Metropolis Management Act 1855 Explained

Short Title:Metropolis Management Act 1855[1]
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act for the better Local Management of the Metropolis
Year:1855
Statute Book Chapter:18 & 19 Vict. c. 120
Territorial Extent:England and Wales
Royal Assent:14 August 1855
Status:partially_repealed
Original Text:https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Vict/18-19/120/contents/enacted
Use New Uk-Leg:yes

The Metropolis Management Act 1855 (18 & 19 Vict. c. 120) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that created the Metropolitan Board of Works, a London-wide body to co-ordinate the construction of the city's infrastructure. The Act also created a second tier of local government consisting of parish vestries and district boards of works. The Metropolitan Board of Works was the forerunner of the London County Council.

Background

The Royal Commission on the City of London considered the case for creation of an authority for the whole of London. Its report recommended the creation of a limited-function Metropolitan Board of Works and seven municipal corporations based on existing parliamentary representation.[2]

The Metropolitan Board of Works

The act constituted the Metropolitan Board of Works and provided that its members should be chosen by the parish vestries and district boards also constituted by the act. The first election of members was to take place on 12 December 1855. From 1857, one third of the board was to go out of office on the third Wednesday of June every year. The board was to take over the powers, duties and liabilities of the Metropolitan Commission of Sewers and the Metropolitan Buildings Office on 1 January 1856. Its area of responsibility was to be that designated by the Registrar General as London in the 1851 census.[3]

Vestries and district boards

The second tier of local government was to be based on the existing vestries of civil parishes in an area comprising parts of the counties of Middlesex, Kent and Surrey.

Section 42 of the Act dealt with the incorporation of vestries and district boards.

Where single parishes became a local authority they were to have the title:

Where parishes were grouped the resulting authority took the title:

List of vestries, district boards and number of members elected to the Metropolitan Board of Works

Electing authorityNumber of members elected to MBWAdministrative headquarters
3Guildhall
Bermondsey Vestry (Surrey)1Town Hall, Spa Road, Bermondsey
Bethnal Green Vestry (Middlesex)1Vestry Hall, Bethnal Green
Camberwell Vestry (Surrey)1Vestry Hall, Peckham Road
Chelsea Vestry (Middlesex)1Town Hall, King's Road, Chelsea
St. James & St. John Clerkenwell Vestry (Middlesex)1Vestry Hall, 58 Rosomon Street, Clerkenwell (replaced by Town Hall in Rosebery Avenue 1895)
Fulham District, comprising: 1Town Hall, Walham Green
Greenwich District, comprising: 1 141 Greenwich Road, Greenwich
Hackney District, comprising: 1Town Hall, Hackney
Hampstead Vestry (Middlesex)1Vestry Hall, Haverstock Hill, Hampstead
Holborn District, comprising: 1Town Hall, Gray's Inn Road
Islington St Mary Vestry (Middlesex)2Vestry Hall, Upper Street, Islington
Kensington Vestry (Middlesex)1Town Hall, Kensington
Lambeth Vestry (Surrey)2Vestry Hall, Kennington Green
Lewisham District comprising: 1 member jointly with Plumstead DistrictCatford
Limehouse District comprising: 1White Horse Street, Commercial Road
Hamlet of Mile End Old Town Vestry (Middlesex)1 Vestry Hall, Bancroft Road, Mile End Road
Newington Vestry (Surrey)1Vestry Hall, Walworth Road
Paddington Vestry (Middlesex)1Vestry Hall, Harrow Road
Plumstead District comprising: 1 member jointly with Lewisham DistrictOld Charlton
Poplar District comprising: 1117 High Street, Poplar
Rotherhithe Vestry (Surrey)1 member jointly with St Olave DistrictPublic Baths, Lower Road, Rotherhithe
St George Hanover Square Vestry (Middlesex)2Vestry Hall, Mount Street, Grosvenor Square
St George in the East Vestry (Middlesex)1 Vestry Hall, Cable Street
St Giles District comprising: 1197 High Holborn
St Luke Middlesex Vestry (Middlesex)1 Vestry Hall, City Road
St Martin in the Fields Vestry (Middlesex)1Town Hall, Charing Cross Road
St Marylebone Vestry (Middlesex)2Court House, Marylebone Lane
St Olave District comprising: 1 member jointly with Rotherhithe VestryVine Street, Tooley Street, Southwark
St Pancras Vestry (Middlesex)2Vestry Hall, Pancras Road
St Saviour's District comprising: 13 Emerson Street, Bankside
Shoreditch St Leonard Vestry (Middlesex)2 Shoreditch Town Hall, Old Street
Southwark St George the Martyr Vestry (Surrey)1 Vestry Hall, 81 Borough Road
Strand District comprising: 1 5 Tavistock Street
Wandsworth District comprising: 1 East Hill, Wandsworth
Westminster District comprising: 1Town Hall, Caxton Street, Westminster
Westminster St James Vestry (Middlesex)1Vestry Hall, Piccadilly
Whitechapel District comprising: 1 15 Great Alie Street, Whitechapel
Woolwich Local Board (Kent)1Town Hall, Woolwich

A number of extra-parochial places lay within the Metropolitan Board of Works' area but were not included in any district:

Changes in later legislation

In 1886, the Fulham District Board of Works was dissolved and the two parish vestries of Fulham and Hammersmith became local authorities. Fulham Vestry continued to use the existing town hall at Walham Green, while Hammersmith Vestry built a town hall at Hammersmith Broadway.

In 1889, the Local Government Act replaced the Metropolitan Board of Works with the London County Council, and the area of the board became the County of London. From that date, the various parishes were separated from Middlesex, Kent and Surrey and placed for all purposes in the new county, while the vestries and district boards continued to function under the aegis of the new county council.

In 1894, the Hackney District Board of Works was dissolved, with the vestries of Hackney and Stoke Newington assuming the powers of the district board. Stoke Newington Vestry built a town hall at 126 Church Street. At the same time, the Vestry of the Parish of Plumstead became a separate authority, with the remaining four parishes of Plumstead District being reconstituted as Lee District Board of Works.

In 1896, the parishes of Southwark St Olave and St Thomas were combined as a civil parish.

In 1900, metropolitan boroughs created by the London Government Act replaced the vestries and district boards.

Repeal

, the majority of the Act has been repealed with only sections 239 and 240 remaining in force. Section 239 deals with the maintenance of enclosed gardens and section 240 relates to obligations under the Crown Estate Paving Act 1851.[4]

References

Sources

Citations

Notes and References

  1. The citation of this Act by this short title was authorised by the Short Titles Act 1896, section 1 and the first schedule. Due to the repeal of those provisions it is now authorised by section 19(2) of the Interpretation Act 1978.
  2. Young, K. & Garside, P., Metropolitan London: Politics and Urban Change, (1982)
  3. Davis, J., Reforming London: The London Government Problem, 1855-1900, (1988)
  4. Metropolis Management Act 1855, s. 239-240