Wycombe Rural District

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GovernmentWycombe Rural District Council
Wycombe
Rural district
Area
  191171,716 acres (112.056 sq mi; 290.22 km2)
  193164,357 acres (100.558 sq mi; 260.44 km2)
  196171,232 acres (111.300 sq mi; 288.27 km2)
Population
  190122,910
  193127,694
  197171,331
History
  OriginRural sanitary district
  Created28 December 1894
  Abolished31 March 1974
  Succeeded byWycombe District
StatusRural district
GovernmentWycombe Rural District Council
  HQHigh Wycombe
Insignia of the Wycombe Rural District Council

Wycombe Rural District was, from 1894 to 1974, a rural district in the administrative county of Buckinghamshire, England.

The district had its origins in the Wycombe Poor Law Union, which had been created in 1835, covering High Wycombe and several surrounding parishes. In 1872 sanitary districts were established, giving public health and local government responsibilities for rural areas to the existing boards of guardians of poor law unions. The Wycombe Rural Sanitary District therefore covered the area of the poor law union except for the town of High Wycombe, which was a municipal borough (officially called Chepping Wycombe until 1946) and so became its own urban sanitary district. The Wycombe Rural Sanitary District was administered from Wycombe Union Workhouse, which had been built in 1843 in open countryside in the parish of Saunderton, nearly five miles north-west of High Wycombe.[1]

Under the Local Government Act 1894, rural sanitary districts became rural districts from 28 December 1894. The Wycombe Rural District Council held its first meeting on 31 December 1894 at the workhouse. William Morris was appointed the first chairman of the council.[2][3]

Area and parishes

The district consisted of a number of rural parishes surrounding High Wycombe. In 1934 it was enlarged, when a county review order added the area of the abolished Hambleden Rural District.[3][4]

ParishChanges
Bledlow Merged with Saunderton 1934
Bledlow cum Saunderton Formed by the merger of two parishes in 1934
Bradenham
Chepping Wycombe Rural Renamed Chepping Wycombe 1949
Ellesborough
Fawley Transferred from Hambleden RD 1934
Fingest Renamed Fingest and Lane End 1937
Great and Little Hampden Parishes had been merged in 1885
Great and Little Kimble Parishes had been merged in 1885
Great Marlow Part of parish became Marlow Urban District in 1897
Hambleden Transferred from Hambleden RD 1934
Hedsor
Horsenden Abolished 1934: area split between Bledlow cum Saunderton and Princes Risborough
Hughenden
Ibstone
Ilmer Abolished 1934: formed part of Longwick cum Ilmer
Lacey Green Formed 1934 from part of Princes Risborough
Little Marlow
Little Missenden Transferred to Amersham Rural District 1901
Longwick cum Ilmer Formed 1934 by merger of Ilmer and Monks Risborough (with parts Princes Risborough of Towersey)
Medmenham Transferred from Hambleden RD 1934
Monks Risborough abolished 1934, most passed to new parish of Longwick cum Ilmer
Princes Risborough
Radnage
Saunderton Merged with Bledlow 1934
Stokenchurch Transferred from Oxfordshire 1895
Turville
West Wycombe Abolished 1934, with part added to enlarged Borough of Chepping Wycombe, remainder to West Wycombe Rural
West Wycombe Rural Formed 1934 from the part of West Wycombe not added to the borough with part of Hughenden
Wooburn

Premises

Abolition

References

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