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Borough of Middlesbrough

The Borough of Middlesbrough is a borough with unitary authority status in North Yorkshire, England, based around the town of Middlesbrough in the north of the county. It is in the Tees Valley mayoralty along with Stockton-on-Tees, Redcar and Cleveland, Hartlepool and Darlington boroughs. Nunthorpe along with Stainton and Thornton have statutory parish councils.

Borough of Middlesbrough
The borough shown within North Yorkshire
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
RegionNorth East England
Combined authorityTees Valley
Ceremonial countyNorth Yorkshire
ConstituenciesMiddlesbrough
South and East Cleveland
Civil parishesNunthorpe
Stainton and Thornton
SeatMiddlesbrough
Area
 • Total20.81 sq mi (53.89 km2)
 • Rank262nd
Population
 (2021)
 • Total143,926
 • RankRanked 150th
 • Density6,900/sq mi (2,700/km2)
Time zoneUTC+0 (Greenwich Mean Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (British Summer Time)
Postcode
TS1, TS2, TS3, TS4, TS5, TS7, TS8
Area codeTS
ONS code00EH (ONS)
E06000002 (GSS)
Ethnicity88% White, 8% S.Asian, 4% other
Websitewww.middlesbrough.gov.uk

History

County Borough/ district
Name Type Dependant Type From Until Notes
Yorkshire Historic  Y Municipal borough 1856 1889
North Riding of Yorkshire Administrative  N County borough 1889 1968 Merged into Teesside
Cleveland (county town) Non-metropolitan  Y Shire district 1974 1996
North Yorkshire Ceremonial  N Unitary authority 1996

From the county's creation in 1889 (from the historic subdivision of Yorkshire) areas under Middlesbrough's governance remained part of North Riding of Yorkshire county for varing amounts of self-governance. The final iteration of this governance was reconstituted as a non-metropolitan district in the county of Cleveland (the county itself governed from Middlesbrough) in 1974. Since 1996, for ceremonial purposes, the district is part of North Yorkshire as a unitary authority. Fire and Police, however, remain as well as the borough's placement in North East England instead of Yorkshire and the Humber, which large parts of North Yorkshire is in. It is included within the combined authority area of Tees Valley for strategic purposes.

Areas of the borough

The borough contains the following areas:

Structure

The borough is made up of 19 council wards (formerly 21 as Gresham ward merged with Newport ward between the 2011 and 2021 censuses) within the borough of Middlesbrough. Each ward has a non-statutory community committee.[3] They is also two statutory parish councils for "Nunthorpe" and "Stainton and Thornton".[4] East, north and west Middlesbrough as well as parts of Park End-and-Beckfield, Berwick-Hils-and-Pallister and Ladgate are covered by the Middlesbrough parliamentary constituency. South Middlesbrough as well as the other parts of the wards are covered by the Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland parliamentary constituency.

 
Skyline of Middlesbrough
 
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1
Acklam (W)
2
Aryesome (W)
3
Longlands and Beechwood (N)
4
Berwick Hills and Pallister (E)
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Brambles and Thorntree (E)
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Central (N)
7
Kader (W)
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Ladgate (W)
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Linthorpe (N)
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Newport (N)
11
North Ormesby (E)
12
Park (N)
13
Park End and Beckfield (E)
14
Trimdon (W)

The council operates a with directly elected Mayor of Middlesbrough. The political composition of the council, as of the May 2019 local election, is Independent 23, Labour 20; and Conservative 3.

Political party make-up of Middlesbrough Borough Council
   Party Seats[5][6] Current council
  Independent 23                                                                      
  Labour 20                                                                      
  Conservative 3                                                                      

Teesside International Airport (formerly known as Durham Tees Valley Airport), is joint owned by the borough and the other four Tees Valley councils The council also owns multiple buildings in the borough.

Mayor

The first ten mayors of Middlesbrough[7]
Year Name of Mayor
1853 Henry Bolckow
1854 Isaac Wilson
1855 John Vaughan
1856 Henry Thompson
1858 John Richardson
1859 William Fallows
1860 George Bottomley
1861 James Harris
1862 Thomas Brentnall
1863 Edgar Gilkes
The first directly elected mayors of Middlesbrough[8]
Years Name of Mayor
2002–2015 Ray Mallon
2015–2019 Dave Budd
2019– Andy Preston

The first Mayor of Middlesbrough was the German-born Henry Bolckow in 1853.[9][10] In the 20th century, encompassing introduction of universal suffrage in 1918 and changes in local government in the United Kingdom, the role of mayor changed and became largely ceremonial.

In 2001, as part of a wider programme of devolution, voters in Middlesbrough were offered a referendum to decide between a directly elected mayor or the cabinet system then in operation, with the traditional civic and ceremonial functions of the Mayors being transferred to the Chair of Middlesbrough Council, which they did so by a large margin.[11]

In 2002, Ray Mallon (Independent), formerly a senior officer in Cleveland Police, became Middlesbrough's first directly elected mayor. He was re-elected in 2007[12] and then in 2011.[13] Mallon chose not to stand for a fourth term in 2015 and his deputy mayor, Dave Budd (Labour) was elected to succeed him.[14][15] Budd decided not to stand for a second term and in the May 2019 mayoral election, local businessman Andy Preston (independent) won with 59% of the vote.[16]

Demography

Borough

The borough of Middlesbrough's total resident population was 143,926, by the 2021 The population of Middlesbrough as a county borough peaked at almost 165,000 in the late 1960s, however this has declined since the early 1980s before starting to recover in the 2010s.[17]

Women in the former Middlehaven ward (absorbed into the central ward) had the second lowest life expectancy at birth, 74 years, of any ward in England and Wales in 2016.[18]

Population 2011 Borough
White British 86.0%
Asian 7.8%
Black 1.3%

In the borough of Middlesbrough, 14.0% of the population were non-white British. This makes the town about as ethnically diverse as Exeter. Additionally, it has a lower indigenous population than Gateshead and South Shields which are further north on the other side of County Durham but now in Tyne and Wear although historically within County Durham. It is also the second most ethnically diverse settlement in the North East (after Newcastle).

Built-up area sub-division

The wider Middlesbrough built-up area sub-division had a population of 174,700 according to the 2011 census. The suburbs which make up the area known as Greater Eston, which in eastern Redcar and Cleveland are often considered part of Middlesbrough outside of the borough.

Economy

 
Middlesbrough Town Hall, Albert Street

This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Middlesbrough at current basic prices (pp. 240–253) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling.

Year Regional Gross Value Added4 Agriculture1 Industry2 Services3
1995 1,115 8 377 729
2000 1,192 6 417 768
2003 1,538 6 561 971

^1 includes hunting and forestry

^2 includes energy and construction

^3 includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured

^4 Components may not sum to totals due to rounding

Freedom of the Borough

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

Individuals

  • Councillor Joseph Calvert JP: 7 November 1919.[19]
  • L. Taylor – 30 March 1967 (deceased 23 May 1983)
  • Right Rev. Monsignor Canon M O'Sullivan – 26 March 1968 (deceased 6 May 1978)
  • Mrs Mary A. Daniel – 16 October 1974 (deceased 23 December 1983)
  • Mrs Ethel A. Gaunt – 16 October 1974 (deceased 10 June 1990)
  • Rt. Hon. Lord Bottomley OBE PC of Middlesbrough in the County of Cleveland – 21 December 1976 (deceased 3 November 1995)
  • Councillor Mr E. A. Dickinson MBE – 8 May 1981 (deceased 2001)
  • Mrs Rose M. Haston – 9 May 1986 (deceased 22 January 1991)
  • Councillor Mr Arthur Pearson CBE – 9 May 1986 (deceased 23 February 1997)
  • Councillor Mr Robert I. Smith – 9 May 1986 (deceased 23 February 1993)
  • Councillor W. Ferrier MBE – 16 June 1992 (deceased 4 March 2015)
  • Councillor Miss G. Popple – 16 June 1992 (deceased 10 May 2003)
  • Councillor Mr Len Poole BEM JP – 16 June 1992 (deceased 15 May 2011)
  • Mr John Robert Foster OBE – 8 March 1996
  • Alma Collin MBE – 15 March 2000 (deceased 2014)
  • Councillor Mrs Hazel Pearson OBE – 3 December 2003 (deceased 5 February 2016)
  • Mr Steve Gibson – 18 March 2004
  • Mr Jack Hatfield – 30 June 2009 (deceased January 2014)
  • Mr Mackenzie Thorpe – 11 April 2019[20]
  • Gareth Southgate OBE - 28 July 2021.[21][22][23][24]

Military units

References

  1. ^ . Midlesbough.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  2. ^ "Middlesbrough". Heraldry of the World. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  3. ^ "Middlesbrough Registration District". UKBMD. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Middlesbrough". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  5. ^ "Local Election Results 2011 Summary". Association of Liberal Democrat Councillors. Archived from the original on 23 December 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  6. ^ "Borough and Parish Elections results - Thursday 2 May 2019". www.darlington.gov.uk.
  7. ^ "Middlesbrough Parish information from Bulmers' 1890". GENUKI. Retrieved 1 November 2008.
  8. ^ "Local elections 2019: the directly elected mayoral contests". Democratic Audit Website. 30 April 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  9. ^ "Bolckow, Henry". Appletons' Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events. Vol. 18. 1886. p. 650. William Ferdinand, a British manufacturer, born in Germany in 1806, died 18 June 1878. ... He was the first Mayor of Middlesbrough, a place which owes much of its prosperity to his energy and enterprise
  10. ^ Up The Boro!. 2011. p. 9. This was followed in 1868 by Middlesbrough's first Parliamentary Elections, in which Henry Bolckow (1806–1878) of the firm Bolckow & Vaughan wanted to stand for election, however this was initially blocked by the fact that he was a foreigner ...
  11. ^ "Mayoral referendum result – Middlesbrough Council". Local Government Chronicle (LGC). 19 October 2001. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  12. ^ . www.middlesbrough.gov.uk. 12 June 2017. Archived from the original on 12 January 2020. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  13. ^ . www.middlesbrough.gov.uk. 7 June 2016. Archived from the original on 4 May 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  14. ^ "2015 Mayoral election". www.middlesbrough.gov.uk. 7 June 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  15. ^ "Dave Budd replaces Ray Mallon as Middlesbrough mayor". BBC News. 8 May 2015. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
  16. ^ "2019 mayoral and local election". www.middlesbrough.gov.uk. 29 April 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Middlesbrough Unitary Authority: Total Population". GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth, A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  18. ^ Bennett, James; et al. (22 November 2018). "Contributions of diseases and injuries to widening life expectancy inequalities in England from 2001 to 2016: a population-based analysis of vital registration data". Lancet public health. Retrieved 23 November 2018.
  19. ^ "Freedom of the Borough presented to Sir Joseph Calvert 7th November 1919". 11 January 2013. Retrieved 29 November 2020 – via Flickr.
  20. ^ "Middlesbrough Borough Council" (PDF). www.middlesbrough.gov.uk.
  21. ^ "England manager Gareth Southgate given freedom of Middlesbrough". BBC News. 29 July 2021. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  22. ^ Craigie, Emily (29 July 2021). "Gareth Southgate awarded Freedom of the Borough". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  23. ^ Craigie, Emily (29 July 2021). "Gareth Southgate granted prestigious Freedom of the Borough after huge public support". Teesside Gazette. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  24. ^ Speare-Cole, Rebecca (30 July 2021). "Gareth Southgate: England manager given Freedom of Middlesbrough award". Sky News. Retrieved 21 August 2021.

External links

Video clips

Coordinates: 54°34′33″N 1°14′02″W / 54.5757°N 1.2340°W / 54.5757; -1.2340

borough, middlesbrough, this, article, about, governance, from, middlesbrough, current, borough, council, middlesbrough, council, borough, with, unitary, authority, status, north, yorkshire, england, based, around, town, middlesbrough, north, county, tees, val. This article is about governance from and in Middlesbrough For the current borough council see Middlesbrough Council The Borough of Middlesbrough is a borough with unitary authority status in North Yorkshire England based around the town of Middlesbrough in the north of the county It is in the Tees Valley mayoralty along with Stockton on Tees Redcar and Cleveland Hartlepool and Darlington boroughs Nunthorpe along with Stainton and Thornton have statutory parish councils Borough of MiddlesbroughBorough with unitary authority statusMiddlesbrough Town HallCoat of Arms 1 2 The borough shown within North YorkshireSovereign stateUnited KingdomConstituent countryEnglandRegionNorth East EnglandCombined authorityTees ValleyCeremonial countyNorth YorkshireConstituenciesMiddlesbroughSouth and East ClevelandCivil parishesNunthorpeStainton and ThorntonSeatMiddlesbroughArea Total20 81 sq mi 53 89 km2 Rank262ndPopulation 2021 Total143 926 RankRanked 150th Density6 900 sq mi 2 700 km2 Time zoneUTC 0 Greenwich Mean Time Summer DST UTC 1 British Summer Time PostcodeTS1 TS2 TS3 TS4 TS5 TS7 TS8Area codeTSONS code00EH ONS E06000002 GSS Ethnicity88 White 8 S Asian 4 otherWebsitewww wbr middlesbrough wbr gov wbr uk Contents 1 History 2 Areas of the borough 3 Structure 4 Mayor 5 Demography 5 1 Borough 5 2 Built up area sub division 6 Economy 7 Freedom of the Borough 7 1 Individuals 7 2 Military units 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Video clipsHistory EditSee also Middlesbrough Rural District County Borough districtName Type Dependant Type From Until NotesYorkshire Historic Y Municipal borough 1856 1889North Riding of Yorkshire Administrative N County borough 1889 1968 Merged into TeessideCleveland county town Non metropolitan Y Shire district 1974 1996North Yorkshire Ceremonial N Unitary authority 1996From the county s creation in 1889 from the historic subdivision of Yorkshire areas under Middlesbrough s governance remained part of North Riding of Yorkshire county for varing amounts of self governance The final iteration of this governance was reconstituted as a non metropolitan district in the county of Cleveland the county itself governed from Middlesbrough in 1974 Since 1996 for ceremonial purposes the district is part of North Yorkshire as a unitary authority Fire and Police however remain as well as the borough s placement in North East England instead of Yorkshire and the Humber which large parts of North Yorkshire is in It is included within the combined authority area of Tees Valley for strategic purposes Areas of the borough EditThe borough contains the following areas Acklam Berwick Hills Brambles Farm Coulby Newham Easterside Grove Hill Hemlington Linthorpe Middlehaven Nunthorpe Ormesby Pallister Stainton Saltersgill Thornton Thorntree Tollesby West Lane Whinney BanksStructure EditThe borough is made up of 19 council wards formerly 21 as Gresham ward merged with Newport ward between the 2011 and 2021 censuses within the borough of Middlesbrough Each ward has a non statutory community committee 3 They is also two statutory parish councils for Nunthorpe and Stainton and Thornton 4 East north and west Middlesbrough as well as parts of Park End and Beckfield Berwick Hils and Pallister and Ladgate are covered by the Middlesbrough parliamentary constituency South Middlesbrough as well as the other parts of the wards are covered by the Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland parliamentary constituency Skyline of Middlesbrough 12345678910111213141516171819201Acklam W 2Aryesome W 3Longlands and Beechwood N 4Berwick Hills and Pallister E 5Brambles and Thorntree E 6Central N 7Kader W 8Ladgate W 9Linthorpe N 10Newport N 11North Ormesby E 12Park N 13Park End and Beckfield E 14Trimdon W 15Coulby Newham S 16Hemlington S 17Marton East S 18Marton West S 19Nunthorpe S 20Stainton and Thornton S The council operates a with directly elected Mayor of Middlesbrough The political composition of the council as of the May 2019 local election is Independent 23 Labour 20 and Conservative 3 Political party make up of Middlesbrough Borough Council Party Seats 5 6 Current council Independent 23 Labour 20 Conservative 3 Teesside International Airport formerly known as Durham Tees Valley Airport is joint owned by the borough and the other four Tees Valley councils The council also owns multiple buildings in the borough Mayor EditSee also Mayor of Middlesbrough The first ten mayors of Middlesbrough 7 Year Name of Mayor1853 Henry Bolckow1854 Isaac Wilson1855 John Vaughan1856 Henry Thompson1858 John Richardson1859 William Fallows1860 George Bottomley1861 James Harris1862 Thomas Brentnall1863 Edgar GilkesThe first directly elected mayors of Middlesbrough 8 Years Name of Mayor2002 2015 Ray Mallon2015 2019 Dave Budd2019 Andy Preston Andy Preston the current Mayor of MiddlesbroughThe first Mayor of Middlesbrough was the German born Henry Bolckow in 1853 9 10 In the 20th century encompassing introduction of universal suffrage in 1918 and changes in local government in the United Kingdom the role of mayor changed and became largely ceremonial In 2001 as part of a wider programme of devolution voters in Middlesbrough were offered a referendum to decide between a directly elected mayor or the cabinet system then in operation with the traditional civic and ceremonial functions of the Mayors being transferred to the Chair of Middlesbrough Council which they did so by a large margin 11 In 2002 Ray Mallon Independent formerly a senior officer in Cleveland Police became Middlesbrough s first directly elected mayor He was re elected in 2007 12 and then in 2011 13 Mallon chose not to stand for a fourth term in 2015 and his deputy mayor Dave Budd Labour was elected to succeed him 14 15 Budd decided not to stand for a second term and in the May 2019 mayoral election local businessman Andy Preston independent won with 59 of the vote 16 Demography EditBorough Edit The borough of Middlesbrough s total resident population was 143 926 by the 2021 The population of Middlesbrough as a county borough peaked at almost 165 000 in the late 1960s however this has declined since the early 1980s before starting to recover in the 2010s 17 Women in the former Middlehaven ward absorbed into the central ward had the second lowest life expectancy at birth 74 years of any ward in England and Wales in 2016 18 Population 2011 BoroughWhite British 86 0 Asian 7 8 Black 1 3 In the borough of Middlesbrough 14 0 of the population were non white British This makes the town about as ethnically diverse as Exeter Additionally it has a lower indigenous population than Gateshead and South Shields which are further north on the other side of County Durham but now in Tyne and Wear although historically within County Durham It is also the second most ethnically diverse settlement in the North East after Newcastle Built up area sub division Edit The wider Middlesbrough built up area sub division had a population of 174 700 according to the 2011 census The suburbs which make up the area known as Greater Eston which in eastern Redcar and Cleveland are often considered part of Middlesbrough outside of the borough Economy Edit Middlesbrough Town Hall Albert Street This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Middlesbrough at current basic prices published pp 240 253 by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling Year Regional Gross Value Added4 Agriculture1 Industry2 Services31995 1 115 8 377 7292000 1 192 6 417 7682003 1 538 6 561 971 1 includes hunting and forestry 2 includes energy and construction 3 includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured 4 Components may not sum to totals due to roundingFreedom of the Borough EditThe following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Borough of Middlesbrough This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items August 2020 Individuals Edit Councillor Joseph Calvert JP 7 November 1919 19 L Taylor 30 March 1967 deceased 23 May 1983 Right Rev Monsignor Canon M O Sullivan 26 March 1968 deceased 6 May 1978 Mrs Mary A Daniel 16 October 1974 deceased 23 December 1983 Mrs Ethel A Gaunt 16 October 1974 deceased 10 June 1990 Rt Hon Lord Bottomley OBE PC of Middlesbrough in the County of Cleveland 21 December 1976 deceased 3 November 1995 Councillor Mr E A Dickinson MBE 8 May 1981 deceased 2001 Mrs Rose M Haston 9 May 1986 deceased 22 January 1991 Councillor Mr Arthur Pearson CBE 9 May 1986 deceased 23 February 1997 Councillor Mr Robert I Smith 9 May 1986 deceased 23 February 1993 Councillor W Ferrier MBE 16 June 1992 deceased 4 March 2015 Councillor Miss G Popple 16 June 1992 deceased 10 May 2003 Councillor Mr Len Poole BEM JP 16 June 1992 deceased 15 May 2011 Mr John Robert Foster OBE 8 March 1996 Alma Collin MBE 15 March 2000 deceased 2014 Councillor Mrs Hazel Pearson OBE 3 December 2003 deceased 5 February 2016 Mr Steve Gibson 18 March 2004 Mr Jack Hatfield 30 June 2009 deceased January 2014 Mr Mackenzie Thorpe 11 April 2019 20 Gareth Southgate OBE 28 July 2021 21 22 23 24 Military units Edit The Green Howards 13 May 1944 transferred to the Yorkshire Regiment 25 October 2006 The 34th Northern Signal Regiment Volunteers 29 April 1972 HMS Marlborough RN 15 March 2000 References Edit Middlesbrough s coat of arms Midlesbough gov uk Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Middlesbrough Heraldry of the World Retrieved 25 August 2022 Middlesbrough Registration District UKBMD Retrieved 17 February 2021 Middlesbrough Ordnance Survey Retrieved 17 February 2021 Local Election Results 2011 Summary Association of Liberal Democrat Councillors Archived from the original on 23 December 2012 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Borough and Parish Elections results Thursday 2 May 2019 www darlington gov uk Middlesbrough Parish information from Bulmers 1890 GENUKI Retrieved 1 November 2008 Local elections 2019 the directly elected mayoral contests Democratic Audit Website 30 April 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Bolckow Henry Appletons Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events Vol 18 1886 p 650 William Ferdinand a British manufacturer born in Germany in 1806 died 18 June 1878 He was the first Mayor of Middlesbrough a place which owes much of its prosperity to his energy and enterprise Up The Boro 2011 p 9 This was followed in 1868 by Middlesbrough s first Parliamentary Elections in which Henry Bolckow 1806 1878 of the firm Bolckow amp Vaughan wanted to stand for election however this was initially blocked by the fact that he was a foreigner Mayoral referendum result Middlesbrough Council Local Government Chronicle LGC 19 October 2001 Retrieved 12 January 2020 2007 Mayoral election www middlesbrough gov uk 12 June 2017 Archived from the original on 12 January 2020 Retrieved 12 January 2020 2011 Mayoral election www middlesbrough gov uk 7 June 2016 Archived from the original on 4 May 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2020 2015 Mayoral election www middlesbrough gov uk 7 June 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Dave Budd replaces Ray Mallon as Middlesbrough mayor BBC News 8 May 2015 Retrieved 11 May 2015 2019 mayoral and local election www middlesbrough gov uk 29 April 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2020 Middlesbrough Unitary Authority Total Population GB Historical GIS University of Portsmouth A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 14 June 2021 Bennett James et al 22 November 2018 Contributions of diseases and injuries to widening life expectancy inequalities in England from 2001 to 2016 a population based analysis of vital registration data Lancet public health Retrieved 23 November 2018 Freedom of the Borough presented to Sir Joseph Calvert 7th November 1919 11 January 2013 Retrieved 29 November 2020 via Flickr Middlesbrough Borough Council PDF www middlesbrough gov uk England manager Gareth Southgate given freedom of Middlesbrough BBC News 29 July 2021 Retrieved 21 August 2021 Craigie Emily 29 July 2021 Gareth Southgate awarded Freedom of the Borough The Northern Echo Retrieved 21 August 2021 Craigie Emily 29 July 2021 Gareth Southgate granted prestigious Freedom of the Borough after huge public support Teesside Gazette Retrieved 21 August 2021 Speare Cole Rebecca 30 July 2021 Gareth Southgate England manager given Freedom of Middlesbrough award Sky News Retrieved 21 August 2021 External links Edithttps www middlesbrough gov uk open data foi and have your say about middlesbrough and local statistics ward profiles https www middlesbrough gov uk http www thisismiddlesbrough com local Contact Middlesbrough Council asp https www lovemiddlesbrough com https british police history uk f middlesbrough borough https www lgo org uk your councils performance middlesbrough borough council statistics https www bbc co uk news topics c5xyn3yw11kt middlesbrough borough council http www 200towns co uk middlesbrough https www bbc co uk news uk england tees 48024370 https www middlesbrough gov uk mayor council and councillors civic and ceremonial freedom borough https teesvalleynaturepartnership org uk resources 2 natural networks opportunity maps middlesbrough local authority area https www routeyou com en gb location toppoi 47411782 things to do in middlesbrough https www gazettelive co uk news teesside news calling middlesbrough city not slip 15795497Video clips Edit https www youtube com user middlesbroughcouncil Coordinates 54 34 33 N 1 14 02 W 54 5757 N 1 2340 W 54 5757 1 2340 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Borough of Middlesbrough amp oldid 1126322401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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