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Old January 12th 14, 12:08 AM posted to uk.transport.london
[email protected] rosenstiel@cix.compulink.co.uk is offline
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Default Which UK railway station names do you feel are anomalous?

In article ,
(Aurora) wrote:

On Sat, 11 Jan 2014 23:09:03 -0000, "NY" wrote:

"Graeme Wall" wrote in message
...
On 11/01/2014 22:16, Robert wrote:
Heathrow wasn't in London when first built! My father worked there in
the early 50s and we lived in Bedfont. Going to London was a major
expedition involving buses to either Feltham or Hounslow West stations
and then the train.


Where was the boundary between London and other places defined to be in
those days? Was it a 1974 change when the county of Greater London was
created? When the neighbouring counties had boundaries that met close to
central London, where was the boundary of "London" deemed to be, and did
it gradually change as greenfield sites got filled in?

Greater London was formed in 1965. Prior to that there was, the
almost sane, smaller, London County Council. Prior to 1889 Middlesex
was the county at the heart of England, although only its South
Eastern part was urbanized. IIRC until 1889 the City of London was
outwith any County.


The area of the County of London was defined long before 1889. The
Metropolitan Board of Works covered the same area and was formed in 1854
(IIRC).

The Metropolitan Police District (1829) and London Transport Area (1933)
were much earlier definitions of Greater London too. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropo...olice_District and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_...ransport_Board.

London's government has sadly been subject to endless meddling by central
government, partly because it is also located in London.

AFIK these 1889 and 1965 are the only times the County of London was
extended. Although Greater London disappeared for a while. It is now
back as a "region" with a peculiar governance structure.


It was never a county as such. London has never had the same local
government arrangements as the rest of England.

The borders of the Cities and boroughs within the County were also
consolidated into their present monstrous size in 1965. Prior to that
were the human scaled boroughs such as Paddington and St Marylebone.
In those days democracy was closer to the electorate.


Not everywhere. Wandsworth was divided, part going to Lambeth, with
Battersea added. the resulting entity was much the same size as the old
Metropolitan Borough.

The inner boroughs had lost a lot of population due to the war and post-war
reconstruction. In 1918 modern day Tower Hamlets had seven MPs. Now it has
one and a half.

--
Colin Rosenstiel