London Borough of Hackney
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other uses of Hackney, see Hackney (disambiguation)
London Borough of Hackney | |
Shown within Greater London |
|
Geography | |
---|---|
Status | London borough |
Area — Total |
Ranked 349th 19.06 km² |
ONS code | 00AM |
Admin HQ | Mare Street, Hackney |
Demographics | |
Population — Total (2005 est.) — Density |
Ranked 64th (of 354) 207,700 10,897 / km² |
Ethnicity | 59.4% White (44.12% British, 3.02% Irish, 12.26% other white) 24.7% Afro-Caribbean 8.6% South Asian 4.2% Mixed Race 1.2% Chinese |
Politics | |
Leadership | Mayor & Cabinet |
Mayor | Jules Pipe |
Executive | Labour |
MPs | Diane Abbott Meg Hillier |
London Assembly — Member |
North East Jennette Arnold |
Coat of Arms | |
Official website | http://www.hackney.gov.uk/ |
The London Borough of Hackney is a London borough in East London and part of Inner London.
Unlike most English districts, its council is led by a directly-elected mayor.
Contents |
[edit] Borough of contrasts
The borough is known for being one of the poorest and most crime-affected London boroughs. Despite this perception it is a place of considerable contrasts. The south western tip of the borough is adjacent to the City and close to the Broadgate development. In this area some office development has taken place within the borough boundary.
Also in the south west is Hoxton and Shoreditch which are central to the London arts scene and home to numerous clubs, bars, shops and restaurants, much of which is centered on Hoxton Square.
The development of Shoreditch and Hoxton caused land value to increase in the area such that developers looked to other parts of the borough for development. Much of Hackney is inner-city in character and in places like Dalston large housing estates now sit side-by-side with gated communities.
The main commercial and retail centre of Hackney is known as Hackney Central to distinguish it from the rest of the borough. South Hackney abuts Victoria Park (which is in neighbouring Tower Hamlets) and terraced Victorian and Edwardian housing stock has survived in the area.
To the north of the borough is Clapton, Stamford Hill and Stoke Newington. To the east is the large open space of the Hackney Marshes and the districts of Hackney Wick and Homerton. There is some declining light industry around the River Lea (the eastern boundary) and land is planned to be re-used for the 2012 Summer Olympics.
In October 2006, a Channel 4 survey programmes 'The Best and Worst places to live in the UK', claimed Hackney to be the worst place to live in the UK[1]. In response, Jules Pipe elected Mayor of Hackney stated "Of course Hackney has problems, as do all inner city boroughs, but it is an amazing place to live. It is diverse and exciting with fantastic architecture, a vibrant arts and cultural scene, and a bright future as an Olympic borough.". He went on to point out that the same production team had also made programmes boosting Hackney as a place to invest in property[2].
[edit] History
The borough was formed in 1965 from the area of the former metropolitan boroughs of Hackney, Shoreditch and Stoke Newington.
[edit] Demographics of Hackney
The 2001 census gives Hackney a population of 202,824.[3]
The population is ethnically diverse. Of the resident population, 89,490 (44%) people describe themselves as White British. 30,978 (15%) are in other White ethnic groups, 50,009 (25%) are Black or Black British, 17,414 (9%) are Asian or Asian British, 8,501 (4%) describe themselves as 'Mixed', and 6,432 (3%) as Chinese or Other.
132,931 (66%) of the resident population were born in the UK. A further 10,095 (5%) were born in other parts of Europe, and the remaining 59,798 (29%) born elsewhere in the world.
The 2001 census also shows Christianity is the biggest religion in Hackney, with 94,431 (47%) Christian; 27,908 (14%) Muslim; 10,732 (5%) Jewish; and 6,831 (3%) belong to other religions. A further 38,607 (19%) stated no religion, and 24,315 (12%) did not state a religion.
32% of householders are owner–occupiers.
[edit] Transport
Hackney is currently the only London borough north of the Thames that has no London Underground stations other than those on its borders with other boroughs. Manor House is in the extreme north-west of the borough and on the boundary with Haringey and Old Street is in the extreme south-west and on the border with Islington.
Transport for London is extending the East London Line northwards through the borough reusing some of the abandoned line between Dalston Junction and Broad Street with stations at Shoreditch High Street, Hoxton, Haggerston and Dalston Junction. When complete, the line will be handed over to Network Rail who will run services from Hackney to South London.
The Silverlink North London Line and the 'one' West Anglia pass through the borough with the following stations within its boundary:
[edit] North London Line
- stations (west to east)
- Dalston Kingsland railway station
- Hackney Central railway station
- Homerton railway station
- Hackney Wick railway station
[edit] 'one' West Anglia
- stations (north to south)
- Stamford Hill railway station
- Stoke Newington railway station
- Rectory Road railway station
- Clapton railway station
- Hackney Downs railway station
- London Fields railway station
[edit] Districts in Hackney
The borough includes the following areas:
- Dalston
- De Beauvoir Town
- Hackney Downs
- Hackney Central
- Hackney Marshes
- Hackney Wick
- Haggerston
- Homerton
- Hoxton
- Kingsland
- Lea Bridge
- London Fields
- Lower Clapton
- Shacklewell
- Shoreditch
- South Hackney
- Stamford Hill
- Stoke Newington
- Upper Clapton
- see also Hackney parks and open spaces
[edit] Cultural Attractions and Institutions in Hackney
- Arcola Theatre (Theatre performance)
- Cell Project Space (Studio rental and gallery)
- Chat's Palace Arts Centre (Community based arts and performance)
- The Circus Space (International circus school and performance space)
- Clowns' Gallery, Museum and Archive
- Dalston Culture House (which includes the Vortex Jazz Club)
- Flowers East (Commercial gallery)
- The Geffrye Museum (Domestic rooms through the ages, presented in an 18th century Alms House)
- The Hackney Empire
- The Hackney Museum (Local history museum)
- Hackney Archives (Local archives - booking essential)
- The Hackney Society
- Hoxton Hall (Community centre & performance space in Victorian Music Hall)
- INIVA (The Institute for New International Visual Arts)
- The Lux Cinema (Cinema closed, collection moved to Shacklewell Lane)
- The Rio Cinema
- Space Studios (studio space for artists, and exhibitions)
- Sutton House (Heritage house and museum owned by the National Trust)
- Transition Gallery (Commercial gallery)
- Miro (Commercial gallery)
- The White Cube (Commercial gallery)
[edit] Individuals associated with Hackney
Among those who were born in Hackney, or have dwelt within the borders of the modern borough are:
- Grace Aguilar (writer)
- John André (Soldier, executed as a spy by George Washington - lived with his Huguenot parents in Clapton)
- Francis Beaufort (hydrographer, is buried in St John's Church Gardens)
- Steven Berkoff (playwright and actor, educated at Hackney Downs School)
- Tony Blair - (British Prime Minister, lived in London Fields in the early 1980s)
- Marc Bolan (musician - born in Homerton)
- Richard "Abs" Breen (solo singer and in boy band Five, born in Hackney?)
- Eric Bristow (darts player)
- Michael Caine (actor, educated at Hackney Downs School)
- Edith Cavell (Nurse executed in Belgium in 1915, worked at St Leonard's Hospital)
- Benjamin Cohen (British internet entrepreneur and journalist)
- Harry Cohen (Labour Member of Parliament born in Hackney)
- Phil Collen (Guitar player for Def Leppard)
- George Collison (first President of Hackney Academy, Well Street Hackney Central)
- Daniel Defoe (writer - born in Stoke Newington)
- DJ Dextrous (Ivor Novello Award & BAFTA Award winning Producer/DJ- born in Stoke Newington)
- Pete Doherty (Musician)
- William Godwin (political philosopher - studied in Homerton)
- Sir Edmund Gosse (poet, author and Critic - lived in De Beauvoir)
- Philip Henry Gosse (naturalist - lived in De Beauvoir)
- Edmond Halley (astronomer - born in Haggerston)
- William Hazlitt (writer - studied in Homerton)
- Shaka Hislop (goalkeeper for West Ham United and Trinidad and Tobago born in Hackney)
- Alfred Hitchcock began his film career at the Gainsborough Studios in Poole Street.
- John Howard (prison reformer - born and lived in Lower Clapton)
- John Hunter (second governor of New South Wales lived in Judd St, buried in St Johns churchyard)
- Hetty King (male impersonator of the Music hall era, was born in Shoreditch. Her father, William Emms was a local comedian known as William King)
- Ronald and Reginald Kray (gang leaders, born in Hoxton)
- Marie Lloyd (entertainer - was born in Hoxton and lived her later life in Hackney Central)
- George Loddiges (horticulturalist and scientist - lived in Hackney Central)
- Martine McCutcheon (actress and singer)
- Syrie Maugham (interior decorator)
- Moses Montefiore (Financier and philanthropist was raised in Stamford Hill)
- Anthony Newley (actor, singer - born in Homerton)
- James Parkinson (physician who researched Parkinson's Disease, lived in Hoxton)
- Jack Petchey (local businessman, football investor and philanthropist)
- Harold Pinter (Nobel Prize-winning playwright, educated at Hackney Downs School)
- Edgar Allan Poe (writer - educated in Stoke Newington)
- Joseph Priestley (chemist and philosopher)
- Charles Reed (Hackney's first MP)
- Nathan Meyer Rothschild (Financier lived in Stamford Hill from 1818-35)
- Helen Shapiro was educated at Clapton Park girls school
- Iain Sinclair (writer - lives in Haggerston)
- Adrian Smith (Iron Maiden guitarist]]
- Sir Alan Sugar (businessman)
- Jessica Tandy (actress, born in Clapton)
- Dick Turpin (notorious highwayman, plied his trade on Kingsland Road and in Stoke Newington. He was a reputed regular at the White House Inn on Hackney Marshes, and a ward is named for him in Homerton University Hospital)
- Sid Vicious (musician)
- Isaac Watts (theologian, logician, hymn writer - lived and died in Stoke Newington)
- Rachel Whiteread (artist, lives and works in Dalston)
- Barbara Windsor (actress, born in Shoreditch)
- Ray Winstone (actor)
- Mary Wollstonecraft (reformer and writer, mother of Mary Shelley, born and lived early years in Hoxton)
[edit] References
- ^ That list accessed: 29 October 2006
- ^ Mayor's statement on desirability of Hackney accessed: 29 October 2006
- ^ Statistics for ethnicity[1], country of birth[2], and religion[3] are from the UK census.
[edit] External links
- Diane Abbott Labour MP for Hackney North and Stoke Newington
- Meg Hillier Labour MP for Hackney South & Shoreditch.
- Claud Moraes MEP
- Hackney Labour Party Links to Labour Councillors, London Assembly Members and MEPs
- Hackney Conservative Party Links to Conservative Councillors, London Assembly Members and MEPs
- Hackney Liberal Democrats Links to Liberal Democrat Councillors, London Assembly Members and MEP
- Hackney Green Party Links to Green Councillor, London Assembly Members and MEP
- Hackney Independent Link to Hackney Independent Party
- Hackney Rugby Football Club
- The Hackney Society (Heritage Conservation)
- Hackney Walks
- HACKNEY ENTERPRISE NETWORK
- Tudor Life in Hackney (National Archives)
- Photos of Hackney from Flickr
- The London Regt (Hackney) (History of the Hackney Battalion of the London Regiment)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: |
Greater London | London | City of London |
London boroughs: Barking and Dagenham | Barnet | Bexley | Brent | Bromley | Camden | Croydon | Ealing | Enfield | Greenwich | Hackney | Hammersmith and Fulham | Haringey | Harrow | Havering | Hillingdon | Hounslow | Islington | Kensington and Chelsea | Kingston | Lambeth | Lewisham | Merton | Newham | Redbridge | Richmond | Southwark | Sutton | Tower Hamlets | Waltham Forest | Wandsworth | City of Westminster |
|