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Municipal borough

A municipal borough was a type of local government district which existed in England and Wales between 1836 and 1974, in Northern Ireland from 1840 to 1973 and in the Republic of Ireland from 1840 to 2002. Broadly similar structures existed in Scotland from 1833 to 1975 with the reform of royal burghs and creation of police burghs.

Municipal borough
Map of municipal boroughs in 1931 (named in boldface text), alongside administrative counties, county boroughs, urban districts, rural districts
CategoryLocal government district
LocationEngland and Wales, Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland
Found inAdministrative county
Created byMunicipal Corporations Act 1835 (England and Wales)
Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 (Ireland)
Created
  • 1835
Abolished by
Abolished
  • 1974 (England and Wales)
  • 1973 (Northern Ireland)
  • 2002 (Republic of Ireland)
Possible types
  • County borough
  • Non-county borough
Possible status
  • City
  • Royal borough
Government
  • Municipal corporation
Subdivisions

England and Wales edit

Municipal Corporations Act 1835 edit

Boroughs had existed in England and Wales since medieval times. By the late Middle Ages they had come under royal control, with corporations established by royal charter. These corporations were not popularly elected: characteristically they were self-selecting oligarchies, were nominated by tradesmen's guilds or were under the control of the lord of the manor. A Royal commission was appointed in 1833 to investigate the various borough corporations in England and Wales. In all 263 towns were found to have some form of corporation created by charter or in existence by prescription. The majority had self-elected common councils, whose members served for life. Where there was an election, the incumbent members of the corporation often effectively nominated the electorate. Eleven boroughs were manorial court leets.[1] Following the report of the royal commission, legislation was introduced to reform borough corporations.

The Municipal Corporations Act 1835 provided for a reformed form of town government, designated a municipal borough. The Act introduced a uniform system of town government in municipal boroughs, with an elected town council, consisting of a mayor, aldermen and councillors to oversee many local affairs. The legislation required all municipal corporations to be elected according to a standard franchise, based on property ownership. The Act reformed 178 boroughs with effect from 1 January 1836. At the same time, a procedure was established whereby the inhabitant householders of a town could petition the Crown via the privy council to grant a charter of incorporation, constituting the area a municipal borough.[2] The attempts to incorporate large industrial towns such as Birmingham, Bolton, Manchester and Sheffield by Whig and Radical "incorporationists" were bitterly contested by Tory "anti-incorporationists".[3] The Tory objections to the legality of the charters led to them boycotting elections to the new boroughs until the enactment of the Borough Charters Confirmation Act 1842.[4]

A number of further acts of parliament[which?] amended the 1835 legislation. All of these were repealed and replaced by the Municipal Corporations Act 1882. The 1882 Act and the consolidating Local Government Act 1933 provided the statutory basis for municipal boroughs up to their abolition. An important change in the 1933 legislation removed the right to petition for incorporation from inhabitant householders. In future, petitions could only be made by existing urban or rural district councils.[5]

The boroughs unreformed by the Act were not immediately abolished. Several of them subsequently sought new charters as municipal boroughs; those that did not were finally abolished in 1887 by the Municipal Corporations Act 1886. Only the City of London Corporation survived as a local authority in an unreformed state; the City undertook a major reform of its democratic structure in 2005.

In 1873 the Association of Municipal Corporations was formed to represent the interests of the boroughs collectively; its membership included both county and non-county boroughs. The AMC was later to be a strong advocate for expanding county boroughs and unitary local government, and it was at the annual conference of the AMC in 1965 that Richard Crossman called for a reform of all local government. This speech eventually led to the Redcliffe-Maud Report recommending large unitary councils for all England.[6]

Corporation and council edit

Each municipal borough possessed a corporation uniformly designated as the Mayor, Aldermen, and Burgesses of the town. The only exception was where the borough enjoyed city status; in this case "burgesses" became "citizens". In a handful of cities the chief magistrate was granted the further dignity of lord mayor.

The corporation was a body corporate with perpetual succession, and included all registered electors or "burgesses" of the borough. However, the actual administration was carried out by a town council, which was in effect a committee representative of the community at large. All those eligible to vote were entered in the "burgess roll", which was compiled by the town clerk annually.[7]

Town councils edit

The town council of each municipal borough consisted of a mayor, aldermen, and councillors. The councillors were directly elected by the burgesses for a three-year term, with one-third of their membership retiring each year. Boroughs with a population of more than 6,000 were divided into wards with separate elections held in each ward annually.[8] One-quarter of the council were aldermen, who were elected by the council for a six-year term. Half of the aldermen were elected every third year at the council's annual meeting. It was originally envisaged that the council would choose persons from outside of the municipal body. In practice, however, the aldermanic benches were almost exclusively filled by the promotion of long-serving councillors.[7] The mayor of the borough was elected for a one-year term, although he was eligible for re-election indefinitely. Under the original legislation the mayor was required to be a councillor or alderman. The Municipal Corporations Act 1882 empowered the council to elect any suitably qualified inhabitant of the borough as mayor. However, the mayoralty continued to be almost universally conferred on a senior alderman or councillor.[7]

Municipal elections were originally held on 1 November, with the mayoral election and filling of aldermanic vacancies on 9 November. Elections were cancelled during the First and Second World Wars, and the November 1948 elections were postponed until May 1949. From that date, municipal elections were held on the second Thursday of May.[9] In view of the forthcoming local government reorganisation, the 1972 elections were rescheduled to 4 May, with no elections in 1973 and all sitting councillors and aldermen holding their seats until midnight on 31 March 1974.[10]

Functions edit

The municipal boroughs created under the 1835 Act had powers relating to electoral registration, providing a watch, making byelaws, and holding various civil and criminal courts. The types of courts which could be held depended on whether the borough had been given a separate commission of the peace or its own quarter sessions; those which had their own quarter sessions were also required to appoint a coroner. The mayor was ex officio made a justice of the peace. The mayor was also required to serve as returning officer for parliamentary elections, except in those boroughs which were counties corporate, where the borough council appointed a sheriff whose duties included serving as returning officer. To fund their work the borough council was allowed to set and collect rates.[11]

Municipal boroughs were not automatically given powers to provide or maintain infrastructure under the 1835 Act. Many boroughs were covered by separate bodies of improvement commissioners responsible for matters such as paving, lighting and cleaning streets, supplying water and providing sewers. These improvement commissioners continued to exist alongside the borough councils unless the commissioners chose to transfer their powers to the council.[12]

From 1848 onwards local boards could also be established for providing infrastructure and overseeing public health. Where local board districts were created covering municipal boroughs the borough council was often, but not always, appointed to serve as the local board. In some places it was deemed necessary for the local board district to cover a larger or smaller territory than the borough, in which case a separate local board was elected.[13] The overlapping functions of borough councils, improvement commissioners and local boards were gradually consolidated. Many boroughs took over the functions of commissioners or separate local boards under the Public Health Act 1872, which established urban sanitary districts, with borough councils usually being designated as the urban sanitary authority.[14] There were a handful of exceptions where commissioners and local boards continued to operate alongside borough councils until the Local Government Act 1888 required the remaining anomalies to be addressed; from 1889 all borough councils were sanitary authorities with powers to provide infrastructure and oversee public health.[15][16]

County and non-county boroughs edit

In 1889, county councils were created across England and Wales under the Local Government Act 1888. Boroughs were divided into two sorts, with some becoming county boroughs which were entirely self-governing and independent from county council administration.

The non-county boroughs had more limited powers of self-government, and shared power with county councils. In 1894, towns which had not been incorporated as boroughs became urban districts with similar powers to municipal boroughs.

The title of "borough" was considered to be more dignified than "urban district", and so many larger urban districts petitioned to be granted the status of a municipal borough, and many were granted this right. Borough status did not substantially increase local government powers, although municipal boroughs above a certain size had the right to run primary education.

Abolition edit

Under the Local Government Act 1958, small municipal boroughs could be absorbed by surrounding rural districts to become rural boroughs, with the powers of a parish council. Seven small boroughs in Cornwall, Devon and Shropshire underwent this process.

The remaining municipal boroughs, of which there were over 200, were abolished on 1 April 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972. In England, they were replaced by metropolitan or non-metropolitan districts and in Wales by districts.

In most cases, the civic privileges and coat of arms of the abolished boroughs were inherited by one of the new local authorities. District councils were permitted to apply for a charter to receive borough status, while small municipal boroughs became successor parishes with town councils headed by a town mayor. In a few cases charter trustees, a special committee of district councillors, were formed to perpetuate the mayoralty of a town or city.

Ireland edit

The Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840 followed the example of the legislation in England and Wales. Unlike the 1835 Act, the Irish Act abolished nearly all of the country's boroughs, reforming just 10. Inhabitants of the larger of the abolished boroughs or of any town with a population of 3,000 could petition the crown for incorporation under the Act. In the event, only one additional borough was created when Wexford received a charter of incorporation in 1846.[17] The corporation and town council were identical in their constitution to the English boroughs, and each borough was divided into wards with three, six or nine councillors per ward and one alderman for every three councillors.[18]

The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 designated the six largest municipalities (Belfast, Cork, Dublin, Limerick, Derry and Waterford) as county boroughs. The Local Government (Ireland) Act 1919 introduced a system of proportional representation into municipal elections. Wards were replaced by electoral areas, and the entire council was to be elected triennially. Separate elections of aldermen and councillors were ended, with all members of the council elected by popular vote. One-quarter of the elected members were entitled to the title of "alderman", which was used to designate the first candidates elected in each area. The remaining successful candidates being "councillors".[19]

Under the Government of Ireland Act 1920, Ireland was partitioned in 1921, between Northern Ireland, which would remain in the United Kingdom, and the remainder, which left the United Kingdom in 1922 as the Irish Free State.

Northern Ireland edit

On establishment, Northern Ireland contained the county boroughs of Belfast and Londonderry, with no municipal boroughs. The Parliament of Northern Ireland abolished proportional representation in local government elections in 1922, and amended the 1840 Act in 1926, allowing urban districts to petition the Governor for a charter of incorporation.[20][21] Accordingly, by 1972 the number of boroughs had increased to 12 in number.

The system of local government was reorganised in 1973, with 26 local government districts replacing all county and municipal boroughs as well as urban and rural districts. The city or borough status conferred by the municipal charters passed to the new district councils.[22]

Irish Free State and the Republic of Ireland edit

Nine boroughs (four county boroughs and five municipal boroughs) were within the territory of the Irish Free State in 1922. Two new boroughs were created by statute. In 1930, the borough of Dún Laoghaire was created by the amalgamation of the four urban districts of Blackrock, Dalkey, Kingstown, and Killiney and Ballybrack in County Dublin.[23] This borough was later abolished in 1994.[24] In 1937 the town of Galway was reconstituted as a municipal borough.[25] It became a county borough in 1986.[26][27]

The Local Government Act 2001 abolished municipal boroughs. County boroughs were replaced by statutory "cities", while the title of "borough" was retained for the other towns holding the status.[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fletcher, Joseph (July 1842). "Statistics of the Municipal Institutions of the English Towns". Journal of the Statistical Society of London. 5 (2): 97–168. doi:10.2307/2980708. JSTOR 2980708.
  2. ^ Municipal Corporations Act 1835 (C.76), S. 141
  3. ^ Edsall, Nicholas C. (March 1973). "Varieties of Radicalism: Attwood, Cobden and the Local Politics of Municipal Incorporation". The Historical Journal. 16 (1): 93–107. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00003721. S2CID 154140874.
  4. ^ 1842 C.111
  5. ^ Local Government Act 1933 (C. 51), S.129
  6. ^ Wood, Bruce (1976). The Process of Local Government Reform 1966–74. George Allen & Unwin. p. 19.
  7. ^ a b c Shaw, Albert (June 1889). "Municipal Government in Great Britain". Political Science Quarterly. 4 (2): 197–229. doi:10.2307/2139337. JSTOR 2139337.
  8. ^ Finlayson, G. B. A. M. (October 1966). "The Politics of Municipal Reform, 1835". The English Historical Review. 81 (321): 673–692. doi:10.1093/ehr/LXXXI.CCCXXI.673. JSTOR 562019.
  9. ^ "The Municipal Elections". The Times. 13 May 1949. p. 3.
  10. ^ The Times, 5 May 1972
  11. ^ Guppy, Robert (1835). A familiar abridgement of the Municipal Corporation Act. London: Henry Butterworth. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  12. ^ Guppy, Robert (1835). A familiar abridgement of the Municipal Corporation Act. London: Henry Butterworth. pp. 47–48. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  13. ^ Lawes, Edward (1851). The Act for Promoting the Public Health, with notes and an appendix (3rd ed.). London: Shaw and Sons. pp. 254–271. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  14. ^ Cunningham Glen, William (1873). The Public Health Act 1872 etc. London: Butterworths. pp. 2–3. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  15. ^ Eighth Annual Report of the Local Government Board. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 1879. p. 408. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  16. ^ Nineteenth Annual Report of the Local Government Board. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. 1890. p. xxxvi. Retrieved 21 February 2024.
  17. ^ . Wexford Borough Council. Archived from the original on 19 November 2007. Retrieved 14 July 2008.
  18. ^ Municipal Corporations (Ireland) Act 1840, C. 108
  19. ^ Local Government (Ireland) Act 1919, C. 19
  20. ^ "Review of Legislation 1922". Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law. Third Series. 6 (3). 1924.
  21. ^ Municipal Corporations Act (Northern Ireland) 1926
  22. ^ Local Government (Northern Ireland) Act 1972 (N.I. 1972 c.9)
  23. ^ Local Government (Dublin) Act 1930, s. 3 (No. 27 of 1930, s. 3). Enacted on 17 July 1930. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 2008-07-14.
  24. ^ Local Government (Dublin) Act 1993, s. 9 (No. 31 of 1993, s. 9). Enacted on 21 December 1993. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 2016-08-05.
  25. ^ Local Government (Galway) Act 1937, s. 4: Formation of the Borough of Galway (No. 3P of 1937, s. 4). Enacted on 10 June 1937. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021.
  26. ^ Local Government (Reorganisation) Act 1985, s. 5: Establishment of Borough of Galway as County Borough (No. 7 of 1985, s. 5). Enacted on 3 April 1985. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021.
  27. ^ Local Government (Reorganisation) Act 1985 (County Borough of Galway) (Appointed Day) Order 1985 (S.I. No. 425 of 1985). Signed on 18 December 1985. Statutory Instrument of the Government of Ireland. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021.
  28. ^ Local Government Act 2001, s. 10: Local government areas (No. 37 of 2001, s. 10). Enacted on 21 July 2001. Act of the Oireachtas. Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 4 April 2023.

municipal, borough, municipal, borough, type, local, government, district, which, existed, england, wales, between, 1836, 1974, northern, ireland, from, 1840, 1973, republic, ireland, from, 1840, 2002, broadly, similar, structures, existed, scotland, from, 183. A municipal borough was a type of local government district which existed in England and Wales between 1836 and 1974 in Northern Ireland from 1840 to 1973 and in the Republic of Ireland from 1840 to 2002 Broadly similar structures existed in Scotland from 1833 to 1975 with the reform of royal burghs and creation of police burghs Municipal boroughMap of municipal boroughs in 1931 named in boldface text alongside administrative counties county boroughs urban districts rural districtsCategoryLocal government districtLocationEngland and Wales Republic of Ireland Northern IrelandFound inAdministrative countyCreated byMunicipal Corporations Act 1835 England and Wales Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 Ireland Created1835Abolished byLocal Government Act 1972 England and Wales Local Government Boundaries Act Northern Ireland 1971 Northern Ireland Local Government Act 2001 Republic of Ireland Abolished1974 England and Wales 1973 Northern Ireland 2002 Republic of Ireland Possible typesCounty boroughNon county boroughPossible statusCityRoyal boroughGovernmentMunicipal corporationSubdivisionsWards Contents 1 England and Wales 1 1 Municipal Corporations Act 1835 1 2 Corporation and council 1 2 1 Town councils 1 3 Functions 1 4 County and non county boroughs 1 5 Abolition 2 Ireland 2 1 Northern Ireland 2 2 Irish Free State and the Republic of Ireland 3 See also 4 ReferencesEngland and Wales editFurther information Boroughs incorporated in England and Wales 1835 1882 Unreformed boroughs in England and Wales 1835 1886 and Boroughs incorporated in England and Wales 1882 1974 Municipal Corporations Act 1835 edit Boroughs had existed in England and Wales since medieval times By the late Middle Ages they had come under royal control with corporations established by royal charter These corporations were not popularly elected characteristically they were self selecting oligarchies were nominated by tradesmen s guilds or were under the control of the lord of the manor A Royal commission was appointed in 1833 to investigate the various borough corporations in England and Wales In all 263 towns were found to have some form of corporation created by charter or in existence by prescription The majority had self elected common councils whose members served for life Where there was an election the incumbent members of the corporation often effectively nominated the electorate Eleven boroughs were manorial court leets 1 Following the report of the royal commission legislation was introduced to reform borough corporations The Municipal Corporations Act 1835 provided for a reformed form of town government designated a municipal borough The Act introduced a uniform system of town government in municipal boroughs with an elected town council consisting of a mayor aldermen and councillors to oversee many local affairs The legislation required all municipal corporations to be elected according to a standard franchise based on property ownership The Act reformed 178 boroughs with effect from 1 January 1836 At the same time a procedure was established whereby the inhabitant householders of a town could petition the Crown via the privy council to grant a charter of incorporation constituting the area a municipal borough 2 The attempts to incorporate large industrial towns such as Birmingham Bolton Manchester and Sheffield by Whig and Radical incorporationists were bitterly contested by Tory anti incorporationists 3 The Tory objections to the legality of the charters led to them boycotting elections to the new boroughs until the enactment of the Borough Charters Confirmation Act 1842 4 A number of further acts of parliament which amended the 1835 legislation All of these were repealed and replaced by the Municipal Corporations Act 1882 The 1882 Act and the consolidating Local Government Act 1933 provided the statutory basis for municipal boroughs up to their abolition An important change in the 1933 legislation removed the right to petition for incorporation from inhabitant householders In future petitions could only be made by existing urban or rural district councils 5 The boroughs unreformed by the Act were not immediately abolished Several of them subsequently sought new charters as municipal boroughs those that did not were finally abolished in 1887 by the Municipal Corporations Act 1886 Only the City of London Corporation survived as a local authority in an unreformed state the City undertook a major reform of its democratic structure in 2005 In 1873 the Association of Municipal Corporations was formed to represent the interests of the boroughs collectively its membership included both county and non county boroughs The AMC was later to be a strong advocate for expanding county boroughs and unitary local government and it was at the annual conference of the AMC in 1965 that Richard Crossman called for a reform of all local government This speech eventually led to the Redcliffe Maud Report recommending large unitary councils for all England 6 Corporation and council edit Each municipal borough possessed a corporation uniformly designated as the Mayor Aldermen and Burgesses of the town The only exception was where the borough enjoyed city status in this case burgesses became citizens In a handful of cities the chief magistrate was granted the further dignity of lord mayor The corporation was a body corporate with perpetual succession and included all registered electors or burgesses of the borough However the actual administration was carried out by a town council which was in effect a committee representative of the community at large All those eligible to vote were entered in the burgess roll which was compiled by the town clerk annually 7 Town councils edit The town council of each municipal borough consisted of a mayor aldermen and councillors The councillors were directly elected by the burgesses for a three year term with one third of their membership retiring each year Boroughs with a population of more than 6 000 were divided into wards with separate elections held in each ward annually 8 One quarter of the council were aldermen who were elected by the council for a six year term Half of the aldermen were elected every third year at the council s annual meeting It was originally envisaged that the council would choose persons from outside of the municipal body In practice however the aldermanic benches were almost exclusively filled by the promotion of long serving councillors 7 The mayor of the borough was elected for a one year term although he was eligible for re election indefinitely Under the original legislation the mayor was required to be a councillor or alderman The Municipal Corporations Act 1882 empowered the council to elect any suitably qualified inhabitant of the borough as mayor However the mayoralty continued to be almost universally conferred on a senior alderman or councillor 7 Municipal elections were originally held on 1 November with the mayoral election and filling of aldermanic vacancies on 9 November Elections were cancelled during the First and Second World Wars and the November 1948 elections were postponed until May 1949 From that date municipal elections were held on the second Thursday of May 9 In view of the forthcoming local government reorganisation the 1972 elections were rescheduled to 4 May with no elections in 1973 and all sitting councillors and aldermen holding their seats until midnight on 31 March 1974 10 Functions edit The municipal boroughs created under the 1835 Act had powers relating to electoral registration providing a watch making byelaws and holding various civil and criminal courts The types of courts which could be held depended on whether the borough had been given a separate commission of the peace or its own quarter sessions those which had their own quarter sessions were also required to appoint a coroner The mayor was ex officio made a justice of the peace The mayor was also required to serve as returning officer for parliamentary elections except in those boroughs which were counties corporate where the borough council appointed a sheriff whose duties included serving as returning officer To fund their work the borough council was allowed to set and collect rates 11 Municipal boroughs were not automatically given powers to provide or maintain infrastructure under the 1835 Act Many boroughs were covered by separate bodies of improvement commissioners responsible for matters such as paving lighting and cleaning streets supplying water and providing sewers These improvement commissioners continued to exist alongside the borough councils unless the commissioners chose to transfer their powers to the council 12 From 1848 onwards local boards could also be established for providing infrastructure and overseeing public health Where local board districts were created covering municipal boroughs the borough council was often but not always appointed to serve as the local board In some places it was deemed necessary for the local board district to cover a larger or smaller territory than the borough in which case a separate local board was elected 13 The overlapping functions of borough councils improvement commissioners and local boards were gradually consolidated Many boroughs took over the functions of commissioners or separate local boards under the Public Health Act 1872 which established urban sanitary districts with borough councils usually being designated as the urban sanitary authority 14 There were a handful of exceptions where commissioners and local boards continued to operate alongside borough councils until the Local Government Act 1888 required the remaining anomalies to be addressed from 1889 all borough councils were sanitary authorities with powers to provide infrastructure and oversee public health 15 16 County and non county boroughs edit In 1889 county councils were created across England and Wales under the Local Government Act 1888 Boroughs were divided into two sorts with some becoming county boroughs which were entirely self governing and independent from county council administration The non county boroughs had more limited powers of self government and shared power with county councils In 1894 towns which had not been incorporated as boroughs became urban districts with similar powers to municipal boroughs The title of borough was considered to be more dignified than urban district and so many larger urban districts petitioned to be granted the status of a municipal borough and many were granted this right Borough status did not substantially increase local government powers although municipal boroughs above a certain size had the right to run primary education Abolition edit Under the Local Government Act 1958 small municipal boroughs could be absorbed by surrounding rural districts to become rural boroughs with the powers of a parish council Seven small boroughs in Cornwall Devon and Shropshire underwent this process The remaining municipal boroughs of which there were over 200 were abolished on 1 April 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972 In England they were replaced by metropolitan or non metropolitan districts and in Wales by districts In most cases the civic privileges and coat of arms of the abolished boroughs were inherited by one of the new local authorities District councils were permitted to apply for a charter to receive borough status while small municipal boroughs became successor parishes with town councils headed by a town mayor In a few cases charter trustees a special committee of district councillors were formed to perpetuate the mayoralty of a town or city Ireland editThe Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 followed the example of the legislation in England and Wales Unlike the 1835 Act the Irish Act abolished nearly all of the country s boroughs reforming just 10 Inhabitants of the larger of the abolished boroughs or of any town with a population of 3 000 could petition the crown for incorporation under the Act In the event only one additional borough was created when Wexford received a charter of incorporation in 1846 17 The corporation and town council were identical in their constitution to the English boroughs and each borough was divided into wards with three six or nine councillors per ward and one alderman for every three councillors 18 The Local Government Ireland Act 1898 designated the six largest municipalities Belfast Cork Dublin Limerick Derry and Waterford as county boroughs The Local Government Ireland Act 1919 introduced a system of proportional representation into municipal elections Wards were replaced by electoral areas and the entire council was to be elected triennially Separate elections of aldermen and councillors were ended with all members of the council elected by popular vote One quarter of the elected members were entitled to the title of alderman which was used to designate the first candidates elected in each area The remaining successful candidates being councillors 19 Under the Government of Ireland Act 1920 Ireland was partitioned in 1921 between Northern Ireland which would remain in the United Kingdom and the remainder which left the United Kingdom in 1922 as the Irish Free State Northern Ireland edit On establishment Northern Ireland contained the county boroughs of Belfast and Londonderry with no municipal boroughs The Parliament of Northern Ireland abolished proportional representation in local government elections in 1922 and amended the 1840 Act in 1926 allowing urban districts to petition the Governor for a charter of incorporation 20 21 Accordingly by 1972 the number of boroughs had increased to 12 in number The system of local government was reorganised in 1973 with 26 local government districts replacing all county and municipal boroughs as well as urban and rural districts The city or borough status conferred by the municipal charters passed to the new district councils 22 Irish Free State and the Republic of Ireland edit Nine boroughs four county boroughs and five municipal boroughs were within the territory of the Irish Free State in 1922 Two new boroughs were created by statute In 1930 the borough of Dun Laoghaire was created by the amalgamation of the four urban districts of Blackrock Dalkey Kingstown and Killiney and Ballybrack in County Dublin 23 This borough was later abolished in 1994 24 In 1937 the town of Galway was reconstituted as a municipal borough 25 It became a county borough in 1986 26 27 The Local Government Act 2001 abolished municipal boroughs County boroughs were replaced by statutory cities while the title of borough was retained for the other towns holding the status 28 See also editList of rural and urban districts in England List of rural and urban districts in Wales Urban district England and Wales Urban and rural districts Ireland Rural district County borough Parliamentary boroughReferences edit Fletcher Joseph July 1842 Statistics of the Municipal Institutions of the English Towns Journal of the Statistical Society of London 5 2 97 168 doi 10 2307 2980708 JSTOR 2980708 Municipal Corporations Act 1835 C 76 S 141 Edsall Nicholas C March 1973 Varieties of Radicalism Attwood Cobden and the Local Politics of Municipal Incorporation The Historical Journal 16 1 93 107 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00003721 S2CID 154140874 1842 C 111 Local Government Act 1933 C 51 S 129 Wood Bruce 1976 The Process of Local Government Reform 1966 74 George Allen amp Unwin p 19 a b c Shaw Albert June 1889 Municipal Government in Great Britain Political Science Quarterly 4 2 197 229 doi 10 2307 2139337 JSTOR 2139337 Finlayson G B A M October 1966 The Politics of Municipal Reform 1835 The English Historical Review 81 321 673 692 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXXI CCCXXI 673 JSTOR 562019 The Municipal Elections The Times 13 May 1949 p 3 The Times 5 May 1972 Guppy Robert 1835 A familiar abridgement of the Municipal Corporation Act London Henry Butterworth Retrieved 21 February 2024 Guppy Robert 1835 A familiar abridgement of the Municipal Corporation Act London Henry Butterworth pp 47 48 Retrieved 21 February 2024 Lawes Edward 1851 The Act for Promoting the Public Health with notes and an appendix 3rd ed London Shaw and Sons pp 254 271 Retrieved 21 February 2024 Cunningham Glen William 1873 The Public Health Act 1872 etc London Butterworths pp 2 3 Retrieved 21 February 2024 Eighth Annual Report of the Local Government Board London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1879 p 408 Retrieved 21 February 2024 Nineteenth Annual Report of the Local Government Board London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1890 p xxxvi Retrieved 21 February 2024 History of Borough Council Wexford Borough Council Archived from the original on 19 November 2007 Retrieved 14 July 2008 Municipal Corporations Ireland Act 1840 C 108 Local Government Ireland Act 1919 C 19 Review of Legislation 1922 Journal of Comparative Legislation and International Law Third Series 6 3 1924 Municipal Corporations Act Northern Ireland 1926 Local Government Northern Ireland Act 1972 N I 1972 c 9 Local Government Dublin Act 1930 s 3 No 27 of 1930 s 3 Enacted on 17 July 1930 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 2008 07 14 Local Government Dublin Act 1993 s 9 No 31 of 1993 s 9 Enacted on 21 December 1993 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 2016 08 05 Local Government Galway Act 1937 s 4 Formation of the Borough of Galway No 3P of 1937 s 4 Enacted on 10 June 1937 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Reorganisation Act 1985 s 5 Establishment of Borough of Galway as County Borough No 7 of 1985 s 5 Enacted on 3 April 1985 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Reorganisation Act 1985 County Borough of Galway Appointed Day Order 1985 S I No 425 of 1985 Signed on 18 December 1985 Statutory Instrument of the Government of Ireland Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 24 June 2021 Local Government Act 2001 s 10 Local government areas No 37 of 2001 s 10 Enacted on 21 July 2001 Act of the Oireachtas Retrieved from Irish Statute Book on 4 April 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Municipal borough amp oldid 1222856238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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