Hoxne Rural District Explained

Hoxne
Start:1894
End:1934
Map:
Location within East Suffolk, 1894

Hoxne Rural District was a rural district within the administrative county of East Suffolk between 1894 and 1934. It was created out of the earlier Hoxne rural sanitary district.[1] It was named after the historic hundred of Hoxne, whose boundaries it closely matched. The hundred, in turn, took its name from the village of Hoxne.

In 1934, under a County Review Order, Hoxne Rural District was abolished and its parishes transferred to Hartismere Rural District, and in 1974 to Mid Suffolk district. 3 parishes went into the new Blyth Rural District.

Statistics

YearArea[2] Population
[3]
Density
(pop/ha)
acresha
1911 52,842 21,385 10,408 0.49
1921 9,631 0.45
1931 9,045 0.42

Parishes

Parishes which would be transferred to Hartismere RD: Athelington, Bedfield, Bedingfield, Brundish, Denham, Fressingfield, Horham, Hoxne, Laxfield, Mendham, Metfield, Monk Soham, Southolt, Stradbroke, Syleham, Tannington, Weybread, Wilby, Wingfield, Worlingworth.

Transferred to Blyth RD: Badingham, Dennington, Saxtead

References

  1. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Hoxne RD through time: Census tables with data for the Local Government District. A Vision of Britain through Time. 9 Jul 2017.
  2. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Hoxne RD through time: Population Statistics: Area (acres). A Vision of Britain through Time. 9 Jul 2017.
  3. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Hoxne RD through time: Population Statistics: Total Population. A Vision of Britain through Time. 9 Jul 2017.

52.3°N 1.28°W