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Hornchurch Urban District

Hornchurch
Urban district
Langtons House was used as the council offices from 1929.

Hornchurch within Essex in 1961
Area
 • 19316,783 acres (27.4 km2)
 • 196119,768 acres (80.0 km2)
 • Coordinates51°33′58″N 0°13′01″E / 51.566°N 0.217°E / 51.566; 0.217
Area transferred
 • 1934All of Rainham and Wennington and parts of Cranham, Great Warley and Upminster from Romford Rural District
 • 1936Part of North Ockendon from Orsett Rural District
Population
 • 193128,417
 • 1961131,014
Density
 • 19314/acre
 • 19616.6/acre
History
 • OriginHornchurch civil parish
 • Created1926
 • Abolished1965
 • Succeeded byLondon Borough of Havering
StatusUrban district
GovernmentHornchurch Urban District Council
 • HQLangtons House, Hornchurch
 • MottoA good name endureth

Coat of arms of Hornchurch Urban District Council
Today part ofLondon Borough of Havering

Hornchurch was a local government district in southwest Essex from 1926 to 1965, formed as an urban district for the civil parish of Hornchurch. It was greatly expanded in 1934 with the addition of Cranham, Great Warley, Rainham, Upminster and Wennington; and in 1936 by gaining North Ockendon. Hornchurch Urban District Council was based at Langtons House in Hornchurch from 1929. The district formed a suburb of London and with a population peaking at 131,014 in 1961, it was one of the largest districts of its type in England. It now forms the greater part of the London Borough of Havering in Greater London.

History

Background

The large ancient parish of Hornchurch had been coterminous with the liberty and manor of Havering since its formation in antiquity.[1] Havering-atte-Bower and Romford formed chapelries and were split off as parishes in the 1798s and 1849 respectively, leaving a rump Hornchurch civil parish.[2]

The liberty was abolished in 1892; although by this date in Hornchurch it had already been superseded by various ad-hoc bodies, such as the Romford Poor Law Union and the Romford Rural Sanitary District. The Hornchurch parish passed to Romford Rural District in 1894 and Hornchurch Parish Council was created. The first election to the parish council took place in December 1894 with thirteen councillors elected.[3] Hornchurch formed part of the London Traffic Area from 1924.

Gaining urban status

Hornchurch Parish Council considered the case for gaining the powers of an urban district council in September 1911.[4] At a meeting in October concerns were raised by Hornchurch Ratepayers' Association about potential increase in the rates.[5] By 1925 the rate of housebuilding in the parish had increased, with eight separate estates under construction and greater control of development was an argument in favour of gaining urban powers.[6] In March 1925 it was reported that the issue was put to a vote.[7] The parish council voted on the matter with eight in favour of urban powers and seven against.[8] In 1925 the parish council applied for conversion of the parish to an urban district. Inquiries were held in May 1925 for Dagenham and Hornchurch gaining urban powers.[9] The Romford Rural District Council and Hornchurch Ratepayers' Association opposed Hornchurch gaining urban powers.[10] The last meeting of the parish council took place on 9 March 1926.[11] Hornchurch parish was removed from the rural district on 1 April 1926 when Hornchurch Urban District and Hornchurch Urban District Council were formed.

Interwar reorganisation

Following the Local Government Act 1929, county councils were required to review districts, with a view to amalgamating smaller councils or adjusting boundaries to be more convenient. In December 1929 Hornchurch Urban District Council favoured amalgamation with Upminster and Cranham.[12] In 1930 it was proposed that the northwestern section (west of Park Lane) and northeastern section (Harold Wood) would transfer to Romford Urban District. Romford Urban District Council rejected the scheme with the clerk of the council referring to the area west of Park Lane as the "Sloper's Island" slum and the worst part of the district. The council felt the opportunity had been missed to make the Romford/Hornchurch boundary more regular and also desired the transfer of the Roneo factory to Romford.[13] Alternative schemes were proposed by Romford Urban District Council and Dagenham Urban District Council to annex more of Hornchurch.[14] It was decided in 1933 that the Harold Wood section would not transfer to Romford and the southern part of Hornchurch would not transfer to Dagenham.[15]

As part of the county review order in 1934 the urban district was extended to the east, by gaining 11,687 acres (47.30 km2) from Romford Rural District. This area corresponded to all of the Rainham and Wennington parishes and the greater part of Upminster, Cranham and Great Warley. There was a small loss of territory to Romford in the northwest where the urban district came close to Romford town centre. Purfleet Urban District Council made an unsuccessful petition to the High Court to oppose the transfer of part of North Ockendon from Orsett Rural District to Hornchurch as part of the review.[16] This delayed the transfer of 1,326 acres (5.37 km2) and it was completed as part of another county review order in 1936.[17]

Merger with Romford

In 1948, as part of the Local Government Boundary Commission, Romford Borough Council suggested it could be merged with Hornchurch to form a new county borough. This was rejected by the chairman of Hornchurch Urban District Council and it was suggested Hornchurch would seek incorporation.[18] In 1949, Hornchurch was one of the largest urban districts with populations over 100,000 that sought incorporation (along with Harrow and Enfield).[19] The council unsuccessfully petitioned for incorporation as a municipal borough on 20 May 1955. This was refused, pending a review of the local government arrangements of the Greater London area.

The urban district of Hornchurch formed part of the review area of the Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London. The proposal of the commission was for Hornchurch to form a Greater London borough. The transfer to Greater London was supported by Hornchurch Urban District Council and opposed by Essex County Council.[20] The London Government Bill that resulted from the commission provided for larger areas, with populations over 200,000. Hornchurch (population 131,014 in 1961) was planned to merge with Romford (population 114,584) as 'Borough 15'. An amendment was proposed by John Parker, MP for Dagenham, that the Rainham and South Hornchurch wards would become part of 'Borough 14' (Barking/Dagenham), but this was defeated. During the debate Godfrey Lagden, MP for Hornchurch, described the combination of Hornchurch with Romford as a 'happy wedding' with a 'great community of interest'. He suggested Havering-atte-Bower as the name for the new borough.[21] This was adopted in 1965 as the London Borough of Havering, which replaced Hornchurch Urban District and the Municipal Borough of Romford. Havering London Borough Council was elected in 1964 and acted as a shadow authority until 1965, when the transfer from Essex to Greater London was completed.

Geography

Boundary marker at Roneo Corner

The civil parish of Hornchurch became an urban district in 1926. It included Harold Wood in the northeast and stretched south through the town of Hornchurch to South Hornchurch and the River Thames.

There was a rapid expansion of the population because of suburban house building and new industries were developing in Outer London during the 1930s, such as the nearby Ford Motor Company plant at Dagenham (which also extended into the district) and Londoners were moving to the new suburban estates of houses that were built around them.[22] New College, Oxford owned a substantial part of the land in Hornchurch for several centuries, but had sold it all off by 1934.[23]

The Barking–Upminster railway line through the district was electrified in the 1930s and new stations were opened at Elm Park and Upminster Bridge, in addition to the earlier stations at Hornchurch and Upminster.

Hornchurch Urban District Council

The council was first elected on 27 March 1926, replacing Hornchurch Parish Council from 1 April. 13 councillors were elected from the existing four wards of Harold Wood (2), North West Hornchurch (5), South Hornchurch (1) and Hornchurch Village (4). It was hoped the election to the new authority might increase voter turnout from the parish council elections, but this was not the case.[24]

After the 1934 enlargement, the district was divided into eight wards, electing 21 councillors as follows:[25]

Ward Electors Councillors
Cranham 869 1
Emerson Park 4263 3
Harold Wood 2744 2
North West 7176 5
Rainham 2779 2
Thameside 1631 1
Town 5700 4
Upminster 4513 3

The wards were revised again in 1936 when the Cranham ward was extended to include the part of North Ockendon absorbed by the district.[17]

In 1948 the number of councillors was increased to 27. The number of wards increased to nine in 1952, by the addition of an Elm Park ward, electing a total of 30 councillors. The number of wards increased to 10 in 1958 and the 30 councillors were redistributed.

Political control

Political control of the council was as follows:[26]

  • Hornchurch Ratepayers' Association 1926[27]
  • Labour Party 1946–48
  • Conservative Party 1949–54
  • Labour Party 1954–55
  • Conservative Party 1955–56
  • Labour Party 1956–60
  • No overall control 1960–65

Civic works

The council operated Queen's Theatre[28] and constructed Hornchurch Stadium in Upminster.[26] Harrow Lodge Park, Haynes Park, Hylands Park and St Andrew's Park were created by the council.

Hornchurch Swimming Pool, which opened in 1957, was the first new swimming pool in the country to be built after the Second World War.[29]

Housing

The urban district contained 464 council houses in 1926. The council built a further 150 houses before the Second World War and 3,000 homes between 1945 and 1965.[26]

Parliamentary representation

Hornchurch was within the Romford constituency. In 1945 the Hornchurch constituency was formed to match the urban district.

Demography

Population

The population of Hornchurch[a] was as follows:[30]

Year 1891 1901 1911 1921 1931 1939 1941 1951 1961
Population 3,841 6,402 9,461 10,891 28,417 81,486 [b] 104,092 131,014

The 1934 expanded area (Cranham, Great Warley, Rainham, Upminster and Wennington) had a population of 11,121 in 1931.[30]

Housing

The annual reports of the medical officer of health for Hornchurch give the following statistics from part of the period of rapid suburban expansion:

Statistic 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938
Population (mid-year estimates) 28,590 33,720 38,650 55,798 59,910 64,447 72,010 76,000
Inhabited houses 8,759 9,914 11,548 17,782 18,042 20,923 23,406 24,100
New council houses (Hornchurch UDC) 10 22 14 6 6 10 2 56
New houses (all others) 1,114 1,131 1,566 1,304 1,441 1,387 2,164 2,111
New roads (feet) 18,141 7,202 17,974 31,149 22,130 31,507 11,942 50,842

During this period 12,344 new homes and 134,474 feet (25.5 miles) of new streets were added to the district. The population increased by 47,410.

Legacy

In 1993 some of the eastern sections of the former urban district around Great Warley were transferred back to Essex.[31]

Notes

  1. ^ The civil parish until 1931 and urban district from 1931.
  2. ^ The census was suspended for World War II.

References

  1. ^ "The liberty of Havering-atte-Bower". British History Online. 1978. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  2. ^ "Parishes: Havering-atte-Bower". British History Online. 1978. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  3. ^ "Parish Council Polls". The Newsman. 22 December 1894. p. 3.
  4. ^ "Hornchurch and Urban Powers". Essex Weekly News. 29 September 1911.
  5. ^ "Hornchurch and Urban Powers". Barking, East Ham & Ilford Advertiser. 28 October 1911.
  6. ^ "Plea for Urban Powers at Hornchurch". Essex Chronicle. 13 March 1925. p. 7.
  7. ^ "Hornchurch". Essex Chronicle. 20 March 1925. There are to polls in all the wards at Hornchurch on the urban powers question
  8. ^ Essex Chronicle, 5 June 1925, Page 8
  9. ^ "Urban Power Inquiries". Essex Chronicle. 29 May 1925. p. 8.
  10. ^ Essex Chronicle, 29 May 1925, Fri, Page 8
  11. ^ "Hornchurch". Essex Chronicle. 12 March 1926.
  12. ^ "Hornchurch". Essex Chronicle. 13 December 1929.
  13. ^ Essex Newsman, 20 December 1930, Page 1
  14. ^ Essex Chronicle, 7 October 1932, Page 1
  15. ^ Essex Chronicle, 19 May 1933, Page 7
  16. ^ "Hornchurch". Essex Chronicle. 23 February 1934. p. 10.
  17. ^ a b Ball, Alfred (1937). "Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Hornchurch: 1936". Wellcome Collection. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  18. ^ "Hornchurch "No" to Romford Merger". The Newsman-Herald. 13 January 1948.
  19. ^ "Case for Borough Status Raised in the House". Harrow Observer. 15 December 1949. p. 1.
  20. ^ "Greater London (Boundaries)". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 659. House of Commons. 18 May 1962. col. cc156W–157W.
  21. ^ Commons Debates - 20 February 1963
  22. ^ The East End Alan Palmer, (John Murray, London 1989)
  23. ^ "Hornchurch: Introduction". British History Online. 1978. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  24. ^ "Essex Elections". Essex Chronicle. 10 April 1925. p. 4.
  25. ^ Ball, Alfred (1935). "Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Hornchurch: 1934". Wellcome Collection. Retrieved 29 July 2023.
  26. ^ a b c "Hornchurch: Economic history and local government". British History Online. 1978. Retrieved 29 July 2023.
  27. ^ "Local Elections". The Times. No. 44245. 14 April 1926. At Hornchurch the Ratepayers' Association have a majority on the newly formed council
  28. ^ "Heritage strategy for Hornchurch". Havering London Borough Council. Archived from the original on 23 November 2010.
  29. ^ "Practical experience". The Guardian Journal. 12 April 1957. p. 2.
  30. ^ a b "Hornchurch UD: Total Population". Vision of Britain. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  31. ^ "Essex and Greater London (County and London Borough Boundaries) (No.2) Order 1993". legislation.gov.uk. 1 May 1993.
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