Tewkesbury Rural District Explained

51.988°N -2.127°W

Tewkesbury
Hq:Tewkesbury
Status:Rural district
Start:1894
End:1935
Replace:Cheltenham Rural District, Gloucester Rural District
Populationfirst:4,986
Populationfirstyear:1901
Populationlast:4,268
Populationlastyear:1931
Areafirst:28366acres
Areafirstyear:1911
Arealast:28482acres
Arealastyear:1931

Tewkesbury Rural District was from 1894 to 1935 a rural district in the southwestern part of the Midlands in England. It had the unusual feature of including territory from the two neighbouring administrative counties of Gloucestershire and Worcestershire until boundary changes in 1933 placed the entire district in Gloucestershire.[1] [2]

Formation

The rural district was formed by the Local Government Act 1894 as successor to the Tewkesbury Rural Sanitary District.[1] [2] A directly elected rural district council (RDC) replaced the rural sanitary authority, which consisted of the poor law guardians for the area. The district did not include the town of Tewkesbury which was a separate municipal borough.

Parishes

The district comprised the following civil parishes:[1] [2]

Parish County
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Worcestershire. Transferred to Pershore Rural District 1933.
Worcestershire. Transferred to Pershore Rural District 1933.
Worcestershire until 1931, Gloucestershire thereafter.
Worcestershire. Transferred to Evesham Rural District 1933.
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire until 1931, Worcestershire thereafter. Transferred to Evesham Rural District 1933.
Gloucestershire
Worcestershire. Transferred to Evesham Rural District 1933.
Gloucestershire
Worcestershire. Transferred to Upton-upon-Severn Rural District 1933.
Gloucestershire
Worcestershire until 1931, Gloucestershire thereafter.
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire

Abolition

The district was abolished in 1935, and its area was redistributed. Most (21713acres) passed to Cheltenham Rural District; four parishes (Chaceley, Forthampton, Hasfield and Tirley) were transferred to Gloucester Rural District, while 182acres was included within the municipal borough of Tewkesbury.[3]

References

Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Notes and References

    1. Youngs 1979, p. 612.
    2. Youngs 1991, p. 764.
    3. Web site: Relationships / unit history of Tewkesbury RD . A Vision of Britain through Time. . 2009 . 12 April 2009.