Francais | English | Espanõl

Metropolitan Borough of Poplar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Poplar
County of London
Metropolitan Borough of Poplar shown within the County of London
Status: Metropolitan borough
Admin. HQ: Bow
Area: 2,348 acres
Created: 1900
Abolished: 1965
Image:Seal poplar.png
Successor: London Borough of Tower Hamlets
London County Council

The Metropolitan Borough of Poplar was between 1900 and 1965 a metropolitan borough in the County of London. The borough took over the area of the Poplar Board of Works, and comprised the parishes of Bow, Bromley and Poplar.<ref>F. A. Youngs, Guide to the Local Administrtive Units of England, Vol.I, 1979</ref> In 1965 it became part of the newly formed London Borough of Tower Hamlets.

It bordered the metropolitan boroughs of Hackney, Stepney, and Bethnal Green to the west and north, and the county of Essex to the east. To the south, the River Thames formed borders with the metropolitan boroughs of Bermondsey, Deptford and Greenwich.

It included the districts of (from north to south):

In the early 1920s the Borough Council, under George Lansbury and the Poor Law Union were engaged in a dispute with the London County Council and central government over poor law rates - it wished to pay out of work people more than usually permitted; and to get wealthier West End boroughs to contribute to its expenses. Several councillors were imprisoned briefly in 1921 in relation to this. See Poplar Rates Rebellion.

In 1951 Poplar was chosen as the site of the Festival of Britain's 'Exhibition of Live Architecture'. The East End of London had been heavily bombed during the war and its reconstruction was showcased at the new Lansbury Estate. New building materials and planning concepts were demonstrated. The first example of 'live architecture' on the exhibition trail was the Trinity Congregational Church and Hall, just across from the main reception area with their Town Planning and Building Research Pavillions on East India Dock Road.

Contents

[edit] Population

The population as given in the census from 1901 to 1961 was:

Year Population
1901 168,822
1911 162,442
1921 162,578
1931 155,089
1951 73,579
1961 66,604

[edit] Borough seal

The borough had no coat of arms, using instead a seal originally designed for the Poplar Board of Works, its predecessor, created by the Metropolis Management Act 1855. The seal depicted the emblems of the three parish vestries merged into the board.

The top shield was the seal of Poplar Vestry, and showed the 'Hibbert Gate' of the old West India Docks, with a sailing ship on top of the shield. A similar representation of the gate and ship formed the head of the vestry's civic mace, which was used by the board of works and borough council until 1965.

The shield on the left was the seal of Bow Vestry , and showed a bridge between two bows. This represented the bow-shaped bridge over the River Lea.

The shield on the right was the seal of Bromley St Leonard Vestry, and depicts the saint dressed as a bishop.

[edit] References

<references/>

  • Vision of Britain website: Population tables for Poplar Borough [1]

[edit] External links


Local government districts abolished (or transferred †) by the London Government Act 1963

from County of London: Battersea | Bermondsey | Bethnal Green | Camberwell | Chelsea | Deptford | Finsbury | Fulham | Greenwich | Hackney | Hammersmith | Hampstead | Holborn | Islington | Kensington | Lambeth | Lewisham | Paddington | Poplar | Shoreditch | Southwark | St Marylebone | St Pancras | Stepney | Stoke Newington | Wandsworth | Westminster | Woolwich

from Essex: Barking | Chingford | Dagenham | East Ham | Hornchurch | Ilford | Leyton | Romford | Walthamstow | Wanstead and Woodford | West Ham

from Hertfordshire: Barnet | East Barnet | to Hertfordshire: Potters Bar

from Middlesex: Acton | Brentford and Chiswick | Ealing | Edmonton | Enfield | Feltham | Finchley | Friern Barnet | Harrow | Hayes and Harlington | Hendon | Heston and Isleworth | Hornsey | Potters Bar | Ruislip-Northwood | Southall | Southgate | Tottenham | Twickenham | Uxbridge | Wembley | Willesden | Wood Green | Yiewsley and West Drayton

from Kent: Beckenham | Bexley | Bromley | Chislehurst and Sidcup | Crayford | Erith | Orpington | Penge

from Surrey: Barnes | Beddington and Wallington | Carshalton | Coulsdon and Purley | Croydon | Kingston upon Thames | Malden and Coombe | Merton and Morden | Mitcham | Sutton and Cheam | Surbiton | Richmond | Wimbledon | to Surrey: Staines † | Sunbury-on-Thames

Personal tools