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Metropolitan Borough of Bolton

The Metropolitan Borough of Bolton (/ˈbltən/ BOHL-tən) is a metropolitan borough in Greater Manchester, England, named after its largest town, Bolton, but covering a larger area which includes Blackrod, Farnworth, Horwich, Kearsley, Westhoughton, and part of the West Pennine Moors. It had a population of 296,041 in 2021, making it the third-most populous district in Greater Manchester.[3]

Borough of Bolton
Motto(s): 
Latin: Supera Moras, lit.'overcome delays'
Bolton shown within Greater Manchester
Coordinates: 53°34′39″N 2°25′48″W / 53.57750°N 2.43000°W / 53.57750; -2.43000
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryEngland
RegionNorth West
City region and ceremonial countyGreater Manchester
Historic countyLancashire
Borough status1253
Incorporated1 April 1974
Named forBolton
Administrative HQBolton Town Hall
Government
 • TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet
 • BodyBolton Council
 • ControlNo overall control
 • LeaderNick Peel (L)
 • Mayor of BoltonMohammed Ayub
 • Chief ExecutiveSue Johnson
 • House of Commons
Area
 • Total54.0 sq mi (139.8 km2)
 • Rank170th
Population
 (2021)[3]
 • Total296,041
 • Rank48th
 • Density5,490/sq mi (2,118/km2)
Ethnicity (2021)
 • Ethnic groups
List
Religion (2021)
 • Religion
List
Time zoneUTC+0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcode areas
Dialling codes
  • 01204
  • 0161
  • 01942
ISO 3166 codeGB-BOL
GSS codeE08000001
ITL codeTLD36
GVA2021 estimate[5]
 • Total£6.3 billion
 • Per capita£21,406
GDP (nominal)2021 estimate[5]
 • Total£7.3 billion
 • Per capita£24,657
Websitebolton.gov.uk

The borough is in the historic county of Lancashire, and was created in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, covering the area of seven former local government districts and part of an eighth; being seven urban districts from the administrative county of Lancashire, and the County Borough of Bolton. The metropolitan districts of Bury, Salford and Wigan lie to the east, south and west respectively; and the unitary authority of Blackburn with Darwen and the non-metropolitan district of Chorley in Lancashire to the north and north-west.

History edit

Bolton Metropolitan Borough was formed on 1 April 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, covering the combined areas of seven former local government districts and part of an eighth, which were all abolished at the same time:[6]

As a county borough, the old borough of Bolton had been administratively independent from any county council, but was deemed part of Lancashire for ceremonial purposes.[7] The other seven districts had all been part of the administrative county of Lancashire prior to 1974, with Lancashire County Council serving as their upper tier authority. When the metropolitan borough of Bolton was created in 1974 it was transferred to the new metropolitan county of Greater Manchester, with Greater Manchester Council providing county-level services. The Greater Manchester Council was abolished in 1986, after which Bolton became a unitary authority, providing all local government services.

Bolton Council unsuccessfully petitioned Elizabeth II for the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton to be granted city status in 1992 (the Queen's 40th year as monarch), in 2000 (for the Millennium celebrations), in 2002 (Queen's Golden Jubilee), and 2012 (Queen's Diamond Jubilee).[8]

Parishes edit

Horwich, Westhoughton and Blackrod are now constituted as civil parishes, each having a town council: Westhoughton Town Council, Horwich Town Council and Blackrod Town Council. The rest of the metropolitan borough, covering the town of Bolton itself, Farnworth, Kearsley, Little Lever, and South Turton, have remained unparished areas since 1974.

Demographics edit

Population change edit

The table below details the population change since 1801, including the percentage change since the last available census data. Although the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton has only existed since 1974, figures have been generated by combining data from the towns, villages, and civil parishes that would later be constituent parts of the borough.

Population growth in Bolton since 1801
YearPopulation±%
1801 37,417—    
1811 48,996+30.9%
1821 60,319+23.1%
1831 75,787+25.6%
1841 89,507+18.1%
1851 105,957+18.4%
1861 132,437+25.0%
YearPopulation±%
1871 158,917+20.0%
1881 185,397+16.7%
1891 216,792+16.9%
1901 240,014+10.7%
1911 265,733+10.7%
1921 263,413−0.9%
1931 261,119−0.9%
YearPopulation±%
1941 256,207−1.9%
1951 251,388−1.9%
1961 255,627+1.7%
1971 259,993+1.7%
1981 260,229+0.1%
1991 262,880+1.0%
2001 261,035−0.7%
Pre-1974 statistics were gathered from local government areas that now comprise the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton
Source: Vision of Britain[9]

Ethnicity edit

According to the 2021 census, of the 295,963 people living in Bolton Metropolitan Borough, the following list shows the population of Bolton by ethnicity:[4]

Religion edit

The following table shows the religious identity of people residing in Bolton at the 2021 census.

Religion 2021[4]
Number %
Christian 139,144 47.0
Muslim 58,997 19.9
Jewish 159 0.1
Hindu 5,887 2.0
Sikh 219 0.1
Buddhism 576 0.2
Other religion 979 0.3
No religion 76,244 25.8
Religion not stated 13,758 4.6
Total 295,963 100.0

Transport edit

The Bolton metropolitan area is served by the following railway stations:

Education edit

In 2007, Bolton was ranked 69th out of the 149 Local Education Authorities – and sixth out of ten in Greater Manchester – for its National Curriculum assessment performance.[10] Measured on the percentage of pupils attaining at least 5 A*–C grades at GCSE including maths and English, the Bolton LEA was 111th out of 149: 40.1% of pupils achieved this objective, against a national average of 46.7%.[11] Unauthorised absence from Bolton's secondary schools in the 2006/2007 academic year was 1.4%, in line with the national average, and authorised absence was 6.0% against the national average of 6.4%.[12] At GCSE level, Bolton School (Girls' Division) was the most successful of Bolton's 21 secondary schools, with 99% of pupils achieving at least 5 A*–C grades at including maths and English.[13]

The University of Bolton is one of Greater Manchester's four universities. In 2008, The Times Good University Guide ranked it 111th of 113 institutions in Britain.[14] There are 4,440 students (83% undergraduate, 17% postgraduate); 2.6% come from outside Britain. In 2007 there were 8.8 applications for every place, and student satisfaction was recorded as 74.4%. It is one of Britain's newest universities, having been given this status in 2005.[15]

GCSE Examination Performance 2009 edit

Metropolitan Borough of Bolton GCSE performances
School A*-C Pass Rate Point Score
Bolton Muslim Girls' School 100% 533.1
Bolton School (Girls' Division) 98% 546.7
Canon Slade C of E School 93% 508.5
Lord's Independent School 93% 401.5
St Joseph's RC High School 85% 426.6
Madrasatul Imam Muhammed Zakariya 79% 347.3
Al Jamiah Al Islamiyyah at Mount St Joseph's Convent 79% 327.9
Ladybridge High School 78% 437.6
Turton School 76% 396.1
Sharples School 74% 414.1
Westhoughton High School 67% 424.0
Rivington and Blackrod High School 69% 456.7
Essa Academy 67% 383.7
Smithills School 66% 400.8
Little Lever School 61% 442.7
Mount St Joseph School 61% 422.7
Harper Green School 59% 384.7
George Tomlinson School 55% 307.4
Bolton School (Boys' Division) 52% 240.4
Average for Metropolitan Borough of Bolton 71.4% 422.5
Average for England 70.0% 413.5
  • Schools highlighted in yellow are above the LEA average; those highlighted in orange are below the average.
  • Another secondary school, Bolton Muslim Girls' School, has opened since January 2007; no results are available.
  • Source: Department for Children, Schools and Families[permanent dead link]

Governance edit

The local authority is Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council, which styles itself "Bolton Council". Since 2011 it has been a constituent member of the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, providing strategic co-ordination of local government across the ten metropolitan boroughs of Greater Manchester. Since 2017 the combined authority has been led by the directly-elected Mayor of Greater Manchester.

Twin towns edit

The Metropolitan Borough of Bolton has two twin towns, one in France and another in Germany.[16]

Place Country County / District / Region / State Originally twinned with Date
Le Mans France Pays de la Loire County Borough of Bolton 1973
Paderborn Germany Nordrhein-Westfalen Metropolitan Borough of Bolton 1975

Neighbouring districts edit

The local government districts which surround the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton
North-West:
Borough of Chorley
North:
Borough of Blackburn with Darwen
North-East and East:
Metropolitan Borough of Bury

Metropolitan Borough of Bolton

South-West:
Metropolitan Borough of Wigan
South-East:
City of Salford

Freedom of the Borough edit

The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Borough.

Individuals edit

Military units edit

[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "About your council". Bolton Council. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Mid-Year Population Estimates, UK, June 2021". Office for National Statistics. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Mid-Year Population Estimates, UK, June 2021". Office for National Statistics. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d UK Census (2021). "2021 Census Area Profile – Bolton Local Authority (E08000001)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 5 January 2024.
  5. ^ a b Fenton, Trevor (25 April 2023). "Regional gross domestic product: city regions". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  6. ^ "Local Government Act 1972", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1972 c. 70, retrieved 31 August 2022
  7. ^ "Local Government Act 1888", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1888 c. 41, retrieved 31 August 2022
  8. ^ "It's still worth trying again for city status". theboltonnews.co.uk. 17 January 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  9. ^ "Bolton District: total population". Vision of Britain. Retrieved on 20 December 2008.
  10. ^ "LEA SATs performance". London: BBC. 6 December 2007. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  11. ^ "How different LEAs performed". London: BBC. 10 January 2008. Retrieved 23 January 2008.
  12. ^ "Secondary schools in Bolton". London: BBC. 10 January 2008. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  13. ^ "Secondary schools in Bolton: GCSE-level". London: BBC. 10 January 2008. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  14. ^ "The University of Bolton". Times Online: Good University Guide website. London: Times Online (Times Newspapers Ltd). 15 August 2007. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  15. ^ "University of Bolton". The Sunday Times University Guide website. London: The Sunday Times (Times Newspapers Ltd). 23 September 2007. Retrieved 25 March 2008.
  16. ^ Bolton Council : Town Twinning. Retrieved 8 January 2010
  17. ^ Harrigan, Joe (8 March 2022). "Sir Jason Kenny hailed for 'outstanding career' with Freedom of Bolton honour". The Bolton News. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  18. ^ "The Freedom of Bolton". www.boltonsmayors.org.uk.

External links edit

metropolitan, borough, bolton, main, settlement, bolton, bohl, tən, metropolitan, borough, greater, manchester, england, named, after, largest, town, bolton, covering, larger, area, which, includes, blackrod, farnworth, horwich, kearsley, westhoughton, part, w. For the main settlement see Bolton The Metropolitan Borough of Bolton ˈ b oʊ l t en BOHL ten is a metropolitan borough in Greater Manchester England named after its largest town Bolton but covering a larger area which includes Blackrod Farnworth Horwich Kearsley Westhoughton and part of the West Pennine Moors It had a population of 296 041 in 2021 making it the third most populous district in Greater Manchester 3 Borough of BoltonMetropolitan boroughBolton Town Hall the seat of Bolton CouncilCoat of armsMotto s Latin Supera Moras lit overcome delays Bolton shown within Greater ManchesterCoordinates 53 34 39 N 2 25 48 W 53 57750 N 2 43000 W 53 57750 2 43000Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryEnglandRegionNorth WestCity region and ceremonial countyGreater ManchesterHistoric countyLancashireBorough status1253Incorporated1 April 1974Named forBoltonAdministrative HQBolton Town HallGovernment 1 TypeMetropolitan borough with leader and cabinet BodyBolton Council ControlNo overall control LeaderNick Peel L Mayor of BoltonMohammed Ayub Chief ExecutiveSue Johnson House of Commons3 MPs Chris Green C Mark Logan C Yasmin Qureshi L Area 2 Total54 0 sq mi 139 8 km2 Rank170thPopulation 2021 3 Total296 041 Rank48th Density5 490 sq mi 2 118 km2 Ethnicity 2021 4 Ethnic groupsList 71 9 White20 1 Asian3 8 Black2 2 Mixed1 9 otherReligion 2021 4 ReligionList 47 0 Christianity25 8 no religion19 9 Islam2 0 Hinduism0 2 Buddhism0 1 Sikhism0 1 Judaism0 3 other4 6 not statedTime zoneUTC 0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST Postcode areasBL1 7M26M46Dialling codes01204016101942ISO 3166 codeGB BOLGSS codeE08000001ITL codeTLD36GVA2021 estimate 5 Total 6 3 billion Per capita 21 406GDP nominal 2021 estimate 5 Total 7 3 billion Per capita 24 657Websitebolton wbr gov wbr ukThe borough is in the historic county of Lancashire and was created in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972 covering the area of seven former local government districts and part of an eighth being seven urban districts from the administrative county of Lancashire and the County Borough of Bolton The metropolitan districts of Bury Salford and Wigan lie to the east south and west respectively and the unitary authority of Blackburn with Darwen and the non metropolitan district of Chorley in Lancashire to the north and north west Contents 1 History 2 Parishes 3 Demographics 3 1 Population change 3 2 Ethnicity 3 3 Religion 4 Transport 5 Education 5 1 GCSE Examination Performance 2009 6 Governance 7 Twin towns 8 Neighbouring districts 9 Freedom of the Borough 9 1 Individuals 9 2 Military units 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory editBolton Metropolitan Borough was formed on 1 April 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972 covering the combined areas of seven former local government districts and part of an eighth which were all abolished at the same time 6 Blackrod Urban District Bolton County Borough Farnworth Municipal Borough Horwich Urban District Kearsley Urban District Little Lever Urban District Turton Urban District southern part remainder became parish of North Turton in Blackburn district Westhoughton Urban DistrictAs a county borough the old borough of Bolton had been administratively independent from any county council but was deemed part of Lancashire for ceremonial purposes 7 The other seven districts had all been part of the administrative county of Lancashire prior to 1974 with Lancashire County Council serving as their upper tier authority When the metropolitan borough of Bolton was created in 1974 it was transferred to the new metropolitan county of Greater Manchester with Greater Manchester Council providing county level services The Greater Manchester Council was abolished in 1986 after which Bolton became a unitary authority providing all local government services Bolton Council unsuccessfully petitioned Elizabeth II for the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton to be granted city status in 1992 the Queen s 40th year as monarch in 2000 for the Millennium celebrations in 2002 Queen s Golden Jubilee and 2012 Queen s Diamond Jubilee 8 Parishes editHorwich Westhoughton and Blackrod are now constituted as civil parishes each having a town council Westhoughton Town Council Horwich Town Council and Blackrod Town Council The rest of the metropolitan borough covering the town of Bolton itself Farnworth Kearsley Little Lever and South Turton have remained unparished areas since 1974 Demographics editPopulation change edit The table below details the population change since 1801 including the percentage change since the last available census data Although the Metropolitan Borough of Bolton has only existed since 1974 figures have been generated by combining data from the towns villages and civil parishes that would later be constituent parts of the borough Population growth in Bolton since 1801YearPopulation 180137 417 181148 996 30 9 182160 319 23 1 183175 787 25 6 184189 507 18 1 1851105 957 18 4 1861132 437 25 0 YearPopulation 1871158 917 20 0 1881185 397 16 7 1891216 792 16 9 1901240 014 10 7 1911265 733 10 7 1921263 413 0 9 1931261 119 0 9 YearPopulation 1941256 207 1 9 1951251 388 1 9 1961255 627 1 7 1971259 993 1 7 1981260 229 0 1 1991262 880 1 0 2001261 035 0 7 Pre 1974 statistics were gathered from local government areas that now comprise the Metropolitan Borough of BoltonSource Vision of Britain 9 Ethnicity edit According to the 2021 census of the 295 963 people living in Bolton Metropolitan Borough the following list shows the population of Bolton by ethnicity 4 71 9 White20 1 Asian3 8 Black2 2 Mixed1 9 other Religion edit The following table shows the religious identity of people residing in Bolton at the 2021 census Religion 2021 4 Number Christian 139 144 47 0Muslim 58 997 19 9Jewish 159 0 1Hindu 5 887 2 0Sikh 219 0 1Buddhism 576 0 2Other religion 979 0 3No religion 76 244 25 8Religion not stated 13 758 4 6Total 295 963 100 0Transport editThe Bolton metropolitan area is served by the following railway stations Bolton Trinity Street Bromley Cross Hall i th Wood Blackrod Horwich Parkway for the University of Bolton Stadium Bolton Wanderers Lostock Westhoughton Moses Gate Farnworth Kearsley Daisy HillEducation editSee also List of schools in Bolton In 2007 Bolton was ranked 69th out of the 149 Local Education Authorities and sixth out of ten in Greater Manchester for its National Curriculum assessment performance 10 Measured on the percentage of pupils attaining at least 5 A C grades at GCSE including maths and English the Bolton LEA was 111th out of 149 40 1 of pupils achieved this objective against a national average of 46 7 11 Unauthorised absence from Bolton s secondary schools in the 2006 2007 academic year was 1 4 in line with the national average and authorised absence was 6 0 against the national average of 6 4 12 At GCSE level Bolton School Girls Division was the most successful of Bolton s 21 secondary schools with 99 of pupils achieving at least 5 A C grades at including maths and English 13 The University of Bolton is one of Greater Manchester s four universities In 2008 The Times Good University Guide ranked it 111th of 113 institutions in Britain 14 There are 4 440 students 83 undergraduate 17 postgraduate 2 6 come from outside Britain In 2007 there were 8 8 applications for every place and student satisfaction was recorded as 74 4 It is one of Britain s newest universities having been given this status in 2005 15 GCSE Examination Performance 2009 edit Metropolitan Borough of Bolton GCSE performances School A C Pass Rate Point ScoreBolton Muslim Girls School 100 533 1Bolton School Girls Division 98 546 7Canon Slade C of E School 93 508 5Lord s Independent School 93 401 5St Joseph s RC High School 85 426 6Madrasatul Imam Muhammed Zakariya 79 347 3Al Jamiah Al Islamiyyah at Mount St Joseph s Convent 79 327 9Ladybridge High School 78 437 6Turton School 76 396 1Sharples School 74 414 1Westhoughton High School 67 424 0Rivington and Blackrod High School 69 456 7Essa Academy 67 383 7Smithills School 66 400 8Little Lever School 61 442 7Mount St Joseph School 61 422 7Harper Green School 59 384 7George Tomlinson School 55 307 4Bolton School Boys Division 52 240 4Average for Metropolitan Borough of Bolton 71 4 422 5Average for England 70 0 413 5Schools highlighted in yellow are above the LEA average those highlighted in orange are below the average Another secondary school Bolton Muslim Girls School has opened since January 2007 no results are available Source Department for Children Schools and Families permanent dead link Governance editMain article Bolton Council For historical political control and leadership see Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council elections The local authority is Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council which styles itself Bolton Council Since 2011 it has been a constituent member of the Greater Manchester Combined Authority providing strategic co ordination of local government across the ten metropolitan boroughs of Greater Manchester Since 2017 the combined authority has been led by the directly elected Mayor of Greater Manchester Twin towns editThe Metropolitan Borough of Bolton has two twin towns one in France and another in Germany 16 Place Country County District Region State Originally twinned with DateLe Mans France Pays de la Loire County Borough of Bolton 1973Paderborn Germany Nordrhein Westfalen Metropolitan Borough of Bolton 1975Neighbouring districts editThe local government districts which surround the Metropolitan Borough of BoltonNorth West Borough of Chorley North Borough of Blackburn with Darwen North East and East Metropolitan Borough of BuryMetropolitan Borough of BoltonSouth West Metropolitan Borough of Wigan South East City of SalfordFreedom of the Borough editThe following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Borough This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2019 Individuals edit William Lever 1st Viscount Leverhulme 10 November 1902 John Pennington Thomasson 10 November 1902 Andrew Carnegie 29 September 1910 Field Marshall Lord Montgomery 5 November 1949 Nat Lofthouse 2 December 1989 Robert Howarth 16 June 2001 Sir Jason Kenny 16 March 2022 17 Military units edit 253rd Regiment Royal Artillery TA 18 April 1964 5th Battalion Loyal Regiment North Lancashire TA 18 April 1964 HMS Dido RN 14 April 1973 216 The Bolton Artillery Battery 103rd Lancashire Artillery Volunteers Regiment Royal Artillery 18 May 1994 1st Battalion The Duke of Lancaster s Regiment 14 March 2009 18 See also editBolton local elections List of Mayors of Bolton List of people from BoltonReferences edit About your council Bolton Council Retrieved 7 January 2024 Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 a b Mid Year Population Estimates UK June 2021 Office for National Statistics 21 December 2022 Retrieved 18 October 2023 a b c d UK Census 2021 2021 Census Area Profile Bolton Local Authority E08000001 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 5 January 2024 a b Fenton Trevor 25 April 2023 Regional gross domestic product city regions Office for National Statistics Retrieved 2 September 2023 Local Government Act 1972 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1972 c 70 retrieved 31 August 2022 Local Government Act 1888 legislation gov uk The National Archives 1888 c 41 retrieved 31 August 2022 It s still worth trying again for city status theboltonnews co uk 17 January 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2011 Bolton District total population Vision of Britain Retrieved on 20 December 2008 LEA SATs performance London BBC 6 December 2007 Retrieved 25 March 2008 How different LEAs performed London BBC 10 January 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2008 Secondary schools in Bolton London BBC 10 January 2008 Retrieved 25 March 2008 Secondary schools in Bolton GCSE level London BBC 10 January 2008 Retrieved 25 March 2008 The University of Bolton Times Online Good University Guide website London Times Online Times Newspapers Ltd 15 August 2007 Retrieved 25 March 2008 University of Bolton The Sunday Times University Guide website London The Sunday Times Times Newspapers Ltd 23 September 2007 Retrieved 25 March 2008 Bolton Council Town Twinning Retrieved 8 January 2010 Harrigan Joe 8 March 2022 Sir Jason Kenny hailed for outstanding career with Freedom of Bolton honour The Bolton News Retrieved 23 March 2022 The Freedom of Bolton www boltonsmayors org uk External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bolton nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Bolton Portal nbsp Greater Manchester Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metropolitan Borough of Bolton amp oldid 1216361026, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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