Metropolitan Water Board

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The Metropolitan Water Board's headquarters in Finsbury. Now residential. (November 2005)
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The Metropolitan Water Board's headquarters in Finsbury. Now residential. (November 2005)


The Metropolitan Water Board was founded in 1903 to bring the nine private water companies supplying water to London under a single public body. The members of the board were nominated by the various local authorities within its area of supply. A Royal Commission had reported in 1899 on the need for such controls.

The board was abolished in 1974 and control transferred to Thames Water.

Contents

[edit] Formation

The board was created by the The Metropolis Water Act 1902 (2 Edw.7, c.41). The board as originally constituted in the Act had 67 members; 65 of these were nominated by local authorities, who appointed a paid chairman and vice-chairman. The nominating bodies were:

The first Metropolitan Water Board retired on 1st June 1907, with a new board being nominated every three years thereafter. As local government changes took place, the nominating bodies changed.

[edit] Undertakings acquired

The board compulsorily acquired the following water companies:

  • The New River Company
  • The East London Waterworks Company
  • The Southwark and Vauxhall Waterworks Company
  • The Company of Proprietors of the West Middlesex Waterworks
  • The Company and Proprietors of Lambeth Waterworks
  • The Governor and Company of Chelsea Waterworks
  • The Grand Junction Waterworks Company
  • The Staines Reservoirs Joint Committee

Also acquired at no cost were the water undertakings of Tottenham and Enfield Urban District Councils

[edit] Area of the board

The board's area, described as its "Limits of Supply" was considerably larger than the administrative County of London: 559 square miles as opposed to 116 square miles. The limits were to be the same as the area supplied by the various undertakings acquired with the addition of the parishes of Sunbury, Middlesex and Chessington, Surrey. It comprised the entire county of London and much of Middlesex, with outer boundaries at Cheshunt in Hertfordshire, Loughton and East Ham in Essex, Dartford and Foots Cray in Kent, and Malden, Surbiton, Esher and Kingston upon Thames in Surrey. The 1911 Encyclopedia Brittanica described " Water London " as an irregular area extending from Ware in Hertfordshire to Sevenoaks in Kent, and westward as far as Ealing and Sunbury.

[edit] Abolition

The various public water boards and local authority water undertakings in England and Wales were reorganised by the Water Act 1973. Ten large Water Authorities were established based on river basins and catchment areas. Accordingly, in 1974, the assets of the Metropolitan Water Board passed to the Thames Water Authority governed by a 60 person board, and covering the area from the source of the Thames in Wiltshire to the Thames Estuary.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • London's Water Supply 1903-1953. A Review of the Work of the Metropolitan Water Board. W. S. Chevalier Clerk of the Board.
  • Metropolis Water Act 1902