The
Metropolitan Borough of Holborn was a
metropolitan borough in the
County of London between 1900 and 1965, when it was amalgamated with the
Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras and the
Metropolitan Borough of Hampstead to form the
London Borough of Camden.
Boundaries
The borough was formed from the
civil parishes of St Andrew Holborn above the Bars, St George the Martyr, St Giles in the Fields, and St George Bloomsbury with the
Liberty of
Saffron Hill plus two of the
Inns of Court.
Coat of Arms
St Giles, St George and St Andrew were depicted on the borough seal. The several constituent parishes were illustrated in the
arms granted to Holborn in 1906, while the supporters, the Lion and the
Griffin are from the arms of
Lincoln's Inn and
Gray's Inn (
Inns of Court).
Several of the street names in the British Museum/Senate House area still bear the "Borough of Holborn" area designation.
Holborn Town Hall still exists, on High Holborn.
Area and population
Holborn was the smallest of the twenty-eight metropolitan boroughs of the
County of London, with an area of between 405 and . It also had the smallest population of any of the boroughs throughout its existence. The populations recorded in National Censuses were:
Constituent Civil Parishes 1801-1899
| Year
| 1801
| 1811
| 1821
| 1831
| 1841
| 1851
| 1861
| 1871
| 1881
| 1891 |
| Population
| 67,103
| 80,642
| 88,172
| 90,670
| 93,767
| 95,726
| 94,074
| 93,513
| 78,668
| 70,938 |
Metropolitan Borough 1900-1961
| Year | 1901
| 1911
| 1921
| 1931
| 1941
| 1951
| 1961 |
| Population
| 59,405
| 49,357
| 43,192
| 38,860
|
| 24,810
| 22,008 |
Gallery
See also
References