Esher Urban District

Esher
Esher Urban District
Area
  1961 14,850 acres (60.1 km2)
Population
  1939 44,439
  1961 60,610
History
  Created 1933
  Abolished 1974
  Succeeded by Elmbridge
Status Urban district
Government Esher Urban District Council

Esher Urban District was an urban district in Surrey, England created by merging two urban districts and adding two parishes to the south-west. It ran from 1933 to 1974 and was governed by an elected Council which therefore continued to split up local government functions with Surrey County Council. Its main building was the large town hall in Esher.[1]

Creation

It was created following the Local Government Act 1929 as part of a county review order from:

The district had eight wards, electing 33 councillors to Esher Urban District Council.[2]

Abolition

The district was within the Metropolitan Police District and part of the review area of the Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London. It was proposed by the commission that Esher should form, with Walton and Weybridge, a borough in Greater London. However, neither district went on to be included in Greater London as created by the London Government Act 1963.

In 1970 there was an exchange of River Thames island territory with the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames in Greater London when Thames Ditton Island was transferred from Richmond upon Thames and Platts Eyot was transferred the other way. Both islands were previously connected to the river bank by bridges on the opposite side of the river to their respective counties.

The urban district was abolished on 1 April 1974 and became, with Walton and Weybridge, Elmbridge.

References

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