Metropolitan Borough of Lewisham

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Lewisham
County of London
Metropolitan Borough of Lewisham shown within the County of London
Status: Metropolitan borough
Admin. HQ: Town Hall, Catford
Created: 1900
Abolished: 1965
Successor: London Borough of Lewisham
London County Council

The Metropolitan Borough of Lewisham was a metropolitan borough in the County of London between 1900 and 1965, when it became part of the London Borough of Lewisham along with the Metropolitan Borough of Deptford.

Contents

[edit] History

It was formed from the parishes of St Mary Lewisham and St Margaret Lee, plus a very small portion from St Giles Camberwell on the western slopes of Forest Hill. While there had been minor industry along the River Ravensbourne for centuries and the extension of the railways had seen suburban development, there were still large areas of farmland at the time of the borough's formation.

The next London property boom in the 1930s saw much of that farmland built upon with both private estates, and the final gaps on the roads to Kent were filled in later on with London County Council built social housing, particularly in Downham and Bellingham.

[edit] Geography

The borough bordered Deptford, Greenwich, Camberwell, and had a portion of the southern boundary of the county of London.

Places in it included Lewisham, Blackheath, Lee, Hither Green, Catford, Brockley, Forest Hill and part of Sydenham.

[edit] Statistics

The area of the borough was 7,015 statute acres (28.4 square kilometres). The population, as recorded at the census, was:[1]

  • 1801: 4,383
  • 1811: 7,137
  • 1821: 8,922
  • 1831: 10,767
  • 1841: 14,636
  • 1851: 18,616
  • 1861: 28,970
  • 1871: 47,018
  • 1881: 67,500
  • 1891: 88,653
  • 1901: 127,495
  • 1911: 160,834
  • 1921: 174,194
  • 1931: 219,953
  • 1951: 227,576
  • 1961: 221,753

[edit] Coat of arms

Unofficial arms adopted in 1901

When the borough was created in 1900, a committee was appointed to design a coat of arms. This device, adopted in the following year, included a shield, crest, supporters and motto.[2]

The shield had four quarters. The first quarter had the attributed arms of King Alfred, first lord of the manor. The second quarter showed a white on red horse, the arms associated with Kent. The Lewisham area was part of Kent until 1889. The third quarter showed a buck's head, from the arms of the Earl of Dartmouth, lord of the manor of Lewisham in 1901. The fourth quarter featured a bear's head and fesse or horizontal band, from the arms of Lord Northbrook, lord of the manor of Lee in 1901.

The crest was a raven, representing the Ravensbourne river.

The supporters were a silver buck sprinkled with red stars and a bear with a gold portcullis on his shoulder. These were also derived from the arms of the Earl of Dartmouth and Lord Northbrook respectively.

Arms granted in 1950

The Latin motto was Salus Populi Suprema Lex, or "the welfare of the people is the highest law" - a motto common to many English municipalities.


In 1950, in celebration of the borough's golden jubilee, a grant of arms was obtained from the College of Arms.[3]

The shield was greatly simplified: A Saxon crown and golden lion recalled the association of King Alfred with the area. The background of three colours recalled the three main areas of the borough: green for Lee Green, purple for Hither (or heather) Green and black for Blackheath.

The raven crest was retained, with the addition of a silver and blue wave for the Ravensbourne.

The 1901 supporters were altered to make them unique to the borough. Around their necks were placed mural crowns, representative of local government.

The motto was not changed, and was continued in use by the London Borough of Lewisham in 1965.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV). Census Tables for Metropolitan Borough of Lewisham, from Vision of Britain website
  2. ^ London's Coats of Arms, Richard Crosley, 1928
  3. ^ London 1900 - 1964, Armorial bearings and regalia of the London County Council, the Corporation of London and the Metropolitan Boroughs, J. F. Beningfield, 1964


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