fbpx
Wikipedia

London County Council

The London County Council (LCC) was the principal local government body for the County of London throughout its existence from 1889 to 1965, and the first London-wide general municipal authority to be directly elected. It covered the area today known as Inner London and was replaced by the Greater London Council. The LCC was the largest, most significant and most ambitious English municipal authority of its day.[1]

London County Council
Type
Type
History
Established21 March 1889
Disbanded1 April 1965
Preceded byMetropolitan Board of Works
Succeeded byGreater London Council
Leadership
Leader
Chairman
Structure
Seats
  • 1889–1919:
  • 118 councillors; 19 aldermen
  • 1919–1949:
  • 124 councillors; 20 aldermen
  • 1949–1955:
  • 129 councillors; 21 aldermen
  • 1955–1965:
  • 126 councillors; 21 aldermen
Constituencies
Electoral divisions
Elections
Bloc vote
Last election
1961
Meeting place
County Hall, Lambeth

History edit

 
The First Meeting of the London County Council in the County Hall Spring Gardens, 1889 by Henry Jamyn Brooks

By the 19th century, the City of London Corporation covered only a small fraction of metropolitan London. From 1855, the Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW) had certain powers across the metropolis, but it was appointed rather than elected. Many powers remained in the hands of traditional bodies such as parishes and the counties of Middlesex, Surrey and Kent. The creation of the LCC in 1889, as part of the Local Government Act 1888, was forced by a succession of scandals involving the MBW, and was also prompted by a general desire to create a competent government for the city, capable of strategising and delivering services effectively.[2] While the Conservative government of the day would have preferred not to create a single body covering the whole of London, their electoral pact with Liberal Unionists led them to this policy. It was established as a provisional council on 31 January 1889 and came into its powers on 21 March 1889.[3] Shortly after its creation a Royal Commission on the Amalgamation of the City and County of London considered the means for amalgamation with the City of London. Although this was not achieved, it led to the creation of 28 metropolitan boroughs as lower tier authorities to replace the various local vestries and boards in 1900; they assumed some powers of the LCC and shared others.

The LCC provided very few services within the City of London, where the ancient Corporation monopolised local governance.[4]

Powers and duties edit

The LCC inherited the powers of its predecessor the MBW, but had wider authority over matters such as education, city planning and council housing. It took over the functions of the London School Board in 1903, and Dr C W Kimmins was appointed chief inspector of the education department in 1904.

From 1899, the Council progressively acquired and operated the tramways in the county, which it electrified from 1903. By 1933, when the LCC Tramways were taken over by the London Passenger Transport Board, it was the largest tram operator in the United Kingdom, with more than 167 miles (269 km) of route and over 1,700 tramcars.

Housing reform edit

One of the LCC's most important roles during the late 19th and early 20th century, was in the management of the expanding city and the re-development of its growing slums.[5] In the Victorian era, new housing had been intentionally urban and large-scale tenement buildings dominated. Beginning in the 1930s, the LCC incentivised an increase in more suburban housing styles. A less-dense style of development, focusing on single family homes, was popular among London housing developers because it was believed that this would satisfy the working classes and provide insurance, "against Bolshevism," to quote one parliamentary secretary. The LCC set the standard for new construction at 12 houses per acre of land at a time when some London areas had as many as 80 housing units per acre. The passage of the Housing of the Working Classes Act in 1885 gave the LCC the power to compel the sale of land for housing development, a power that was vital to the systematic rehousing that began under the council's early Progressive leadership.[5]

The Totterdown Fields development at Tooting was the first large suburban-style development to be built under LCC authority, in 1903, and was quickly followed by developments at Roehampton, Bellingham, and Becontree. By 1938, 76,877 units of housing had been built under the auspices of the LCC in the city and its periphery, an astonishing number given the previous pace of development.[6] Many of these new housing developments were genuinely working-class, though the poorest could rarely afford even subsidised rents. They relied on an expanding London Underground network that ferried workers en masse to places of employment in central London. These housing developments were broadly successful, and they resisted the slummification that blighted so many Victorian tenement developments. The success of these commuter developments constructed by the LCC in the periphery of the city is, "one of the more remarkable achievements in London government, and contributed much to the marked improvement of conditions between the wars for the capital's working classes."[5]

The LCC also built overspill estates outside London (some after World War II)[7] including Debden in Essex, Merstham and Sheerwater in Surrey, and Edenbridge in Kent.

Street renaming edit

The MBW, and the LCC undertook between 1857 and 1945 to standardise and clarify street names across London. Many streets in different areas of the city had similar or identical names, and the rise of the car as a primary mode of transportation in the city made these names unworkable. In an extreme case, there were over 60 streets called "Cross Street" spread across London when the LCC began its process of systematic renaming. These were given names from an approved list that was maintained by the LCC, containing only "suitably English" names. If street names were deemed un-English, they were also slated for change; Zulu Crescent in Battersea, for instance, became Rowena Crescent in 1912.[8]

Second World War era edit

By 1939, the council had the following powers and duties:[9]

Category Powers and duties Notes
Public Assistance
  • Adoption of children
  • Welfare of blind persons
  • Assistance with formation of building societies and co-operatives
  • Assistance with emigration
  • Domicilary and institutional relief
  • Casual wards
  • Training centres
  • Provision of smallholdings
  • Classes and relief works for the unemployed
  • Appointment of old age pension committee
Many of these powers were acquired in 1930 when the Local Government Act 1929 abolished the Metropolitan Asylums Board and the Poor Law Boards of Guardians.
Health Services, Housing and Sanitation
  • By-laws and regulations†
  • Prevention of spread of animal diseases†
  • District medical service
  • Main drainage
  • Hospitals and ambulances
  • Large housing schemes (inside and outside the county)†
  • Redevelopment†
  • School medical service
  • Care of "mentally defective" and "mentally disordered"
  • Midwives
  • Registration and inspection of nursing homes†
  • Open spaces†
  • Overcrowding survey
  • Prevention of river pollution
  • Residential treatment of tuberculosis
  • Clearance of unhealthy areas†
  • Treatment of venereal disease†
Medical and ambulance services passed to the National Health Service in 1948.
Regulation and Licensing
  • Licensing of boxing matches
  • Building regulation
  • Dangerous and neglected structures†
  • By-laws for good rule and government†
  • Storage, registration and inspection of celluloid†
  • Licensing of cinemas and theatres (other than those under the Lord Chamberlain)
  • Testing of gas and electricity meters†
  • Registration of employment agencies†
  • Safeguarding of children and young people in employment†
  • Registration and inspection of explosives†
  • Inspection of fertilisers and foodstuffs†
  • Registration of land charges†
  • Registration and inspection of massage establishments†
  • Music and dancing licences
  • Licensing and inspection of petroleum†
  • Licensing of racecourses
  • Clearance of unhealthy areas†
  • Treatment of venereal disease†
  • Shop hours and closing†
  • Prevention of smoke nuisance†
  • Registration of theatrical employers†
  • Town planning†
  • Registration of war and blind charities†
  • Weights and measures†
  • Protection of wild birds
Protective Services
Education and Museums
  • Protection of ancient monuments†
  • Elementary schools
  • Special schools
  • Nursery schools
  • Secondary schools
  • Technical and art schools
  • Training colleges
  • Scholarships
  • Grants to educational institutions
  • Fleet Street Museum
  • Geffrye Museum (Museum of the Home)
  • Horniman Museum
The council received powers to provide technical education in 1892. On the abolition of the London School Board the LCC became the local education authority with responsibility for elementary and secondary schools on 1 May 1904.
Transport
  • Provision of aerodromes†
  • Bridges†
  • Maintenance of Thames Embankment
  • River Ferries
  • Motor vehicle registration
  • Driver licensing
  • Street improvements†
  • Street naming and numbering
  • Subways†
  • Tunnels

Until 1933 the council provided a network of tramway services in the county. This passed to the London Passenger Transport Board.

Denotes a power administered by the City of London Corporation within the City.

Headquarters edit

Spring Gardens edit

 
Spring Gardens

The LCC initially used the Spring Gardens headquarters inherited from the Metropolitan Board of Works. The building had been designed by Frederick Marrable, the MBW's superintending architect, and dated from 1860.[10] Opinions on the merits of the building varied: the Survey of London described it as "well balanced" while the architectural correspondent of The Times was less enthusiastic. He summarised the building as "of the Palladian type of four storeys with two orders, Ionic above and Corinthian below as if its designer had looked rather hastily at the banqueting house of Inigo Jones."[10][11] The most impressive feature was the curving or elliptical spiral staircase leading to the principal floor. The original board room was too small to accommodate meetings of the new council, and it was soon replaced by a horseshoe-shaped council chamber.[10][11]

Search for a new site edit

By 1893, it was clear that the Spring Gardens building was too small for the increased work of the LCC. Seven additional buildings within a quarter of a mile of the County Hall had been acquired, and it was estimated that they would need to take over an average of two more houses annually.[12] The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Sir William Harcourt, offered the council a site at Parliament Street, Westminster for three-quarters of a million pounds. Another site subsequently became available between The Strand and The Embankment, when the Official Receiver took over the partially completed premises of the failed Liberator Building Society.[13] The council's Establishment Committee recommended the purchase of the Parliament Street lot, as it would be a prominent site opposite the Palace of Westminster and next to the principal government offices.[12] Following a debate of the whole council, the committee's recommendation was rejected on financial grounds and as it was felt that the headquarters should not be in the privileged West End.[12]

The matter remained unresolved, and in 1900 a special committee was formed by the council to seek out a suitable site. In July 1902, they presented their report, recommending a 3.35-acre (13,600 m2) site in the Adelphi. Entry roads to the proposed county hall would be made from The Strand and The Embankment.[14] The council rejected the recommendations in October 1902, and a suggestion was made that the committee seek a site south of the Thames, adjacent to Westminster Bridge.[15]

County Hall, Lambeth edit

 
County Hall from the north bank of the Thames

In April 1905, the council finally agreed to seek powers to buy three adjoining plots of land on the eastern side of Westminster Bridge as a site for a single headquarters. The debate in the council chamber was somewhat heated with one councillor objecting to the purchase as it was "on the wrong side of the river ... in a very squalid neighbourhood ... and quite unworthy of the dignity of a body like the council". Leading member of the council, John Burns countered that it "would brighten up a dull place, sweeten a sour spot and for the first time bring the south of London into a dignified and beautiful frontage on the River Thames."[16]

The necessary powers were obtained under the London County Council (Money) Act 1906, and a competition to design the new building was organised.[17] There were approximately 100 entries, and the winner was the 29-year-old Ralph Knott. Construction began in 1911, and the first section was opened in 1922, with the original building completed in 1933. Extensions continued to be made throughout the council's existence.[11][18]

Politics edit

Elections edit

 
Electioneering poster, 1907

The county was divided into electoral divisions, co-terminous with parliamentary constituencies. Initially, each returned two councillors, save for the City of London, which returned four.[19] Under the Representation of the People Act 1948 this was altered, to three each.[20] Elections of all councillors were held every three years save that none were held in the First and Second World Wars.

Complementing the elected councillors and of equal power but longer tenure the council appointed one county alderman for every six councillors. These were elected by halves (as to half of their number) by the council for a six-year term at the first meeting after each election.

Control edit

Initially, it had been hoped by many that elections to the LCC would be conducted on a non-partisan basis, but in the council two political groups formed. The majority group in 1889 was the Progressives,[21] who were unofficially allied with the Liberal Party in national politics. Those who allied with the Conservative Party formed the Moderate group. In 1906, the Moderates became known as the Municipal Reform Party.

The LCC was elected every three years. The Progressives were in control continuously from 1889 until 1907, when they lost power to the Municipal Reformers. Municipal Reform control lasted until 1934 when Labour won power, which they kept until the LCC was abolished.

Council composition:[22]

Election Overall control Mod./M.R./
Cons.
Labour Prog./Lib. Others
1961 Labour 42 + 7 84 +14
1958 Labour 25 + 7 101 + 14
1955 Labour 52 + 8 74 + 13
1952 Labour 37 + 6 92 + 15
1949 Labour 64 + 5 64 + 16 1 + 0
1946 Labour 30 + 6 90 + 14 2 + 0 2 + 0
1937 Labour 49 + 8 75 + 12
1934 Labour 55 + 9 69 + 11
1931 Municipal Reform 83 + 13 35 + 6 6 + 0 0 + 1
1928 Municipal Reform 77 + 12 42 + 6 5 + 1 0 + 1
1925 Municipal Reform 83 + 13 35 + 6 6 + 0
1922 Municipal Reform 82 + 12 16 + 3 26 + 5
1919 Municipal Reform 68 + 12 15 + 2 40 + 6 1 + 0
1913 Municipal Reform 67 + 15 2 + 0 49 + 4
1910 Municipal Reform 60 + 17 3 + 0 55 + 2
1907 Municipal Reform 79 + 11 1 + 0 37 + 8 1 + 0
1904 Progressive 35 + 6 82 + 13 1 + 0
1901 Progressive 32 + 6 0 + 1 86 + 12
1898 Progressive 48 + 8 0 + 1 70 + 10
1895 Progressive 59 + 7 59 + 12
1892 Progressive 35 + 2 83 + 17
1889 Progressive 46 + 1 72 + 18

Leaders edit

 
Council Chamber of the LCC, from the majority benches
 
King George VI & Queen Elizabeth commemorative ceramic mug, May 1937, J. & G. Meakin for London County Council.

The post of leader of the council was only officially recognised in 1933. This table gives the leaders of the majority parties on the council before this time.

Name Party From To Years served
Thomas Farrer Progressive 21 Mar 1889 27 Mar 1890 1
James Stuart Progressive 27 Mar 1890 9 Mar 1892 2
Charles Harrison Progressive 9 Mar 1892 10 Mar 1898 6
Thomas McKinnon Wood Progressive 10 Mar 1898 8 Mar 1907 9
Richard Robinson Municipal Reform 8 Mar 1907 11 Mar 1908 1
William Peel Municipal Reform 11 Mar 1908 8 Mar 1910 2
William Hayes Fisher Municipal Reform 8 Mar 1910 19 Dec 1911
Cyril Jackson Municipal Reform 19 Dec 1911 16 Mar 1915
Ronald Collet Norman Municipal Reform 16 Mar 1915 1 Mar 1918 3
George Hume Municipal Reform 1 Mar 1918 11 Mar 1925 7
William Ray Municipal Reform 11 Mar 1925 9 Mar 1934 9
Herbert Morrison Labour 9 Mar 1934 27 May 1940 6.16
Charles Latham Labour 27 May 1940 29 Jul 1947 7.16
Isaac Hayward Labour 29 Jul 1947 31 Mar 1965 17¾

Chairmen and vice chairmen edit

 
Lord Rosebery, first chairman of the London County Council

The county council was required by statute to appoint a chairman and a vice chairman at its annual meeting. Both of these positions were generally filled by members of the majority party. The chairman chaired meetings of the council, and was the county's civic leader, filling a similar role to the mayor of a borough or city. The vice chairman performed these functions in his absence. The first chairman was the Earl of Rosebery, and the last chairman was Arthur Wicks.

The chairmanship was a prestigious office, second only to that of lord lieutenant. The incumbent chairmen were honoured with knighthoods on the occasions of the coronations of Edward VII and Elizabeth II, and the laying of the foundation stone of County Hall.[23][24][25] As part of the celebrations of the silver jubilee of George V in 1935 it was announced that the chairman would in future be entitled to use the style "right honourable", an honour already enjoyed by the Lord Mayor of London.[26]

Deputies edit

The council's standing orders also provided for the post of deputy chairman. Until 1895, the holder of this office was in charge of the organisation of the council's activities, and was paid a salary. This was seen as a conflict of interest by the Royal Commission on the Amalgamation of the City and County of London when they reported in 1894, and in 1895 a county clerk was added to the council staff to perform these duties.[27][28] The deputy chairmanship then became purely ceremonial, and was filled by nominees of the opposition party on the council.

Abolition edit

 
London County Council Tramways manhole cover in a footway in the London Borough of Lewisham as seen in 2022. There are many of these throughout the borough.

After World War II, it became evident that the London County Council was too small to cope with the greater demands being placed on local government by the new Welfare State.[29] In 1957, a Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London was set up under Sir Edwin Herbert to examine the issues and make recommendations. The Commission deliberated for three years and in 1960 it recommended a major restructuring of local government in London. This included the abolition of all existing local authorities with the exception of the City of London Corporation; a Greater London Council was to be established along with 32 new lower-tier London boroughs with populations of 100,000 to 250,000 each. The new boroughs would split the responsibility for government functions with the Greater London Council.[30]

The Royal Commission's report led to the Bill for the London Government Act 1963,[31] and when this was introduced into Parliament it initially faced considerable opposition.[32][33][34] The Bill passed into law with some minor amendments. An Inner London Education Authority was set up for education to be overseen on a broad county level. The first elections for the new Greater London Council were held on 9 April 1964. The London County Council ran concurrently for a year with the new Greater London Council to ensure a seamless transition, and the LCC was finally abolished on 1 April 1965. The Royal Commission commented that "nobody studying London Government can fail to be deeply impressed with the achievements of the London County Council. It has given the Administrative County of London a strong and able form of government which makes its standing very high among the municipal governments of the world."[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Saint, A. (1989). Politics and the people of London: the London County Council (1889–1965).
  2. ^ Szreter, Simon (May 2002). . History & Policy. History & Policy. Archived from the original on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  3. ^ Albert Emil Davies (1937). The London County Council 1889–1931: A Historical Sketch. Fabian Society.
  4. ^ Robson, William A. (1939). The government and misgovernment of London. London: Allen & Unwin. pp. 80–92. OCLC 504395625.
  5. ^ a b c Roy Porter (1994). London: A Social History. Harvard University Press.
  6. ^ W. Ashworth (1954). The Genesis of Modern British Town Planning: A Study in Economic and Social History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Routledge.
  7. ^ Municipal Dreams
  8. ^ "Old and New Street Names". History & Policy. The Hunt House London. December 2015. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  9. ^ "Powers and Duties of the L.C.C.". The Times. 21 March 1939. p. vi.
  10. ^ a b c "Old County Hall (including site of Berkeley House)". Survey of London: volume 20: St Martin-in-the-Fields, pt III: Trafalgar Square & Neighbourhood. British History Online. 1940. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  11. ^ a b c "Homes of the Council. Spring Gardens and County Hall". The Times. 21 March 1939. p. vi.
  12. ^ a b c "The London County Council". The Times. 15 July 1893. pp. 13–14.
  13. ^ "Proposed London County Council Buildings". The Times. 28 June 1893. p. 4.
  14. ^ "Proposed New London County Hall". The Times. 21 July 1902. p. 3.
  15. ^ "London County Hall". The Times. 22 October 1902. p. 10.
  16. ^ "London County Council. The New County Hall". The Times. 19 April 1905. p. 12.
  17. ^ "London County Council (Money) Bill". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 9 July 1906. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
  18. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus (1952). London except the Cities of London and Westminster. The Buildings of England. Penguin. p. 274.
  19. ^ Local Government Act 1888, S.40(4)
  20. ^ Representation of the People Act 1948, chapter (statute number) 65, section 59
  21. ^ Rodney Mace (1999). British Trade Union Posters: An Illustrated History. Sutton Publishing. p. 58. ISBN 0750921587.
  22. ^ Saint, Andrew (1989). Politics and the People of London: The London County Council, 1889–1965. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 3. ISBN 1-85285-029-9.
  23. ^ "The Coronation Honours". The Times. 26 June 1902. p. 5.
  24. ^ "No. 28589". The London Gazette. 12 March 1912. p. 1827.
  25. ^ "L.C.C. Chairman Knighted". The Times. 7 July 1953. p. 6.
  26. ^ "Royal Guests of L.C.C. The Queen At The County Hall, Honour For Chairman". The Times. 1 June 1935. p. 16.
  27. ^ "London Amalgamation – The Commissioners' Report". The Times. 1 October 1894. pp. 13–14.
  28. ^ "The London County Council Clerkship". The Times. 14 December 1895. p. 5.
  29. ^ London County Council – 'Exploring 20th Century London
  30. ^ a b London County Council – London Metropolitan Archives Collections Catalogue – City of London website
  31. ^ "London Government Act 1963". Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  32. ^ "LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Lords. 14 March 1962. col. 278–291.
  33. ^ "LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. 20 February 1963. col. 278–518.
  34. ^ "LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Commons. 11 December 1962. col. 278–291.

External links edit

  Media related to London County Council at Wikimedia Commons

New creation County council
1889–1965
Succeeded by

london, county, council, this, article, about, council, abolished, 1965, council, formed, 1965, greater, london, council, principal, local, government, body, county, london, throughout, existence, from, 1889, 1965, first, london, wide, general, municipal, auth. This article is about the council abolished in 1965 For the council formed in 1965 see Greater London Council The London County Council LCC was the principal local government body for the County of London throughout its existence from 1889 to 1965 and the first London wide general municipal authority to be directly elected It covered the area today known as Inner London and was replaced by the Greater London Council The LCC was the largest most significant and most ambitious English municipal authority of its day 1 London County CouncilCoat of armsTypeTypeCounty council for the County of LondonHistoryEstablished21 March 1889Disbanded1 April 1965Preceded byMetropolitan Board of WorksSucceeded byGreater London CouncilLeadershipLeaderList of leaders since 1933ChairmanList of chairmen since 1889StructureSeats1889 1919 118 councillors 19 aldermen1919 1949 124 councillors 20 aldermen1949 1955 129 councillors 21 aldermen1955 1965 126 councillors 21 aldermenConstituenciesElectoral divisionsElectionsVoting systemBloc voteLast election1961Meeting placeCounty Hall Lambeth Contents 1 History 2 Powers and duties 2 1 Housing reform 2 2 Street renaming 2 3 Second World War era 3 Headquarters 3 1 Spring Gardens 3 2 Search for a new site 3 3 County Hall Lambeth 4 Politics 4 1 Elections 4 2 Control 4 3 Leaders 4 4 Chairmen and vice chairmen 4 4 1 Deputies 5 Abolition 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp The First Meeting of the London County Council in the County Hall Spring Gardens 1889 by Henry Jamyn BrooksBy the 19th century the City of London Corporation covered only a small fraction of metropolitan London From 1855 the Metropolitan Board of Works MBW had certain powers across the metropolis but it was appointed rather than elected Many powers remained in the hands of traditional bodies such as parishes and the counties of Middlesex Surrey and Kent The creation of the LCC in 1889 as part of the Local Government Act 1888 was forced by a succession of scandals involving the MBW and was also prompted by a general desire to create a competent government for the city capable of strategising and delivering services effectively 2 While the Conservative government of the day would have preferred not to create a single body covering the whole of London their electoral pact with Liberal Unionists led them to this policy It was established as a provisional council on 31 January 1889 and came into its powers on 21 March 1889 3 Shortly after its creation a Royal Commission on the Amalgamation of the City and County of London considered the means for amalgamation with the City of London Although this was not achieved it led to the creation of 28 metropolitan boroughs as lower tier authorities to replace the various local vestries and boards in 1900 they assumed some powers of the LCC and shared others The LCC provided very few services within the City of London where the ancient Corporation monopolised local governance 4 Powers and duties editThe LCC inherited the powers of its predecessor the MBW but had wider authority over matters such as education city planning and council housing It took over the functions of the London School Board in 1903 and Dr C W Kimmins was appointed chief inspector of the education department in 1904 From 1899 the Council progressively acquired and operated the tramways in the county which it electrified from 1903 By 1933 when the LCC Tramways were taken over by the London Passenger Transport Board it was the largest tram operator in the United Kingdom with more than 167 miles 269 km of route and over 1 700 tramcars Housing reform edit See also London County Council cottage estate One of the LCC s most important roles during the late 19th and early 20th century was in the management of the expanding city and the re development of its growing slums 5 In the Victorian era new housing had been intentionally urban and large scale tenement buildings dominated Beginning in the 1930s the LCC incentivised an increase in more suburban housing styles A less dense style of development focusing on single family homes was popular among London housing developers because it was believed that this would satisfy the working classes and provide insurance against Bolshevism to quote one parliamentary secretary The LCC set the standard for new construction at 12 houses per acre of land at a time when some London areas had as many as 80 housing units per acre The passage of the Housing of the Working Classes Act in 1885 gave the LCC the power to compel the sale of land for housing development a power that was vital to the systematic rehousing that began under the council s early Progressive leadership 5 The Totterdown Fields development at Tooting was the first large suburban style development to be built under LCC authority in 1903 and was quickly followed by developments at Roehampton Bellingham and Becontree By 1938 76 877 units of housing had been built under the auspices of the LCC in the city and its periphery an astonishing number given the previous pace of development 6 Many of these new housing developments were genuinely working class though the poorest could rarely afford even subsidised rents They relied on an expanding London Underground network that ferried workers en masse to places of employment in central London These housing developments were broadly successful and they resisted the slummification that blighted so many Victorian tenement developments The success of these commuter developments constructed by the LCC in the periphery of the city is one of the more remarkable achievements in London government and contributed much to the marked improvement of conditions between the wars for the capital s working classes 5 The LCC also built overspill estates outside London some after World War II 7 including Debden in Essex Merstham and Sheerwater in Surrey and Edenbridge in Kent Street renaming edit The MBW and the LCC undertook between 1857 and 1945 to standardise and clarify street names across London Many streets in different areas of the city had similar or identical names and the rise of the car as a primary mode of transportation in the city made these names unworkable In an extreme case there were over 60 streets called Cross Street spread across London when the LCC began its process of systematic renaming These were given names from an approved list that was maintained by the LCC containing only suitably English names If street names were deemed un English they were also slated for change Zulu Crescent in Battersea for instance became Rowena Crescent in 1912 8 Second World War era edit By 1939 the council had the following powers and duties 9 Category Powers and duties NotesPublic Assistance Adoption of children Welfare of blind persons Assistance with formation of building societies and co operatives Assistance with emigration Domicilary and institutional relief Casual wards Training centres Provision of smallholdings Classes and relief works for the unemployed Appointment of old age pension committee Many of these powers were acquired in 1930 when the Local Government Act 1929 abolished the Metropolitan Asylums Board and the Poor Law Boards of Guardians nbsp Aldwych a broad porticoed street with underpass to Waterloo Bridge from a slum clearance project in 1905 nbsp Lambeth Bridge built by the LCC in 1932 its red colour being that of the nearby House of Lords nbsp The headquarters of the London Fire Brigade on Albert Embankment opened in 1937 nbsp A pond on Hampstead Heath the largest open space maintained by the council nbsp Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts built by the LCC in 1898 nbsp The Museum of the Home nbsp Plaque marking the opening of the Blackwall Tunnel in 1897 nbsp LCC Tram Car No 106Health Services Housing and Sanitation By laws and regulations Prevention of spread of animal diseases District medical service Main drainage Hospitals and ambulances Large housing schemes inside and outside the county Redevelopment School medical service Care of mentally defective and mentally disordered Midwives Registration and inspection of nursing homes Open spaces Overcrowding survey Prevention of river pollution Residential treatment of tuberculosis Clearance of unhealthy areas Treatment of venereal disease Medical and ambulance services passed to the National Health Service in 1948 Regulation and Licensing Licensing of boxing matches Building regulation Dangerous and neglected structures By laws for good rule and government Storage registration and inspection of celluloid Licensing of cinemas and theatres other than those under the Lord Chamberlain Testing of gas and electricity meters Registration of employment agencies Safeguarding of children and young people in employment Registration and inspection of explosives Inspection of fertilisers and foodstuffs Registration of land charges Registration and inspection of massage establishments Music and dancing licences Licensing and inspection of petroleum Licensing of racecourses Clearance of unhealthy areas Treatment of venereal disease Shop hours and closing Prevention of smoke nuisance Registration of theatrical employers Town planning Registration of war and blind charities Weights and measures Protection of wild birdsProtective Services Supervision of adoption Provision of ambulances street accidents Protection of children Costs of Central Criminal Court and quarter sessions London Fire Brigade Fire regulations Coroners and inquests Remand homes Thames flood preventionEducation and Museums Protection of ancient monuments Elementary schools Special schools Nursery schools Secondary schools Technical and art schools Training colleges Scholarships Grants to educational institutions Fleet Street Museum Geffrye Museum Museum of the Home Horniman Museum The council received powers to provide technical education in 1892 On the abolition of the London School Board the LCC became the local education authority with responsibility for elementary and secondary schools on 1 May 1904 Transport Provision of aerodromes Bridges Maintenance of Thames Embankment River Ferries Motor vehicle registration Driver licensing Street improvements Street naming and numbering Subways Tunnels Until 1933 the council provided a network of tramway services in the county This passed to the London Passenger Transport Board Denotes a power administered by the City of London Corporation within the City Headquarters editSpring Gardens edit nbsp Spring GardensThe LCC initially used the Spring Gardens headquarters inherited from the Metropolitan Board of Works The building had been designed by Frederick Marrable the MBW s superintending architect and dated from 1860 10 Opinions on the merits of the building varied the Survey of London described it as well balanced while the architectural correspondent of The Times was less enthusiastic He summarised the building as of the Palladian type of four storeys with two orders Ionic above and Corinthian below as if its designer had looked rather hastily at the banqueting house of Inigo Jones 10 11 The most impressive feature was the curving or elliptical spiral staircase leading to the principal floor The original board room was too small to accommodate meetings of the new council and it was soon replaced by a horseshoe shaped council chamber 10 11 Search for a new site edit By 1893 it was clear that the Spring Gardens building was too small for the increased work of the LCC Seven additional buildings within a quarter of a mile of the County Hall had been acquired and it was estimated that they would need to take over an average of two more houses annually 12 The Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir William Harcourt offered the council a site at Parliament Street Westminster for three quarters of a million pounds Another site subsequently became available between The Strand and The Embankment when the Official Receiver took over the partially completed premises of the failed Liberator Building Society 13 The council s Establishment Committee recommended the purchase of the Parliament Street lot as it would be a prominent site opposite the Palace of Westminster and next to the principal government offices 12 Following a debate of the whole council the committee s recommendation was rejected on financial grounds and as it was felt that the headquarters should not be in the privileged West End 12 The matter remained unresolved and in 1900 a special committee was formed by the council to seek out a suitable site In July 1902 they presented their report recommending a 3 35 acre 13 600 m2 site in the Adelphi Entry roads to the proposed county hall would be made from The Strand and The Embankment 14 The council rejected the recommendations in October 1902 and a suggestion was made that the committee seek a site south of the Thames adjacent to Westminster Bridge 15 County Hall Lambeth edit nbsp County Hall from the north bank of the ThamesMain article County Hall London In April 1905 the council finally agreed to seek powers to buy three adjoining plots of land on the eastern side of Westminster Bridge as a site for a single headquarters The debate in the council chamber was somewhat heated with one councillor objecting to the purchase as it was on the wrong side of the river in a very squalid neighbourhood and quite unworthy of the dignity of a body like the council Leading member of the council John Burns countered that it would brighten up a dull place sweeten a sour spot and for the first time bring the south of London into a dignified and beautiful frontage on the River Thames 16 The necessary powers were obtained under the London County Council Money Act 1906 and a competition to design the new building was organised 17 There were approximately 100 entries and the winner was the 29 year old Ralph Knott Construction began in 1911 and the first section was opened in 1922 with the original building completed in 1933 Extensions continued to be made throughout the council s existence 11 18 Politics editElections edit nbsp Electioneering poster 1907The county was divided into electoral divisions co terminous with parliamentary constituencies Initially each returned two councillors save for the City of London which returned four 19 Under the Representation of the People Act 1948 this was altered to three each 20 Elections of all councillors were held every three years save that none were held in the First and Second World Wars Complementing the elected councillors and of equal power but longer tenure the council appointed one county alderman for every six councillors These were elected by halves as to half of their number by the council for a six year term at the first meeting after each election Control edit Initially it had been hoped by many that elections to the LCC would be conducted on a non partisan basis but in the council two political groups formed The majority group in 1889 was the Progressives 21 who were unofficially allied with the Liberal Party in national politics Those who allied with the Conservative Party formed the Moderate group In 1906 the Moderates became known as the Municipal Reform Party The LCC was elected every three years The Progressives were in control continuously from 1889 until 1907 when they lost power to the Municipal Reformers Municipal Reform control lasted until 1934 when Labour won power which they kept until the LCC was abolished Council composition 22 Number of councillors plus aldermen 13 2 means 13 councillors and 2 aldermen Election Overall control Mod M R Cons Labour Prog Lib Others1961 Labour 42 7 84 14 1958 Labour 25 7 101 14 1955 Labour 52 8 74 13 1952 Labour 37 6 92 15 1949 Labour 64 5 64 16 1 0 1946 Labour 30 6 90 14 2 0 2 01937 Labour 49 8 75 12 1934 Labour 55 9 69 11 1931 Municipal Reform 83 13 35 6 6 0 0 11928 Municipal Reform 77 12 42 6 5 1 0 11925 Municipal Reform 83 13 35 6 6 0 1922 Municipal Reform 82 12 16 3 26 5 1919 Municipal Reform 68 12 15 2 40 6 1 01913 Municipal Reform 67 15 2 0 49 4 1910 Municipal Reform 60 17 3 0 55 2 1907 Municipal Reform 79 11 1 0 37 8 1 01904 Progressive 35 6 82 13 1 01901 Progressive 32 6 0 1 86 12 1898 Progressive 48 8 0 1 70 10 1895 Progressive 59 7 59 12 1892 Progressive 35 2 83 17 1889 Progressive 46 1 72 18 Leaders edit nbsp Council Chamber of the LCC from the majority benches nbsp King George VI amp Queen Elizabeth commemorative ceramic mug May 1937 J amp G Meakin for London County Council The post of leader of the council was only officially recognised in 1933 This table gives the leaders of the majority parties on the council before this time Name Party From To Years servedThomas Farrer Progressive 21 Mar 1889 27 Mar 1890 1James Stuart Progressive 27 Mar 1890 9 Mar 1892 2Charles Harrison Progressive 9 Mar 1892 10 Mar 1898 6Thomas McKinnon Wood Progressive 10 Mar 1898 8 Mar 1907 9Richard Robinson Municipal Reform 8 Mar 1907 11 Mar 1908 1William Peel Municipal Reform 11 Mar 1908 8 Mar 1910 2William Hayes Fisher Municipal Reform 8 Mar 1910 19 Dec 1911 1 Cyril Jackson Municipal Reform 19 Dec 1911 16 Mar 1915 4 Ronald Collet Norman Municipal Reform 16 Mar 1915 1 Mar 1918 3George Hume Municipal Reform 1 Mar 1918 11 Mar 1925 7William Ray Municipal Reform 11 Mar 1925 9 Mar 1934 9Herbert Morrison Labour 9 Mar 1934 27 May 1940 6 16Charles Latham Labour 27 May 1940 29 Jul 1947 7 16Isaac Hayward Labour 29 Jul 1947 31 Mar 1965 17 Chairmen and vice chairmen edit nbsp Lord Rosebery first chairman of the London County CouncilMain article List of chairmen of the London County Council The county council was required by statute to appoint a chairman and a vice chairman at its annual meeting Both of these positions were generally filled by members of the majority party The chairman chaired meetings of the council and was the county s civic leader filling a similar role to the mayor of a borough or city The vice chairman performed these functions in his absence The first chairman was the Earl of Rosebery and the last chairman was Arthur Wicks The chairmanship was a prestigious office second only to that of lord lieutenant The incumbent chairmen were honoured with knighthoods on the occasions of the coronations of Edward VII and Elizabeth II and the laying of the foundation stone of County Hall 23 24 25 As part of the celebrations of the silver jubilee of George V in 1935 it was announced that the chairman would in future be entitled to use the style right honourable an honour already enjoyed by the Lord Mayor of London 26 Deputies edit The council s standing orders also provided for the post of deputy chairman Until 1895 the holder of this office was in charge of the organisation of the council s activities and was paid a salary This was seen as a conflict of interest by the Royal Commission on the Amalgamation of the City and County of London when they reported in 1894 and in 1895 a county clerk was added to the council staff to perform these duties 27 28 The deputy chairmanship then became purely ceremonial and was filled by nominees of the opposition party on the council Abolition edit nbsp London County Council Tramways manhole cover in a footway in the London Borough of Lewisham as seen in 2022 There are many of these throughout the borough After World War II it became evident that the London County Council was too small to cope with the greater demands being placed on local government by the new Welfare State 29 In 1957 a Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London was set up under Sir Edwin Herbert to examine the issues and make recommendations The Commission deliberated for three years and in 1960 it recommended a major restructuring of local government in London This included the abolition of all existing local authorities with the exception of the City of London Corporation a Greater London Council was to be established along with 32 new lower tier London boroughs with populations of 100 000 to 250 000 each The new boroughs would split the responsibility for government functions with the Greater London Council 30 The Royal Commission s report led to the Bill for the London Government Act 1963 31 and when this was introduced into Parliament it initially faced considerable opposition 32 33 34 The Bill passed into law with some minor amendments An Inner London Education Authority was set up for education to be overseen on a broad county level The first elections for the new Greater London Council were held on 9 April 1964 The London County Council ran concurrently for a year with the new Greater London Council to ensure a seamless transition and the LCC was finally abolished on 1 April 1965 The Royal Commission commented that nobody studying London Government can fail to be deeply impressed with the achievements of the London County Council It has given the Administrative County of London a strong and able form of government which makes its standing very high among the municipal governments of the world 30 See also editHistory of local government in London Coat of arms of London County Council London County Council Staff Association London County Council Tramways List of members of London County Council 1889 1919 List of members of London County Council 1919 1937 List of members of London County Council 1937 1949 London Metropolitan ArchivesReferences edit Saint A 1989 Politics and the people of London the London County Council 1889 1965 Szreter Simon May 2002 A central role for local government The example of late Victorian Britain History amp Policy History amp Policy Archived from the original on 17 December 2013 Retrieved 9 December 2010 Albert Emil Davies 1937 The London County Council 1889 1931 A Historical Sketch Fabian Society Robson William A 1939 The government and misgovernment of London London Allen amp Unwin pp 80 92 OCLC 504395625 a b c Roy Porter 1994 London A Social History Harvard University Press W Ashworth 1954 The Genesis of Modern British Town Planning A Study in Economic and Social History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Routledge Municipal Dreams Old and New Street Names History amp Policy The Hunt House London December 2015 Retrieved 7 December 2015 Powers and Duties of the L C C The Times 21 March 1939 p vi a b c Old County Hall including site of Berkeley House Survey of London volume 20 St Martin in the Fields pt III Trafalgar Square amp Neighbourhood British History Online 1940 Retrieved 21 August 2009 a b c Homes of the Council Spring Gardens and County Hall The Times 21 March 1939 p vi a b c The London County Council The Times 15 July 1893 pp 13 14 Proposed London County Council Buildings The Times 28 June 1893 p 4 Proposed New London County Hall The Times 21 July 1902 p 3 London County Hall The Times 22 October 1902 p 10 London County Council The New County Hall The Times 19 April 1905 p 12 London County Council Money Bill Parliamentary Debates Hansard 9 July 1906 Retrieved 21 August 2009 Pevsner Nikolaus 1952 London except the Cities of London and Westminster The Buildings of England Penguin p 274 Local Government Act 1888 S 40 4 Representation of the People Act 1948 chapter statute number 65 section 59 Rodney Mace 1999 British Trade Union Posters An Illustrated History Sutton Publishing p 58 ISBN 0750921587 Saint Andrew 1989 Politics and the People of London The London County Council 1889 1965 Continuum International Publishing Group p 3 ISBN 1 85285 029 9 The Coronation Honours The Times 26 June 1902 p 5 No 28589 The London Gazette 12 March 1912 p 1827 L C C Chairman Knighted The Times 7 July 1953 p 6 Royal Guests of L C C The Queen At The County Hall Honour For Chairman The Times 1 June 1935 p 16 London Amalgamation The Commissioners Report The Times 1 October 1894 pp 13 14 The London County Council Clerkship The Times 14 December 1895 p 5 London County Council Exploring 20th Century London a b London County Council London Metropolitan Archives Collections Catalogue City of London website London Government Act 1963 Retrieved 10 July 2023 LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Lords 14 March 1962 col 278 291 LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 20 February 1963 col 278 518 LOCAL GOVERNMENT BILL Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 11 December 1962 col 278 291 External links edit nbsp Media related to London County Council at Wikimedia Commons New creation County council1889 1965 Succeeded byGreater London Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London County Council amp oldid 1176800335, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.