of any single synagogue in the whole of Europe.[24] Harrow also has a sizable Muslim community, about 1 in 10 of its population.

As per the 2011 census, Harrow has a larger than average Jewish, Hindu and Muslim population.

Religion1995 estimates[25] 2021 census[26]
Population%Population%
Christianity33.9
Hinduism25.8
Islam15.9
Judaism14,1007%2.8
Jainism2.4
Buddhism1.1
Sikhism1.1
No religion10.6
Religion not stated5.9

Other

In a national detailed Land Use Survey by the Office for National Statistics in 2005 it was found that the London Borough of Harrow had the second highest proportion of land being domestic gardens: 34.7% of all 326 districts in England; this compared with the London Borough of Sutton's 35.1% (highest proportion nationally) and Bournemouth's 34.6%.[27]

Arts and culture

The first and only contemporary artist-led gallery in Harrow was set up in 2010 by the Usurp Art Collective. The space is called the Usurp Art Gallery & Studios and is based in West Harrow, a bohemian part of Harrow. Usurp Art provides professional support to artists and runs the only public artists studios in the borough. It is a flagship project for Arts Council England.[28] [29] [30] [31]

There are 289 listed buildings located in the London Borough of Harrow, including more than 80 in Harrow-on-the-Hill ward and over 50 in Pinner ward.[32] Grade I and II* buildings in the borough include the Church of St Lawrence, Stanmore and Headstone Manor, and Grade II listed buildings include Bentley Priory, Grim's Dyke and Harrow and Wealdstone station.

Economy

Major employers included Kodak,[33] the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital and Ladbrokes, which formally has its headquarters in Harrow.[34]

Crime

Crime figures are generally lower compared to the Greater London average; the borough had 2,618 notifiable offences in April 2009, compared with an average of 2,204 across London's boroughs.[35] Between the annual year of June 2017 to June 2018, Harrow was ranked 28th out of the 32 London boroughs in terms of number of criminal offences,[36] and recording just one murder in the period.[37] The Pinner South ward was recorded as having the lowest crime rate out of all wards of Greater London in 2014/15.[38]

Sport and leisure

The London Borough of Harrow has 4 non league football clubs, including Wealdstone FC who play at The Vale, Harrow Borough F.C. who play at Earlsmead Stadium and Rayners Lane F.C. who play at the Tithe Farm Social Club. Barnet F.C. are also based in Harrow, having moved into The Hive Stadium from the neighbouring London Borough of Barnet in 2013 after disagreements with the local authority over their former home Underhill Stadium. Five of the 30 cricket clubs which play in the Middlesex County Cricket League are based in the London Borough of Harrow: Harrow, Harrow St Mary's, Harrow Town, Kenton and Stanmore. Hatch End Cricket Club previously played at Shaftesbury playing fields in Hatch End but following an arson attack on their clubhouse and a subsequent failure to raise enough funds to build a new one, the club moved to Elstree in 2011.

Harrow also had a professional rugby league team when London Broncos played at The Hive Stadium in 2014 and 2015. The club relocated to Ealing from 2016 onwards.

Education

See also: List of schools in Harrow. The borough is often perceived as having a good educational record, and features many state-funded primary and secondary schools as well as a handful of large tertiary colleges.

For a long time the secondary schools of Harrow did not feature integrated sixth form education, with all school leavers having to join the tertiary colleges such as Harrow College and Stanmore College, or the faith-based St Dominic's Sixth Form College. The tertiary system was implemented in 1987 after years of discussions and delays, with Harrow becoming the first London borough with a complete change to tertiary; the Pinner Observer called it an education "revolution". There have been critics of the tertiary colleges, with many arguing the standard of education does not continue the standard set by the Borough's secondary schools. The council eventually went into another re-organisation, creating the Harrow Sixth Form Collegiate, a co-ordinated partnership between many of the borough's secondary schools, which led to the first admission of school sixth form students in September 2008.[39] Both Catholic faith-based Salvatorian College and Sacred Heart Language College were unaffected, the students of which could transfer to St Dominic's Sixth Form College.

From September 2010, the primary sector was modified to enable transfer to secondary education at age 11 in line with other London Boroughs.[40]

The Borough has a Music Service which provides instrumental tuition for 15% of all Harrow state sector pupils (the national figure is 8% of all state pupils receiving instrumental tuition) and a range of ensemble opportunities for pupils.[41]

The independent schools of the Borough are dominated by the presence of Harrow School and John Lyon School for boys and North London Collegiate School for girls which consistently rank as among the best schools in the country. Notable independent primary schools include Orley Farm School and Reddiford School, both of which are co-educational.

There are also a number of voluntary aided schools in the Borough. These include: Salvatorian College (Roman Catholic, boys), Sacred Heart Language College (Roman Catholic, girls) and Moriah Jewish Day School (Jewish, co-ed).

There are two special needs high schools; Kingsley High School (co-ed) and Shaftesbury High School (co-ed).

Other state secondary schools in the London Borough of Harrow are: Whitefriars High School (co-ed); Bentley Wood High School (girls); Canons High School (co-ed); Harrow High School (co-ed); Hatch End High School (co-ed); Nower Hill High School (co-ed); Park High School (co-ed); Rooks Heath School (co-ed); Whitmore High School (co-ed). Mountview High School in Wealdstone - a comprehensive school formed out of Whitefriars Secondary Modern in the early 1970s - closed in 1986 with the site being partially redeveloped into industrial units. The catchment area was dispersed between Nower Hill and Hatch End Schools.

Middle schools include Whitchurch Middle School.

GCSE examination performance
SchoolA*-C Pass Rate
2008
A*-C Pass Rate
2009
A*-C Pass Rate
2010
English Baccalaureate
Pass Rate
2010
A*-C Pass Rate
2011
English Baccalaureate
Pass Rate
2011
Bentley Wood High School59%58%61%30%69%36%
Canons High School49%46%54%2%52%12%
Harrow High School52%43%31%5%35%3%
Hatch End High School51%59%55%24%49%20%
Nower Hill High School68%57%79%27%78%16%
Park High School66%72%66%15%71%23%
Rooks Heath School37%42%52%11%48%12%
Sacred Heart College76%86%77%53%84%59%
Salvatorian College67%67%74%27%73%26%
Whitmore High School65%64%60%35%70%40%
Average for London Borough of Harrow57.7%60.8%60.7%22.6%tbatba
Average for England47.6%50.7%55.2%15.1%tbatba

All of Harrow's pupils have the chance to be elected onto the Harrow Youth Parliament. This is a group of around 50 young people in the Borough who come together to work on projects that benefit other young people. They are also the official youth voice for the council and are in constant communication with the council on all youth matters.

Notable residents

See main article: List of people from the London Borough of Harrow.

Transport

The London Borough of Harrow was historically in the heart of an area known as "Metro-land" and therefore is very well served by the London Underground compared with other boroughs in Outer London. It is located near the northwestern extremity of the modern-day network, with 4 lines serving the area. The Bakerloo and Jubilee lines terminate in the borough, at Harrow and Stanmore respectively. Meanwhile, the Piccadilly and Metropolitan lines pass through the southern edge of the borough on shared track before both terminating at Uxbridge. The Northern line terminates just outside Harrow at Edgware tube station in the London Borough of Barnet.

The London Overground also serves the borough, sharing track with the Bakerloo line between Queens Park and Harrow & Wealdstone before it continues beyond the latter station to eventually terminate at Watford Junction.

The numerous National Rail, London Overground and London Underground stations in the borough are:

In March 2011, the main forms of transport that residents used to travel to work were: driving a car or van, 27.5% of all residents aged 16–74; underground, metro, light rail, tram, 5.9%; bus, minibus or coach, 5.9%; train, 4.5%; on foot, 4.3%; work mainly at or from home, 3.5%; passenger in a car or van, 1.6%.[43]

Town twinning

Harrow is twinned with:

Coat of arms

A coat of arms was granted to Harrow Urban District Council in 1938. Supporters to the arms were granted in 1954, when the urban district was incorporated as a municipal borough. The municipal borough became the London Borough of Harrow in 1965, with unaltered boundaries, and thus the council retained use of the arms. The arms are also used by Harrow Borough F.C. The motto reads as "Salus Populi Suprema Lex" which translates from Latin as "The well-being of the people is the highest law."[44]

Freedom of the Borough

The following people and organisations have received the Freedom of the Borough of Harrow.

Individuals

Military units

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thain. Bruce. 13 May 2014. Translations of borough's motto needed for anniversary. 2 February 2021. Harrow Times. en.
  2. Web site: Councillor Paul Osborn . 24 September 2022 .
  3. Book: Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society: Volume 3 . 1870 . 181 . 20 May 2022.
  4. Book: Lawes . Edward . The Act for promoting the Public Health, with notes . 1851 . Shaw and Sons . London . 264–265 . 11 April 2024.
  5. Book: Hibbert . Christopher . Weinreb . Ben . Keay . John . Keay . Julia . The London Encyclopaedia . 2011 . 352 . 3rd . 20 May 2024.
  6. act. Local Government Act 1894. 1894. 73. 12 April 2024.
  7. Book: Annual Report of the Local Government Board . 1895 . 269 . 20 May 2024.
  8. Youngs, Frederic A Jr. (1979). Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, Vol.I: Southern England. London: Royal Historical Society.
  9. Web site: Harrow Urban District / Municipal Borough . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 12 April 2024.
  10. Web site: 1961 Census of England and Wales, County Report . A Vision of Britain through Time . GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth . 20 May 2024.
  11. Web site: The naming of the London Boroughs: Part One . LCC Municipal . 20 August 2023 . en . 29 June 2018.
  12. Web site: Elstree and Potters Bar. UK Births, Marriages and Deaths. 8 November 2021.
  13. Web site: Harrow's regeneration business plans approved . London Borough of Harrow . 12 April 2024 . 26 January 2024.
  14. News: Williams . Grant . Harrow Council's town hall will be demolished and turned into housing . 12 April 2024 . My London . 1 February 2023.
  15. Web site: London against gun and knife crime. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930184646/http://www.london.gov.uk/gangs/projects/harrow/index.jsp. dead. 30 September 2007.
  16. Web site: Migration and London’s growth . LSE.
  17. Book: Surveys, Great Britain Office of Population Censuses and . Ethnicity in the 1991 Census: Demographic characteristics of the ethnic minority populations . 1996 . H.M. Stationery Office . 978-0-11-691655-6 . en.
  18. Book: Surveys, Great Britain Office of Population Censuses and . Ethnicity in the 1991 Census: Demographic characteristics of the ethnic minority populations . 1996 . H.M. Stationery Office . 978-0-11-691655-6 . en.
  19. Web site: 1991 census – theme tables . 20 January 2017 . NOMIS.
  20. Web site: KS006 - Ethnic group . NOMIS . 30 January 2016.
  21. Web site: Ethnic Group by measures . NOMIS . 8 January 2016.
  22. Web site: Ethnic group - Office for National Statistics . 2022-11-29 . www.ons.gov.uk.
  23. Web site: Archived copy . 9 January 2007 . dead . http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20070109002329/http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/eth1006.pdf . 9 January 2007 . . National Statistics. Retrieved 8 October 2006.
  24. Web site: Partnership2Gether. The Jewish Agency. 19 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20110426075317/http://www.jewishagency.org/JewishAgency/English/Israel/Partnerships/Regions/Kavimut/Britain+Communities/Stanmore+11.htm. 26 April 2011. dead.
  25. Web site: A PROFILE OF BRITISH JEWRY - 1995 . 12.
  26. Web site: Religion - Religion in England and Wales: Census 2021, ONS .
  27. http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk Physical Environment: Land Use Survey 2005
  28. Web site: Archived copy . 23 October 2012 . dead . http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120904134134/http%3A//press.artscouncil.org.uk/Press%2DReleases/New%2Dart%2Dgallery%2Dopens%2Din%2DHarrow%2D3cc.aspx . 4 September 2012 .
  29. Web site: All the news from Harrow - getwestlondon. www.harrowobserver.co.uk. 19 April 2018.
  30. Web site: Lifestyle: lifestyle news for West London - Get West London. www.harrowobserver.co.uk. 19 April 2018.
  31. Web site: Home and Away: Group for War and Culture Studies – the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture – IMCC the Institute for Modern and Contemporary Culture . 23 October 2012 . dead . https://archive.today/20130114064736/http://instituteformodern.co.uk/author/marq/page/3 . 14 January 2013 .
  32. Web site: Listed Buildings in Harrow . 2022-10-27 . britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.
  33. News: Kodak: 123 years of history in Harrow. 30 March 2014. Harrow Times. 16 December 2013. Bruce Thain. After more than a century in the borough Kodak has announced it is set to stay.... Kodak has sold off large parts of the Harrow site for development..
  34. http://www.harrow.gov.uk/www2/documents/s63118/draft%20of%20Core%20Strategy.pdf Draft Core Strategy
  35. Web site: Police web site download in Excel format. https://web.archive.org/web/20120425015846/http://www.met.police.uk/crimestatistics/index.htm. dead. 25 April 2012.
  36. Web site: Which London boroughs are the most dangerous? | Metro News . Metro.co.uk . 31 July 2018 . 4 May 2020.
  37. Web site: Robin De Peyer . Revealed: The boroughs with the highest (and lowest) murder rates in London | London Evening Standard . Standard.co.uk . 23 June 2018 . 4 May 2020.
  38. Web site: Ward Profiles and Atlas. 4 May 2020.
  39. Web site: Harrow Sixth Form College: Decision Makers' Guidance. https://web.archive.org/web/20120911021230/http://www2.harrow.gov.uk/documents/s24090/Harrow%20Sixth%20Form%20Collegiate%20Annex%20D%20-%20Decision%20Makers%20Guidance.pdf . 2012-09-11 . live. Harrow Council.

  40. Web site: School reorganisation to change the ages of transfer. 2009. London borough of Harrow. 24 April 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090417122116/http://www.harrow.gov.uk/site/scripts/documents_info.php?categoryID=49&documentID=1361. 17 April 2009. dead.
  41. Web site: Harrow Music Service. Harrow Music Service. 19 April 2018.
  42. Web site: Search for schools and colleges to compare - GOV.UK. Find and compare schools in England.
  43. Web site: 2011 Census: QS701EW Method of travel to work, local authorities in England and Wales. Office for National Statistics. 23 November 2013. Percentages are of all residents aged 16-74 including those not in employment. Respondents could only pick one mode, specified as the journey’s longest part by distance.
  44. Web site: HARROW, LONDON BOROUGH OF. civicheraldry.co.uk.
  45. Web site: Churchill At Harrow. British. Pathé. www.britishpathe.com.
  46. Web site: Sir Roger recalls the run of his life. Harrow Times.
  47. Web site: Former mayor granted freedom of Harrow. Harrow Times.
  48. Web site: Further info – Freedoms granted by Harrow – Harrow Council. www.harrow.gov.uk. 20 August 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150823180213/http://www.harrow.gov.uk/info/200033/elections_and_representatives/884/freedoms_granted_by_harrow/2. 23 August 2015. dead.