Wainford Rural District Explained

Wainford
Start:1934
End:1974
Map:
Location within East Suffolk, 1934

Wainford Rural District was a rural district in East Suffolk, England, between 1934 and 1974. It was created by a merger of the disbanded Wangford Rural District and parts of Blything Rural District,[1] and contained the group of small villages collectively known as The Saints. The name Wainford is linked to that of Wangford, a historic hundred of Suffolk.

The district was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, and the area became part of the Waveney district.

Statistics

YearArea[2] Population
[3]
Density
(pop/ha)
acresha
1951 44,900 18,171 7,069 0.39
1961 6,299 0.35

Parishes

Parishes formerly in Wangford RD: Stoven, Westhall, Wissett,, Barsham, Ellough, Flixton, Homersfield, Ilketshall (St Andrew, St John, St Lawrence, St Margaret), Mettingham, North Cove, Redisham, Ringsfield, Shadingfield, Shipmeadow, Sotterley, South Elmham (All Saints and St Nicholas, St Cross, St James, St Margaret, St Michael, St Peter), Weston, Willingham St Mary, Worlingham. Formerly in Blything RD: Blyford, Brampton, Holton, Rumburgh, Sotherton, Spexhall

References

52.43°N 1.47°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Wainford RD through time: Census tables with data for the Local Government District. A Vision of Britain through Time. 11 Jul 2017.
  2. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Wainford RD through time: Population Statistics: Area (acres). A Vision of Britain through Time. 11 Jul 2017.
  3. Web site: GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth. Wainford RD through time: Population Statistics: Total Population. A Vision of Britain through Time. 11 Jul 2017.