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London Borough of Lambeth

Lambeth (/ˈlæmbəθ/ (listen))[1] is a London borough in South London, England, which forms part of Inner London. Its name was recorded in 1062 as Lambehitha ("landing place for lambs") and in 1255 as Lambeth. The geographical centre of London is at Frazier Street near Lambeth North tube station,[2] though nearby Charing Cross on the other side of the Thames in the City of Westminster is traditionally considered the centre of London.[3]

Lambeth
Motto(s): 
Spectemur agendo
(Let us be judged by our acts)
Lambeth shown within Greater London
Coordinates: Coordinates: 51°27′37″N 0°07′17″W / 51.460218°N 0.121445°W / 51.460218; -0.121445
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
RegionLondon
Ceremonial countyGreater London
Created1 April 1965
Admin HQBrixton Hill, Lambeth Town Hall
Government
 • TypeLondon borough council
 • BodyLambeth London Borough Council
 • LeadershipLeader & Cabinet (Labour)
 • MayorAnnie Gallop
 • London AssemblyMarina Ahmad (Labour)
 • MPsFlorence Eshalomi (Labour Co-op)
Helen Hayes (Labour)
Bell Ribeiro-Addy (Labour)
 • Council LeaderCllr Claire Holland (Labour)
Area
 • Total10.36 sq mi (26.82 km2)
 • Rank304th (of 309)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total317,654
 • Rank38th (of 309)
 • Density31,000/sq mi (12,000/km2)
Time zoneUTC (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcodes
Area code020
ONS code00AY
GSS codeE09000022
PoliceMetropolitan Police
Websitewww.lambeth.gov.uk

History

Origins

Lambeth was part of the large ancient parish of Lambeth St Mary, the site of the archepiscopal Lambeth Palace, in the hundred of Brixton in the county of Surrey.[4] It was an elongated north–south parish with two miles (three kilometres) of River Thames frontage opposite the cities of London and Westminster. Lambeth became part of the Metropolitan Police District in 1829. It remained a parish for Poor Law purposes after the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, and was governed by a vestry after the introduction of the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1855.[4]

Borough origins

Until 1889, Surrey included the present-day London borough of Lambeth. When the government drew the boundaries for the present London boroughs, it initially suggested that the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and the Metropolitan Borough of Southwark be merged into a new borough; the southern and eastern sections of the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth (including Clapham, Streatham and Tooting) would form another. South Shields town clerk R.S. Young was commissioned to make final recommendations to the government on the shape of the future London boroughs, and he noted that the Wandsworth council opposed the partition of its borough. However, Wandsworth's suggestion to merge Lambeth with the Metropolitan Borough of Battersea was rejected by both councils involved. Young believed that residents of Clapham and Streatham would be more familiar with Brixton than with Wandsworth, and recommended a new borough formed from the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and six wards and portions of two others from the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth.[5]

Political events

In 1979, the administration of Edward ("Red Ted") Knight organised the borough's first public demonstration against the Thatcher government.[6][7] In 1985 Knight's Labour administration was subjected to rate-capping, with its budget restricted by the government. Knight and most of the Labour councillors protested by refusing to propose budgets. As a result of the protest, 32 councillors were ordered to repay interest lost by the council due to budgeting delays and were disqualified from office for five years.[6]

In 1991, Joan Twelves' administration failed to collect the poll tax and opposed the war in the Persian Gulf.[6][7] The following year, Twelves and 12 other councillors were suspended from the local Labour Party by regional officials for advocating non-payment of the poll tax and other ideas.[6][8] Twelves' deputy leader at this time was John Harrison.[9]

From 1978 to 2002 the council comprised 64 members, elected from 20 three-member and two two-member wards. Before this, the council had 60 members elected from 20 three-member wards. Just before the 2010 election, its political balance was 37 Labour members, 18 Liberal Democrats, seven Conservatives and one Green, giving Labour an eleven-member majority. In the 2010 Lambeth Council election, Labour gained seats and the Liberal Democrats, Conservatives and Greens lost seats. In 2014 the Liberal Democrats lost their seats, Conservatives were reduced to three and the Greens to one. Labour, gaining seats from the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, had 59 seats.

In the 2016 European Union referendum, Lambeth had the highest share of Remain votes in the United Kingdom at 78.62%, second to overseas territory Gibraltar's 95.9%.[10]

Geography

Lambeth is a long, thin borough, about three miles (five kilometres) wide and seven miles (eleven kilometres) long. Brixton is its civic centre, and there are other town centres. The largest shopping areas are (in order of size) Streatham, Brixton, Vauxhall, Clapham and West Norwood.

In the northern part of the borough are the central London districts of the South Bank, Vauxhall and Lambeth; in the south are the suburbs of Gipsy Hill, Streatham, West Dulwich and West Norwood. In between are the developed and inner-city districts of Brixton, Brixton Hill, Streatham Hill, Clapham, Clapham Park, Herne Hill, Stockwell, Tulse Hill and Kennington, each at different stages of gentrification with suburban and urban elements. Vauxhall and South Lambeth are central districts in the process of redevelopment with high-density business and residential property. Streatham lies between suburban London and inner-city Brixton, with the suburban and developed areas of Streatham, Streatham Hill and Streatham Vale.

The London Borough of Southwark lies to the east of the Borough of Lambeth. To the west is the London Borough of Wandsworth; to the south-west is the London Borough of Merton; and to the south is the London Borough of Croydon.

Parks and green space

Lambeth's open spaces include Brockwell Park and Lido, Streatham Common, half of Clapham Common, West Norwood Cemetery, Archbishop's Park, Norbury Park, Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens and Ruskin Larkhall and Kennington Parks.

Landmarks

Along and around the South Bank, a tourist area has developed around the former Greater London Council headquarters of County Hall and the Southbank Centre and National Theatre. Also on the river is the London Eye and Shell Centre. Nearby is St Thomas' Hospital, Lambeth Palace and the Florence Nightingale Museum. Nearby is Brixton, home of Lambeth Town Hall and the Brixton Murals.

 
London Eye
 
Sunlight Laundry

Landmark church buildings include:

 
St John the Divine on Vassall Road

The Oval cricket ground in Kennington is the home of Surrey County Cricket.

The Basaveshwara statue at the Albert Embankment erected by the former Mayor of Lambeth Neeraj Patil was unveiled by the Prime Minister of India on 14 November 2015.[11]

Demography

 
Population pyramid of the Borough of Lambeth in 2020
Population census
YearPop.±%
1801 34,135—    
1811 49,511+45.0%
1821 68,458+38.3%
1831 102,524+49.8%
1841 131,131+27.9%
1851 158,559+20.9%
1861 204,252+28.8%
1871 249,945+22.4%
1881 295,637+18.3%
1891 332,619+12.5%
1901 357,316+7.4%
1911 383,848+7.4%
1921 388,779+1.3%
1931 393,782+1.3%
1941 355,970−9.6%
1951 321,795−9.6%
1961 315,184−2.1%
1971 308,740−2.0%
1981 244,153−20.9%
1991 256,406+5.0%
2001 266,170+3.8%
2011 303,086+13.9%
Note:[12]

Ethnicity

Ethnic Group 1981 estimations[13] 1991[14] 2001[15] 2011[16] 2021[17]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 187,998 77% 170,755 69.7% 166,058 62.39% 173,025 57.09% 174,778 55%
White: British 131,939 49.57% 118,250 39.02% 119,395 37.6%
White: Irish 8,689 3.26% 7,456 2.46% 6,828 2.1%
White: Gypsy or Irish Traveller 195 0.06% 146 0.0%
White: Roma 1,537 0.5%
White: Other 25,430 9.55% 47,124 15.55% 46,872 14.8%
Asian or Asian British: Total 14,937 6.1% 15,526 5.83% 20,938 6.91% 23,051 7.3%
Asian or Asian British: Indian 5,208 5,316 2.00% 4,983 1.64% 6,054 1.9%
Asian or Asian British: Pakistani 1,997 2,634 0.99% 3,072 1.01% 3,868 1.2%
Asian or Asian British: Bangladeshi 1,658 2,169 0.81% 2,221 0.73% 2,502 0.8%
Asian or Asian British: Chinese 3,086 3,362 1.26% 4,573 1.51% 4,986 1.6%
Asian or Asian British: Other Asian 2,988 2,045 0.77% 6,089 2.01% 5,641 1.8%
Black or Black British: Total 53,432 21.8% 68,554 25.76% 78,542 25.91% 76,145 24%
Black or Black British: African 16,021 30,836 11.59% 35,187 11.61% 37,359 11.8%
Black or Black British: Caribbean 30,789 32,139 12.07% 28,886 9.53% 28,991 9.1%
Black or Black British: Other Black 6622 5,579 2.10% 14,469 4.77% 9,795 3.1%
Mixed or British Mixed: Total 12,854 4.83% 23,160 7.64% 25,630 8%
Mixed: White and Black Caribbean 5,322 2.00% 8,302 2.74% 8,348 2.6%
Mixed: White and Black African 2,159 0.81% 4,301 1.42% 4,006 1.3%
Mixed: White and Asian 2,100 0.79% 3,574 1.18% 4,541 1.4%
Mixed: Other Mixed 3,273 1.23% 6,983 2.30% 8,735 2.7%
Other: Total 5,710 2.3% 3,177 1.19% 7,421 2.45% 18,046 5.6%
Other: Arab 1,728 0.57% 2,649 0.8%
Other: Any other ethnic group 5710 2.3% 3,177 1.19% 5,693 1.88% 15,397 4.8%
Ethnic minority: Total 56,155 23% 74,079 30.2% 100,111 37.61% 130,061 42.91% 142,872 45%
Total 244,153 100% 244,834 100% 266,169 100.00% 303,086 100.00% 317,650 100%

Language

Main languages spoken by all Lambeth pupils (%)[18]
Language 1992 2014
English 76.0% 49.6%
Portuguese 1.5% 7.6%
Spanish 0.9% 5.1%
Somali 0.1% 4.5%
French 1.0% 3.7%
Yoruba 3.2% 3.4%
Akan/TwiFante 1.5% 2.7%
Polish 0.1% 2.6%
Arabic 1.2% 2.5%
Bengali 1.9% 1.6%

Religion

Religion 2011[19] 2021[20]
Number % Number %
Christian 160,944 53.1 138,714 43.7
Buddhist 2,963 1.0 2,437 0.8
Hindu 3,119 1.0 3,179 1.0
Jewish 1,134 0.4 1,344 0.4
Muslim 21,500 7.1 25,871 8.1
Sikh 440 0.1 527 0.2
Other religion 1,682 0.6 2,351 0.7
No religion 84,803 28.0 119,123 37.5
Religion not stated 26,501 8.7% 24,110 7.6
Total 303,086 100.00 317,600 100.0

Sexuality

Lambeth is the local authority with the highest relative gay or lesbian population in the UK, at 5.5%, with the borough containing the gay village of Vauxhall and the area around Clapham Common.[21]

Arts

Civic affairs

Borough Council

 
A map showing the wards of Lambeth between 2002 to 2022
 
Lambeth Town Hall, completed in 1908

Since 2002, Lambeth Borough Council has had 63 members elected in 21 three-member wards by means of a plurality bloc voting system. The wards are Bishop's, Brixton Hill, Clapham Common, Clapham Town, Coldharbour, Ferndale, Gipsy Hill, Herne Hill, Knight's Hill, Larkhall, Oval, Prince's, St Leonard's, Stockwell, Streatham Hill, Streatham South, Streatham Wells, Thornton, Thurlow Park, Tulse Hill and Vassall.

The independent Local Government Boundary Commission for England reviewed Lambeth’s electoral arrangements. The Commission’s recommendations have now passed into law and take effect on Thursday 5 May 2022, when council elections take place across the borough. Most wards will have a new name, 12 wards will be represented by 2 councillors, 13 wards will be represented by 3 councillors and Lambeth’s total number of councillors stays the same at 63.[22]

Civic council affairs

The council is run by a leader and cabinet, chaired by council leader Claire Holland. All cabinet members are from the ruling Labour Party who hold 55 of the 63 seats on Lambeth Council.

The Leader of the official Opposition is Jonathan Bartley (Green) and the leader of the Conservative group is Tim Briggs.

From 1994 to 2014, the Mayor of Lambeth was elected unanimously by their fellow councillors, with each of the three political parties supplying a candidate in rotation. According to the borough's website, this underscored the mayor's apolitical role and enables him or her to represent all the borough's citizens. Since 2014, the predominance of the Labour Party has meant that all subsequent Mayors have been members of the Labour group.

Coat of arms

The borough's coat of arms is that of the former Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth, with two gold stars (mullets) in the second and third quarters of the shield indicating the addition of the districts of Clapham and Streatham. Its motto is "Spectemur agendo" ("Let us be judged according to our conduct").

Westminster Parliament

The borough has three Parliamentary constituencies: Dulwich and West Norwood (shared with Southwark), Streatham, and Vauxhall.

Twinning

The former Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and its successor have been twinned with the Vincennes district of Paris in France since 1955. Lambeth is also twinned with Bluefields, Nicaragua; Brooklyn, New York; and Spanish Town, Jamaica.

Transport

The borough covers London Waterloo railway station, the Waterloo tube station network and (until 2007) the London terminus for Eurostar. National Rail service in Lambeth is provided by South Western Railway, Southeastern, Southern, Thameslink and London Overground.

Bridges and tunnels

 
Stockwell war memorial and shelter

Railway stations

London Overground stations

Tube stations

Commuting

In March 2011, the primary forms of transport borough residents used to travel to work were the London Underground, metro, light rail or tram (21.4 percent of residents aged 16–74); bus, minibus or coach (10 percent); train (10 percent); automobile (8.6 percent); bicycle (5.7 percent), or walking (5.4 percent). A small percentage (3.2 percent) worked mainly at—or from—home.[23]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lambeth". Collins Dictionary.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 May 2016. Retrieved 6 May 2016.
  3. ^ BBC. "Where Is The Centre Of London?".
  4. ^ a b Youngs, Frederic (1979). Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England. Vol. I: Southern England. London: Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-901050-67-9.
  5. ^ "London Government: The London Boroughs", Ministry of Housing and Local Government, HMSO, 1962. See in particular paragraphs 51–57.
  6. ^ a b c d "The rise and fall of Red Ted's loony lefties". Independent.co.uk. 29 July 1995.
  7. ^ a b Kate Hoey MP and Lambeth Labour Party – Brian Deer investigates. Briandeer.com (8 August 1993). Retrieved on 17 July 2013.
  8. ^ Bennett, Will (29 July 1995). "The rise and fall of Red Ted's loony lefties". The Independent.
  9. ^ GLATUC News. Glatuc.org.uk. Retrieved on 17 July 2013.
  10. ^ "EU referendum: full results and analysis". The Guardian. 24 June 2016.
  11. ^ "PM unveils Basaveshwara Statue, inaugurates Dr Ambedkar Memorial in London". PMindia. 14 November 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  12. ^ "Lambeth: Total Population". A Vision of Britain Through Time. Great Britain Historical GIS Project. Retrieved 6 September 2011.
  13. ^ Peach, Ceri (1 July 1986). "A geographical perspective on the 1981 urban riots in England". Ethnic and Racial Studies. 9 (3): 396–411. doi:10.1080/01419870.1986.9993541. ISSN 0141-9870. The scale of the area for which one makes the definition will clearly affect the percentage. For example, in Great Britain the coloured ethnic population may form 4 per cent of the population; in England 4.6 per cent; in Greater London 14.3 per cent; in Lambeth 23.0 per cent; in Ferndale ward 43.3 percent and in certain streets, 100 per cent. In making statistical analyses of riots there is a major problem of the appropriate a real scale
  14. ^ "1991 census – theme tables". NOMIS. Retrieved 20 January 2017.
  15. ^ "KS006 - Ethnic group". NOMIS. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  16. ^ "Ethnic Group by measures". NOMIS. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
  17. ^ "Ethnic group - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  18. ^ Association, Local Government. "Lambeth State of the Borough 2016". lginform.local.gov.uk. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  19. ^ "2011 census - theme tables". Retrieved 5 September 2014.
  20. ^ "Religion - 2021 census". Office of National Statistics. 29 November 2022. from the original on 29 November 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  21. ^ Ross, Alice (19 April 2017). "Out in the country – rural hotspots found as gay population mapped". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  22. ^ "New electoral wards | Lambeth Council". beta.lambeth.gov.uk. Retrieved 11 April 2022.
  23. ^ "2011 Census: QS701EW Method of travel to work, local authorities in England and Wales". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 23 November 2013. Percentages are of all residents aged 16–74 including those not in employment. Respondents could only pick one mode, specified as the journey's longest part by distance.

External links

  • Lambeth.gov.uk London Borough of Lambeth Official Website
  • electionmemory.com Independent Lambeth Council Elections Forum
  • Community Police Consultative Group for Lambeth Independent forum for community and statutory agencies to address community safety and policing issues.

london, borough, lambeth, this, article, about, london, borough, district, within, borough, lambeth, lambeth, listen, london, borough, south, london, england, which, forms, part, inner, london, name, recorded, 1062, lambehitha, landing, place, lambs, 1255, lam. This article is about the London borough For the district within the borough see Lambeth Lambeth ˈ l ae m b e 8 listen 1 is a London borough in South London England which forms part of Inner London Its name was recorded in 1062 as Lambehitha landing place for lambs and in 1255 as Lambeth The geographical centre of London is at Frazier Street near Lambeth North tube station 2 though nearby Charing Cross on the other side of the Thames in the City of Westminster is traditionally considered the centre of London 3 LambethBoroughCoat of armsCouncil logoMotto s Spectemur agendo Let us be judged by our acts Lambeth shown within Greater LondonCoordinates Coordinates 51 27 37 N 0 07 17 W 51 460218 N 0 121445 W 51 460218 0 121445Sovereign stateUnited KingdomConstituent countryEnglandRegionLondonCeremonial countyGreater LondonCreated1 April 1965Admin HQBrixton Hill Lambeth Town HallGovernment TypeLondon borough council BodyLambeth London Borough Council LeadershipLeader amp Cabinet Labour MayorAnnie Gallop London AssemblyMarina Ahmad Labour MPsFlorence Eshalomi Labour Co op Helen Hayes Labour Bell Ribeiro Addy Labour Council LeaderCllr Claire Holland Labour Area Total10 36 sq mi 26 82 km2 Rank304th of 309 Population 2021 Total317 654 Rank38th of 309 Density31 000 sq mi 12 000 km2 Time zoneUTC GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST PostcodesSE SWArea code020ONS code00AYGSS codeE09000022PoliceMetropolitan PoliceWebsitewww lambeth gov uk Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Borough origins 1 3 Political events 2 Geography 2 1 Parks and green space 2 2 Landmarks 3 Demography 3 1 Ethnicity 3 2 Language 3 3 Religion 3 4 Sexuality 4 Arts 5 Civic affairs 5 1 Borough Council 5 2 Civic council affairs 5 3 Coat of arms 5 4 Westminster Parliament 5 5 Twinning 6 Transport 6 1 Bridges and tunnels 6 2 Railway stations 6 3 London Overground stations 6 4 Tube stations 6 5 Commuting 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditFor the borough s history from 1900 to 1965 see Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth Origins Edit Main article Lambeth Lambeth was part of the large ancient parish of Lambeth St Mary the site of the archepiscopal Lambeth Palace in the hundred of Brixton in the county of Surrey 4 It was an elongated north south parish with two miles three kilometres of River Thames frontage opposite the cities of London and Westminster Lambeth became part of the Metropolitan Police District in 1829 It remained a parish for Poor Law purposes after the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 and was governed by a vestry after the introduction of the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1855 4 Borough origins Edit Until 1889 Surrey included the present day London borough of Lambeth When the government drew the boundaries for the present London boroughs it initially suggested that the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and the Metropolitan Borough of Southwark be merged into a new borough the southern and eastern sections of the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth including Clapham Streatham and Tooting would form another South Shields town clerk R S Young was commissioned to make final recommendations to the government on the shape of the future London boroughs and he noted that the Wandsworth council opposed the partition of its borough However Wandsworth s suggestion to merge Lambeth with the Metropolitan Borough of Battersea was rejected by both councils involved Young believed that residents of Clapham and Streatham would be more familiar with Brixton than with Wandsworth and recommended a new borough formed from the Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and six wards and portions of two others from the Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth 5 Political events Edit In 1979 the administration of Edward Red Ted Knight organised the borough s first public demonstration against the Thatcher government 6 7 In 1985 Knight s Labour administration was subjected to rate capping with its budget restricted by the government Knight and most of the Labour councillors protested by refusing to propose budgets As a result of the protest 32 councillors were ordered to repay interest lost by the council due to budgeting delays and were disqualified from office for five years 6 In 1991 Joan Twelves administration failed to collect the poll tax and opposed the war in the Persian Gulf 6 7 The following year Twelves and 12 other councillors were suspended from the local Labour Party by regional officials for advocating non payment of the poll tax and other ideas 6 8 Twelves deputy leader at this time was John Harrison 9 From 1978 to 2002 the council comprised 64 members elected from 20 three member and two two member wards Before this the council had 60 members elected from 20 three member wards Just before the 2010 election its political balance was 37 Labour members 18 Liberal Democrats seven Conservatives and one Green giving Labour an eleven member majority In the 2010 Lambeth Council election Labour gained seats and the Liberal Democrats Conservatives and Greens lost seats In 2014 the Liberal Democrats lost their seats Conservatives were reduced to three and the Greens to one Labour gaining seats from the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats had 59 seats In the 2016 European Union referendum Lambeth had the highest share of Remain votes in the United Kingdom at 78 62 second to overseas territory Gibraltar s 95 9 10 Geography EditLambeth is a long thin borough about three miles five kilometres wide and seven miles eleven kilometres long Brixton is its civic centre and there are other town centres The largest shopping areas are in order of size Streatham Brixton Vauxhall Clapham and West Norwood In the northern part of the borough are the central London districts of the South Bank Vauxhall and Lambeth in the south are the suburbs of Gipsy Hill Streatham West Dulwich and West Norwood In between are the developed and inner city districts of Brixton Brixton Hill Streatham Hill Clapham Clapham Park Herne Hill Stockwell Tulse Hill and Kennington each at different stages of gentrification with suburban and urban elements Vauxhall and South Lambeth are central districts in the process of redevelopment with high density business and residential property Streatham lies between suburban London and inner city Brixton with the suburban and developed areas of Streatham Streatham Hill and Streatham Vale The London Borough of Southwark lies to the east of the Borough of Lambeth To the west is the London Borough of Wandsworth to the south west is the London Borough of Merton and to the south is the London Borough of Croydon Parks and green space Edit Main article Lambeth parks and open spaces Lambeth s open spaces include Brockwell Park and Lido Streatham Common half of Clapham Common West Norwood Cemetery Archbishop s Park Norbury Park Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens and Ruskin Larkhall and Kennington Parks Landmarks Edit Along and around the South Bank a tourist area has developed around the former Greater London Council headquarters of County Hall and the Southbank Centre and National Theatre Also on the river is the London Eye and Shell Centre Nearby is St Thomas Hospital Lambeth Palace and the Florence Nightingale Museum Nearby is Brixton home of Lambeth Town Hall and the Brixton Murals London Eye Sunlight Laundry Landmark church buildings include St Mary s Lambeth now the Garden Museum The four Waterloo Churches in the former Lambeth Parish St Matthew s Brixton St Mark s Kennington St Luke s West Norwood St John s Waterloo Holy Trinity Clapham St Leonard s Streatham Christ Church Streatham Hill Christ Church Church of England Brixton Road North Brixton All Saints Church West Dulwich Church of England Holy Trinity Trinity Rise Tulse Hill St John the Divine Church of England Vassall Road St John the Divine on Vassall Road The Oval cricket ground in Kennington is the home of Surrey County Cricket The Basaveshwara statue at the Albert Embankment erected by the former Mayor of Lambeth Neeraj Patil was unveiled by the Prime Minister of India on 14 November 2015 11 Demography Edit Population pyramid of the Borough of Lambeth in 2020 Population censusYearPop 180134 135 181149 511 45 0 182168 458 38 3 1831102 524 49 8 1841131 131 27 9 1851158 559 20 9 1861204 252 28 8 1871249 945 22 4 1881295 637 18 3 1891332 619 12 5 1901357 316 7 4 1911383 848 7 4 1921388 779 1 3 1931393 782 1 3 1941355 970 9 6 1951321 795 9 6 1961315 184 2 1 1971308 740 2 0 1981244 153 20 9 1991256 406 5 0 2001266 170 3 8 2011303 086 13 9 Note 12 Ethnicity Edit Ethnic Group 1981 estimations 13 1991 14 2001 15 2011 16 2021 17 Number Number Number Number Number White Total 187 998 77 170 755 69 7 166 058 62 39 173 025 57 09 174 778 55 White British 131 939 49 57 118 250 39 02 119 395 37 6 White Irish 8 689 3 26 7 456 2 46 6 828 2 1 White Gypsy or Irish Traveller 195 0 06 146 0 0 White Roma 1 537 0 5 White Other 25 430 9 55 47 124 15 55 46 872 14 8 Asian or Asian British Total 14 937 6 1 15 526 5 83 20 938 6 91 23 051 7 3 Asian or Asian British Indian 5 208 5 316 2 00 4 983 1 64 6 054 1 9 Asian or Asian British Pakistani 1 997 2 634 0 99 3 072 1 01 3 868 1 2 Asian or Asian British Bangladeshi 1 658 2 169 0 81 2 221 0 73 2 502 0 8 Asian or Asian British Chinese 3 086 3 362 1 26 4 573 1 51 4 986 1 6 Asian or Asian British Other Asian 2 988 2 045 0 77 6 089 2 01 5 641 1 8 Black or Black British Total 53 432 21 8 68 554 25 76 78 542 25 91 76 145 24 Black or Black British African 16 021 30 836 11 59 35 187 11 61 37 359 11 8 Black or Black British Caribbean 30 789 32 139 12 07 28 886 9 53 28 991 9 1 Black or Black British Other Black 6622 5 579 2 10 14 469 4 77 9 795 3 1 Mixed or British Mixed Total 12 854 4 83 23 160 7 64 25 630 8 Mixed White and Black Caribbean 5 322 2 00 8 302 2 74 8 348 2 6 Mixed White and Black African 2 159 0 81 4 301 1 42 4 006 1 3 Mixed White and Asian 2 100 0 79 3 574 1 18 4 541 1 4 Mixed Other Mixed 3 273 1 23 6 983 2 30 8 735 2 7 Other Total 5 710 2 3 3 177 1 19 7 421 2 45 18 046 5 6 Other Arab 1 728 0 57 2 649 0 8 Other Any other ethnic group 5710 2 3 3 177 1 19 5 693 1 88 15 397 4 8 Ethnic minority Total 56 155 23 74 079 30 2 100 111 37 61 130 061 42 91 142 872 45 Total 244 153 100 244 834 100 266 169 100 00 303 086 100 00 317 650 100 Language Edit Main languages spoken by all Lambeth pupils 18 Language 1992 2014English 76 0 49 6 Portuguese 1 5 7 6 Spanish 0 9 5 1 Somali 0 1 4 5 French 1 0 3 7 Yoruba 3 2 3 4 Akan TwiFante 1 5 2 7 Polish 0 1 2 6 Arabic 1 2 2 5 Bengali 1 9 1 6 Religion Edit Religion 2011 19 2021 20 Number Number Christian 160 944 53 1 138 714 43 7Buddhist 2 963 1 0 2 437 0 8Hindu 3 119 1 0 3 179 1 0Jewish 1 134 0 4 1 344 0 4Muslim 21 500 7 1 25 871 8 1Sikh 440 0 1 527 0 2Other religion 1 682 0 6 2 351 0 7No religion 84 803 28 0 119 123 37 5Religion not stated 26 501 8 7 24 110 7 6Total 303 086 100 00 317 600 100 0Sexuality Edit Lambeth is the local authority with the highest relative gay or lesbian population in the UK at 5 5 with the borough containing the gay village of Vauxhall and the area around Clapham Common 21 Arts EditSouth London Theatre a community theatre in West Norwood National Theatre Southbank Centre Old Vic Theatre Young Vic Theatre Ballet Rambert British Film Institute Black Cultural Archives Beconsfield Gasworks Gallery Newport Street Gallery Ovalhouse theatre Cinema MuseumCivic affairs EditBorough Council Edit A map showing the wards of Lambeth between 2002 to 2022 Lambeth Town Hall completed in 1908 Since 2002 Lambeth Borough Council has had 63 members elected in 21 three member wards by means of a plurality bloc voting system The wards are Bishop s Brixton Hill Clapham Common Clapham Town Coldharbour Ferndale Gipsy Hill Herne Hill Knight s Hill Larkhall Oval Prince s St Leonard s Stockwell Streatham Hill Streatham South Streatham Wells Thornton Thurlow Park Tulse Hill and Vassall The independent Local Government Boundary Commission for England reviewed Lambeth s electoral arrangements The Commission s recommendations have now passed into law and take effect on Thursday 5 May 2022 when council elections take place across the borough Most wards will have a new name 12 wards will be represented by 2 councillors 13 wards will be represented by 3 councillors and Lambeth s total number of councillors stays the same at 63 22 Civic council affairs Edit The council is run by a leader and cabinet chaired by council leader Claire Holland All cabinet members are from the ruling Labour Party who hold 55 of the 63 seats on Lambeth Council The Leader of the official Opposition is Jonathan Bartley Green and the leader of the Conservative group is Tim Briggs From 1994 to 2014 the Mayor of Lambeth was elected unanimously by their fellow councillors with each of the three political parties supplying a candidate in rotation According to the borough s website this underscored the mayor s apolitical role and enables him or her to represent all the borough s citizens Since 2014 the predominance of the Labour Party has meant that all subsequent Mayors have been members of the Labour group Coat of arms Edit The borough s coat of arms is that of the former Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth with two gold stars mullets in the second and third quarters of the shield indicating the addition of the districts of Clapham and Streatham Its motto is Spectemur agendo Let us be judged according to our conduct Westminster Parliament Edit The borough has three Parliamentary constituencies Dulwich and West Norwood shared with Southwark Streatham and Vauxhall Twinning Edit The former Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth and its successor have been twinned with the Vincennes district of Paris in France since 1955 Lambeth is also twinned with Bluefields Nicaragua Brooklyn New York and Spanish Town Jamaica Transport EditThe borough covers London Waterloo railway station the Waterloo tube station network and until 2007 the London terminus for Eurostar National Rail service in Lambeth is provided by South Western Railway Southeastern Southern Thameslink and London Overground Bridges and tunnels Edit Waterloo station from the London Eye Stockwell war memorial and shelter Waterloo Bridge incorporating the National Film Theatre Hungerford Bridge and Golden Jubilee Bridges Lambeth Bridge Westminster Bridge Vauxhall Bridge Hungerford Bridge and Golden Jubilee Bridges seen from the northRailway stations Edit Brixton Gipsy Hill Herne Hill Loughborough Junction Streatham Streatham Common Streatham Hill Tulse Hill Vauxhall Waterloo Waterloo East West NorwoodLondon Overground stations Edit Clapham High Street Wandsworth RoadTube stations Edit Brixton Clapham Common Clapham North Lambeth North Nine Elms Oval Stockwell Vauxhall Waterloo Commuting Edit In March 2011 the primary forms of transport borough residents used to travel to work were the London Underground metro light rail or tram 21 4 percent of residents aged 16 74 bus minibus or coach 10 percent train 10 percent automobile 8 6 percent bicycle 5 7 percent or walking 5 4 percent A small percentage 3 2 percent worked mainly at or from home 23 See also EditLambeth London Borough Council List of districts in Lambeth List of schools in LambethReferences Edit Lambeth Collins Dictionary Where is the Centre of London An Update Londonist Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2016 BBC Where Is The Centre Of London a b Youngs Frederic 1979 Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England Vol I Southern England London Royal Historical Society ISBN 0 901050 67 9 London Government The London Boroughs Ministry of Housing and Local Government HMSO 1962 See in particular paragraphs 51 57 a b c d The rise and fall of Red Ted s loony lefties Independent co uk 29 July 1995 a b Kate Hoey MP and Lambeth Labour Party Brian Deer investigates Briandeer com 8 August 1993 Retrieved on 17 July 2013 Bennett Will 29 July 1995 The rise and fall of Red Ted s loony lefties The Independent GLATUC News Glatuc org uk Retrieved on 17 July 2013 EU referendum full results and analysis The Guardian 24 June 2016 PM unveils Basaveshwara Statue inaugurates Dr Ambedkar Memorial in London PMindia 14 November 2014 Retrieved 22 November 2019 Lambeth Total Population A Vision of Britain Through Time Great Britain Historical GIS Project Retrieved 6 September 2011 Peach Ceri 1 July 1986 A geographical perspective on the 1981 urban riots in England Ethnic and Racial Studies 9 3 396 411 doi 10 1080 01419870 1986 9993541 ISSN 0141 9870 The scale of the area for which one makes the definition will clearly affect the percentage For example in Great Britain the coloured ethnic population may form 4 per cent of the population in England 4 6 per cent in Greater London 14 3 per cent in Lambeth 23 0 per cent in Ferndale ward 43 3 percent and in certain streets 100 per cent In making statistical analyses of riots there is a major problem of the appropriate a real scale 1991 census theme tables NOMIS Retrieved 20 January 2017 KS006 Ethnic group NOMIS Retrieved 30 January 2016 Ethnic Group by measures NOMIS Retrieved 2 September 2014 Ethnic group Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 29 November 2022 Association Local Government Lambeth State of the Borough 2016 lginform local gov uk Retrieved 11 April 2022 2011 census theme tables Retrieved 5 September 2014 Religion 2021 census Office of National Statistics 29 November 2022 Archived from the original on 29 November 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Ross Alice 19 April 2017 Out in the country rural hotspots found as gay population mapped The Guardian Retrieved 11 July 2019 New electoral wards Lambeth Council beta lambeth gov uk Retrieved 11 April 2022 2011 Census QS701EW Method of travel to work local authorities in England and Wales Office for National Statistics Retrieved 23 November 2013 Percentages are of all residents aged 16 74 including those not in employment Respondents could only pick one mode specified as the journey s longest part by distance External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to London Borough of Lambeth Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Lambeth Lambeth gov uk London Borough of Lambeth Official Website electionmemory com Independent Lambeth Council Elections Forum General information on Lambeth parks and green spaces Community Police Consultative Group for Lambeth Independent forum for community and statutory agencies to address community safety and policing issues Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London Borough of Lambeth amp oldid 1139494657, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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