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County Borough of Warley

Coordinates:52°30′N2°00′W / 52.5°N 2.0°W /52.5; -2.0
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Warley
County borough
Map of the County Borough of Warley. The boundary of Warley is shown in blue and of the constituent boroughs in red.
Map of Warley County Borough
Area
 • 19663,833 acres (15.51 km2)
 • 19743,833 acres (15.51 km2)
Population
 • 1971163,545
History
 • Preceded byCounty Borough of Smethwick
Municipal Borough of Oldbury
Municipal Borough of Rowley Regis
 • OriginLocal Government Act 1958
 • Created1966
 • Abolished1974
 • Succeeded bySandwell
StatusCounty borough,Civil parish
Government
 • HQSmethwick Council House, Smethwick
 • MottoUnity and Progress
Coat of arms of Warley Borough Council
Arms of the County Borough of Warley

Warley was a short-livedcounty borough andcivil parish in thegeographical county ofWorcestershire,England, forming part of theWest Midlands conurbation.[1] It was formed in 1966 by the combination of the existing county borough ofSmethwick with the municipal boroughs ofOldbury andRowley Regis, by recommendation of theLocal Government Commission for England.[1] It was abolished just 8 years later in 1974 under theLocal Government Act 1972, with its area passing to theMetropolitan Borough of Sandwell.

Formation

[edit]
See also:Evolution of Worcestershire county boundaries
The local government structure within North Worcestershire and South Staffordshire – Prior to theWest Midlands Order 1965 reorganisation

TheLocal Government Act 1958 appointed a Local Government Commission to review administrative structures and boundaries in England outside London. The Act designated a "West Midlands Special Review Area" as one of five conurbations in which urgent reform was felt to be needed.[2] The commission made its report in July 1961, recommending that theBlack Country area of the West Midlands should be administered by five large county boroughs. The proposal to merge the boroughs of Oldbury, Rowley Regis and Smethwick as one of the new authorities was initially suggested by the three councils involved. The government announced that it accepted the proposals in November 1962, and it was originally intended that the County Borough of Warley should come into being on 1 April 1964.[3] The reforms were delayed when five district councils in the review area took legal action in an attempt to prevent their implementation. The legal process was finally concluded in the Court of Appeal in July 1965, with the court ruling in the government's favour. Plans for Rowley Regis to be absorbed into an expanded Dudley borough were also considered, while Halesowen was being lined up as the third area to be absorbed into a new borough which also included Oldbury and Smethwick, but this did not happen and the borough of Halesowen survived until it was incorporated into the newMetropolitan Borough of Dudley in 1974.[3]

The Local Government (West Midlands) Order 1965 was made on 3 November 1965, with the changes to come into effect on 1 April 1966. The Order was debated in theHouse of Commons on 2 December 1965.John Horner, theLabourMP forOldbury and Halesowen stated that while the boroughs of Oldbury and Rowley Regis had supported the creation of the new county borough in 1961, they no longer did so. In contrast,Peter Griffiths,Conservative member forSmethwick stated that the working party consisting of councillors for the three boroughs had given up their opposition, and were trying to make a success of the new county borough. The group did, however, have objections to boundary changes which caused the transfer of an estate of council houses (next to theWest Bromwich Albion F.C. stadium) to West Bromwich.[3]

The borough took its name from the ancientManor of Warley, listed in theDomesday Survey as covering much of the area. This was subsequently divided into two parts: Warley Salop (in Shropshire) and Warley Wigorn (in Worcestershire). This was united as the civil parish ofWarley in 1884, but later divided between the boroughs of Oldbury and Smethwick (Warley Woods).[1][4]

Smethwick and Rowley Regis had been part ofStaffordshire, while Oldbury was part ofWorcestershire (having been transferred fromShropshire in 1844). The new county borough was placed entirely in the geographical county of Worcestershire. Part of the Oakham area ofDudley and most of theTividale area ofTipton were also incorporated into Warley, becoming part of the new Oldbury B69 postal district.

The archives for Warley Borough are held atSandwell Community History and Archives Service.

Areas transferred

[edit]
Existing local authorityArea (acres)Population 1961Notes
Rowley Regis MB, Staffordshire1,48347,831Remainder of borough was divided between West Bromwich CB (44 acres, pop 43)
and Halesowen MB (2 acres, pop 150)
Oldbury MB, Worcestershire1,23151,902Remainder of borough was divided between West Bromwich CB (11 acres, pop 43)
and Halesowen MB (95 acres, pop 2,003)
Smethwick CB98867,501Remainder of borough was divided between West Bromwich CB (20 acres, pop 889)
and Birmingham CB (3 acres, pop 0)
Birmingham CB501,820
Halesowen MB, Worcestershire37525
West Bromwich CB32169
Dudley CB10317
Tipton MB, Staffordshire195Borough was abolished, the remainder becoming part of West Bromwich CB with the exception of a small section being incorporated into Dudley CB
Brierley Hill UD, Staffordshire10Urban District was abolished, most going to Dudley CB

Source:Vision of Britain[5]

On creation, the county borough was included in the area of theWest Midlands Constabulary, which was formed to cover the five Black Country county boroughs formed in 1966. Warley was included in the area of theWest Midlands Passenger Transport Executive in 1969, and nominated one member of the transport authority.[6]

Borough council

[edit]

The first elections to Warley Borough Council were in February 1966, with those elected being a "shadow council" until coming into full powers on 1 April.[3] The Labour Party initially held power, losing it to the Conservatives in 1968. Labour regained control in 1972 at the final borough election before abolition. The county borough was divided into fifteenwards, each returning three councillors and onealderman:[1]

The political composition of the borough council was as follows following each election from 1967 to 1972:

YearLabourConservativeLiberalIndependent
1967[7]312612
1968[8]173913
1969[9]104712
1970[10]174110
1971[11]263211
1972[12]392100

In 1967, the first council elections in Warley saw the Labour Party gain control of the council with a narrow majority, although the following year saw the Conservatives gain control with a significant majority, reflecting the slump in popularity of the Labour government across Britain at the time. In 1972, Labour regained control of Warley.

In September 1967, the council appointedTony O'Connor as headmaster at what was then Bearwood Junior and Infants School; he is widely held to be the UK's first black headmaster.[13]

Coat of arms

[edit]

On 30 June 1966, theCollege of Arms granted the new county borougharmorial bearings.[14] The design incorporated features from the arms of the three merged boroughs. Theblazon of the arms was as follows:

Per saltire vert and or, two lions rampant in pale or, in fess of either flank a club in bend sinister surmounted by acaduceus in bend proper; on a chief or a lion passant vert. And for a crest: Issuant from a Saxon crown or, a demi lion rampant double queued vert holding with the dexter paw an arrow barb downwards proper. Supporters: on the dexter side a lion gules in the mouth an arrow proper; on the sinister side a dragon gules in the mouth an anchor or.[14]

The "chief" or upper third of the shield bearing a lion passant came from the arms of Rowley Regis, and the "per saltire" division of the arms and green and gold colouring was found in Oldbury's insignia. The gold lions on a green background were from the arms of the Robsart family, while the crossed club and caduceus were the arms ofJames Watt. The crest featured aSaxon crown from which rose a green double-tailed lion, emblem of the Suttons, mediaeval lords of Dudley. The lion held an arrow from the arms ofMatthew Boulton. Thesupporters of the arms were a red lion and dragon. The lion was from the armorial bearings of SirJames Timmins Chance, while the dragon was intended to represent the ancient Britons, founders of the "old burh" or Oldbury. Both animals held objects in their mouths as heraldic differences: an arrow (as in the crest) and an anchor (for Cradley Heath's traditional industry). Themotto chosen by the borough was "Unity and Progress".[15]

Parliamentary constituencies

[edit]

The Parliamentary Constituencies (England) Order 1970 divided the county borough into two parliamentary constituencies:Warley East andWarley West.[16] The constituencies were first used at the1974 general election, shortly before the abolition of the borough. They were abolished in 1997, although the borough's name lived on until 2024 as the name ofWarley constituency which consisted ofOldbury andSmethwick (formerly Warley East). The old Warley West seat was divided between the new constituency ofHalesowen and Rowley Regis and an expandedWest Bromwich West.

Abolition

[edit]

On the formation of theWest Midlandsmetropolitan county in 1974, the county borough of Warley merged with the county borough ofWest Bromwich to form theMetropolitan Borough of Sandwell. West Bromwich itself had expanded in 1966 to take in the bulk of Tipton andWednesbury.[17]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdFrederic A. Youngs, Jr.,Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, Vol.II: Northern England, London, 1991
  2. ^Local Government Act 1958 c.55
  3. ^abcd"Local Government (West Midlands Order) HC Deb 02 December 1965 vol 721 cc1793-846".Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 2 December 1965. Retrieved3 June 2008.
  4. ^"Manors: Halesowen: Introduction, borough and manors inA History of the County of Worcester, Vol.3". British History Online. 1913. Retrieved3 June 2008.
  5. ^"Warley County Borough". Vision of Britain. Retrieved4 June 2008.
  6. ^The West Midlands Passenger Transport Area (Designation) Order 1969 (S.I. 1969 No. 97)
  7. ^The Times, 12 May 1967
  8. ^The Times, 10 May 1968
  9. ^The Times, 12 May 1969
  10. ^The Times, 8 May 1970
  11. ^The Times, 14 May 1971
  12. ^The Times, 5 May 1972
  13. ^"England's pioneering black head teachers". BBC News. 11 May 2018. Retrieved30 November 2020.
  14. ^abGeoffrey Briggs,Civic & Corporate Heraldry: A dictionary of impersonal arms of England, Wales and Northern Ireland, London, 1971
  15. ^Peter Skidmore,The Civic Heraldry of the Black Country, Kingswinford, 2003
  16. ^The Parliamentary Constituencies (England) Order 1970 (S.I. 1970 No. 1674)
  17. ^"About Sandwell | Sandwell Homes". Archived fromthe original on 15 June 2012. Retrieved8 May 2012.

External links

[edit]

52°30′N2°00′W / 52.5°N 2.0°W /52.5; -2.0

Ancient boroughs
Incorporated boroughs
Urban districts
Rural districts
Civil parishes
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