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Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
In message
, at 05:22:42 on Thu, 31 Dec 2009, John B remarked: Following the LGA 1963, Surrey County Council has spent the last 45 years failing to deal with the absurdity of having their administrative centre outside the county. Does it matter that much, that the administrative centre is a mile outside[1] the county (rather than a mile inside[2], which would apparently offend people less)? [1] 1.1 miles according to Google Maps. [2] Cheshire (West) County Hall is less than a mile from the Welsh border. -- Roland Perry |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
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Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
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Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
John B wrote:
The issue was having the administration moving from Lewes to Chichester. In 1974 EG was on the major route from London to Lewes (the A22 out of EG to the south is called Lewes Road) so there were/are quite close links between the two towns. Meanwhile, Chichester is a about as far away from EG as you can get and still be in Sussex. Getting from one to the other is a major trek so there's no feeling that they belong together in any way. There's some logic there - however, given that Crawley, Horsham, Worthing and Gatwick are in W Sussex, the issue is more that Chichester (right on the western border) is a daft place to put the administration for a region whose population is concentrated in its east. Not as daft as putting Surrey County Council in London, admittedly... Less daft as it was in Surrey when it was put there; rather the boundaries moved away. They *should* have relocated the seat of administration but often these things stir up local rivalries and a neutral location is often chosen or retained in preference to the logical one. Note that the last proposal for a move was to Woking rather than Guildford. Personally as one who grew up in Epsom I'd see Esher or Leatherhead as the natural place to go rather than being too far to the west. Furthermore AIUI prior to the 1970s shake-up a lot of county councils met in county halls located in county boroughs that were outside their jurisdiction - e.g. Cumberland in Carlisle, Devon in Exeter, Lincolnshire in Lincoln, Norfolk in Norwich and so forth. So the Surrey situation was not unique in 1965 and by the time it became so things had settled down. |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
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Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
In message
, John B writes The historic county town of Surrey is Guildford, but for reasons that aren't entirely clear the county administration was moved to Southwark in the 1790s. At that time the main venue for the Surrey Quarterly Sessions was Kennington and, before the Acts of the late Victorian period, the Quarterly Sessions were responsible for a number of functions that are now the responsibility of councils, such as licensing, road repair and the like. Much the same happened in Middlesex, where the Quarterly Sessions were held in Clerkenwell before moving out to Westminster. Both no doubt due to the fact that the judiciary and legal teams had little distance to travel from the Inns of Court in Temple and around Holborn. After the Local Government Act 1888 moved Southwark into the County of London, they had to find a new site - bizarrely, given that it was already becoming suburban London even at this point, they chose Kingston. They considered six alternatives: Epsom, Guildford, Kingston, Redhill, Surbiton and Wimbledon. I suspect that Kingston appealed to the historically-minded Victorians because of its association with the coronation of ancient kings - plus the fact that it had two gaols to support the local judicial work. With hindsight, we can see that it's absorption into the metropolis was inevitable, but I doubt that was the case at the time: a lot of the early intensive housing in outer SW London dates from after 1900. -- Paul Terry |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
MIG wrote
[...] Geographically north of the river indeed. Rivers are geographical. I have no problem with that. If you look carefully at the boundary between Surrey and Middlesex (now between Elmbridge or Runnymede and Spelthorne) you will see the boundary is not the river Thames but where the river Thames used to be. So it's "recent", but more geologically "recent" than geographically so. -- Mike D |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
In message , at 18:56:49 on Thu, 31 Dec
2009, Tim Roll-Pickering remarked: Furthermore AIUI prior to the 1970s shake-up a lot of county councils met in county halls located in county boroughs that were outside their jurisdiction - e.g. Cumberland in Carlisle, Devon in Exeter, Lincolnshire in Lincoln, Norfolk in Norwich and so forth. Nottinghamshire County Council has recently narrowly avoided the same fate. Their main building is on the south bank of the Trent (in Rushcliffe/West Bridgford), and so didn't end up in the Unitary City of Nottingham in 1998. -- Roland Perry |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
Basil Jet wrote
I don't think Kingston is a good place to have Surrey's admin, but Surbiton would be, because it's probably easier to reach from any part of Surrey than any place that's actually in Surrey. Since Surrey HQ is between the two and less than a mile from Surbiton that is in fact the situation. The SWT rail net radiates from Surbiton but for the A3 the other (Hook/Tolworth) side would be slightly better. -- Mike D |
Edgware Road: The interchange from hell
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