Municipal Borough of Hornsey

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Hornsey

Hornsey within Middlesex in 1961
Geography
Status Local board 1867 – 1894
Urban district 1894 – 1903
Municipal borough From 1903
1901 area 2,875 acres (11.6 km²)
1965 area 2,871 acres (11.6 km²)
HQ Town Hall, Crouch End From 1935
History
Created 1867
Abolished 1965
Succeeded by London Borough of Haringey
Demography
1901 population 72,056
1961 population 97,962
The Arms of The Municipal Borough of Hornsey
Coat of arms of the borough council

Hornsey was a local government district in east Middlesex from 1867 to 1965.

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Hornsey

History

Parish of Hornsey
Municipal Borough of Hornsey

In 1867, a Local Board was formed for part of the civil parish of Hornsey. The rest of the parish was already under South Hornsey Local Board formed in 1865.

In 1894, under the Local Government Act of that year, Hornsey became an urban district. In 1903, it was incorporated as a municipal borough. The corporation made two unsuccessful attempts to gain county borough status in 1904 and 1915.[1] The borough was part of the London postal district and Metropolitan Police District.

The borough's coat of arms, granted in 1904 featured two trees recalling the ancient forest that once covered the area. The manor of Hornsey had at one time been held by the Diocese of London and crossed swords, taken from the Diocese's arms, completed the design. The Latin motto was Fortior quo paratior or The better prepared, the stronger.

Hornsey Town Hall, built in 1933-5, was widely admired for its clean, modernist style and beautiful detailing, symbolizing enlightened local government. The architect was Reginald Harold Uren. However, since 2004 Haringey Council gradually removed municipal services from the building, and its increasing dereliction caused a local furore.

In 1965, the municipal borough was abolished and its area was transferred to Greater London under the London Government Act 1963. Hornsey's area was combined with the Municipal Borough of Tottenham and the Municipal Borough of Wood Green to form the present-day London Borough of Haringey.

[edit] References

  • Local Government Act 1894
  • London Government Act 1963

[edit] External links