Northfleet Urban District Council

Former council in Kent, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Northfleet Urban District Council was the local government authority for Northfleet, Kent, England, created under the Local Government Act 1894. It took over from the earlier Northfleet Local Board of Health (established 1874) and governed the town until 1894.

Type
of Northfleet, Kent, England
Founded1894
Disbanded1 April 1974
PrecededbyNorthfleet Local Board of Health
Quick facts Type, History ...
Northfleet Urban District Council
Type
Type
of Northfleet, Kent, England
History
Founded1894
Disbanded1 April 1974
Preceded byNorthfleet Local Board of Health
Succeeded byGravesham Borough Council
Meeting place
Northfleet House, Council Avenue, Northfleet[1]
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History

Before 1894, Northfleet was managed by a Local Board of Health (from 1874). In 1894 the Local Government Act transformed local boards into elected urban district councils, and Northfleet Urban District Council (UDC) was created by Act of Parliament. Its first meeting was held in May 1896. Until then, the Local Board had even opened a municipal cemetery – purchased in 1891 – to serve the town.[2] In 1893 the Urban District Council opened Northfleet Cemetery on land from Brookvale Farm, and the site remains the community burial ground now containing Commonwealth war graves.[3]

The district covered about 4,162 acres (including the shoreline).[4] It lay on the south bank of the River Thames, with its northern boundary the river itself, bordering Gravesend borough to the east.[5] On other sides it met Dartford and Strood rural districts (to the south) and the Swanscombe Urban District (to the west).[6] Northfleet's population was roughly 11,717 by 1891,[7] and about 12,900 by 1901, roughly 18,800 by 1951, and over 22,000 by the early 1960s.

As an Urban District Council, Northfleet UDC handled local matters such as housing, sanitation, roads, and public health. For example, the council built new homes and estates after the Second World War: in 1954 it borrowed funds to build 60 houses on the Painters Ash estate, and in 1955 the first post-war council houses were completed with keys handed over to tenants.[8] The council's responsibilities included health too: around 1900 Northfleet UDC opened a small isolation hospital (for smallpox patients) just north of Gravesend Sanatorium.[9] In 1957, Drewery F. Bunkall served as the Clerk of the council.[a]

Northfleet House

Council Avenue, where Northfleet House was

In 1920 the council established its main offices. Northfleet House – a large former private residence – was converted into the council's headquarters that year.[11] Northfleet House had been built in the mid-19th century by cement businessman Thomas Sturge, but from 1920 it served as the council offices. The building was extended in 1958 to accommodate staff.[12] Northfleet Urban District Council operated from Northfleet House until local government reorganisation in 1974, when the building passed to Gravesham Borough Council and was used by departments including the Technical Department.[13] It was later sold for private use and today serves as a residential home.[14]

Northfleet Urban District Council ceased to exist on 1 April 1974. Under the Local Government Act 1972 the town's council was merged with Gravesend Borough and part of Strood Rural District to form the new Gravesham District Council.[15][16] This reorganisation combined Northfleet's local government functions into the larger Gravesham authority, ending the independent Northfleet UDC after 80 years. A merger with Gravesend had in fact been proposed as early as 1904, when Councillor A. Tolhurst advocated uniting the two authorities on grounds of economy and administrative efficiency.[17] In summary, Northfleet Urban District Council was established in 1894, developed housing and local services through the mid-20th century, and was dissolved in 1974 when Gravesham Borough Council was created.[18]

Northfleet Roll of Honour

The Northfleet Roll of Honour was originally housed at the Northfleet Urban District Council offices in Northfleet House, where it was formally displayed in the council chamber to commemorate local residents.[19] Following the local government reorganisation in 1974 and the subsequent conversion of Northfleet House into a home for the elderly, the memorial—including an oil painting and citation for Thomas Riversdale Colyer-Fergusson VC—was transferred to the Gravesham Borough Council. While it was initially kept inside the old council chambers in Gravesend, renovations led to its relocation to the lobby outside the new chambers on the 3rd floor of the Civic Centre.[20]

Northfleet was a mixed industrial and residential area. A major employer was W.T. Henley's Telegraph Works, whose cable factory stood on the Thames at Northfleet Creek. During World War II, the council co-operated in wartime measures: tunnels in the chalk under Fountain Walk were dug to form a large industrial air-raid shelter for 2,500 Henley workers.[21] In 1968 Northfleet Urban District Council granted a licence to Chevron Oil UK Ltd to develop the riverfront oil terminal (the Northfleet Terminal).[22] Decades later, parts of Fountain Walk (above the Henley shelter) were the subject of a village-green application: in 2008 local residents applied to register that open land as a new village green, but Kent County Council refused the application.[23]

During national discussions in the 1960s about lowering the age of majority from 21 to 18, Northfleet Urban District Council took an active role in the review process. It was the only urban district council in the United Kingdom to submit both oral and written evidence to the Latey Committee, the government body set up to examine whether the legal age of adulthood should be reduced. By providing evidence, the council contributed directly to the national debate on changing the age at which young people would be legally recognised as adults.[24]

Charles Robert Lane was a councillor on Northfleet Urban District Council. He was named in the 1968 New Year Honours list.

In 1904, Northfleet Urban District Council was offered money from the philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to build a public library. Carnegie's offers normally required the local council to agree to pay for the library's ongoing costs from local taxes. When councillors realised they would have to pay those costs through local rates, they declined the gift. Because of this decision, Northfleet did not have a public library of its own until 1924.[25]

Ted “Mr Northfleet" Rouse

Ted Rouse was a prominent local politician and decorated war veteran from the Borough of Gravesham. He served on Northfleet Urban District Council for 24 years and became leader of the newly formed Gravesham Borough Council in 1974, later leading the Labour group until 1981.[26] In 1978, he was awarded an MBE for his service to the community, and in 1982 he was made a freeman of the borough. During the Second World War, he served in the Royal Corps of Signals at Bletchley Park and later took part in the Normandy landings. He was mentioned in dispatches for his service in north-west Europe.[27]

Notes

  1. DREWERY F. BUNKALL, Clerk of the Council. Council Offices, Northfleet, Kent (1957).[10]

References

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