Middlesex

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Middlesex is one of the 39 historic counties of England and the second smallest by area. The low-lying county contained the wealthy and politically independent City of London on its southern boundary and was dominated by it from a very early time. The county was significantly affected by the expansion of the metropolitan area of London in both the 18th and 19th centuries; such that from 1855 the south east was administered as part of the metropolis. When county councils were initially introduced in England in 1889 around 20% of the area of Middlesex, and a third of its population, was transferred to the County of London, and the remainder formed a smaller county, in the north west, under the control of Middlesex County Council.

In the interwar years urban London had further expanded, with increasing suburbanisation, improvement and expansion of public transport, and the setting up of new industries outside the inner London area. After World War II the population of the County of London and inner Middlesex was in steady decline, with new population growth only experienced in the outer suburbs. After a Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London, almost all of the original area was incorporated into an enlarged Greater London in 1965, with small parts transferred to neighbouring Hertfordshire and Surrey. Despite the abolition of the county, Middlesex is still used informally as an area name and was retained as a postal county; which is now an optional component of postal addresses.

Etymology and geography

The name means territory of the middle Saxons and refers to the reputed ethnic origin of its inhabitants. Its first recorded use was in 704 as Middleseaxan. The county lay within the London Basin and the most significant feature was the River Thames which formed the southern boundary. The River Lee and the River Colne formed natural boundaries to the east and west. In the south west of the county the Thames meandered enough to make "Middlesex bank" more descriptively accurate than "North bank". In the north the boundary was mostly formed by a ridge of hills broken by Barnet valley and a long protrusion of Hertfordshire into the county. The county was thickly wooded, with much of it covered by the ancient Forest of Middlesex. The highest point was the High Road by Bushey Heath at , which is now one of the highest points in London.

Early settlement and economy

Middlesex was recorded in the Domesday Book as being divided into the six hundreds of Edmonton, Elthorne, Gore, Hounslow (Isleworth in all later records), Ossulstone and Spelthorne. Settlement was divided as follows:

Hundred Parishes and settlements Area (1831)
acres
Edmonton EdmontonEnfieldMonken HadleySouth MimmsTottenham 31,410
Elthorne CowleyCranfordGreenfordHanwellHarefieldHarlingtonHarmondsworthHayesHillingdonIckenhamNew BrentfordNortholtNorwoodPerivaleRuislipUxbridgeWest Drayton 35,690
Gore EdgwareGreat StanmoreHarrow on the HillHendonKingsburyLittle StanmorePinner 28,660
Isleworth HestonIsleworthTwickenham 9,280
Ossulstone ActonBloomsburyBowBromleyChelseaChiswickClerkenwellEalingFinchleyFriern BarnetFulhamHackneyHammersmithHampsteadMinoriesHornseyKensingtonMile EndPaddingtonPoplarRatcliffeShadwellShoreditchSpitalfieldsHolbornSt PancrasStepneyWappingWest TwyfordWhitechapelWillesden 47,950
Spelthorne AshfordEast BedfontFelthamHamptonHampton WickHanworthLalehamLittletonSheppertonStainesStanwellSunburyTeddington 23,500

The City of London, which has been self-governing since the thirteenth century, was geographically within the county and it also included Westminster which had a high degree of autonomy. Of the six hundreds, Ossulstone contained the districts closest to the City of London. During the 17th century it was divided into four divisions, which, along with the Liberty of Westminster largely took over the administrative functions of the hundred. The divisions were named Finsbury, Holborn, Kensington and Tower. The county had parliamentary representation from the 13th century. The title Earl of Middlesex was created twice, in 1622 and 1677 but became extinct in 1843.

The economy of the county was dependent on the City of London and was primarily agricultural. All manner of good were provided for the City, including crops such as grain and hay, livestock and building materials. Tourism in early resorts such as Hackney, Islington and Highgate also formed part of the early economy. However, during the 18th century the inner parishes of Middlesex started to instead function as suburbs of the City and were increasingly urbanised. The following is the population of the ancient county (including the City of London) as given at each ten-yearly census from 1801–1881:

Year Edmonton
Hundred
Elthorne
Hundred
Gore
Hundred
Isleworth
Hundred
Ossulstone
Hundred
Spelthorne
Hundred
London City Inns of Court
and
Chancery
Westminster
City and
Liberty
Total
Holborn
Division
Finsbury
Division
Kensington
Division
Tower
Division
Within
the Walls
Without
the Walls
1801 16,885 16,853 6,968 9,266 171,202 73,268 40,642 215,382 12,743 63,832 70,676 1,907 157,890 818,129
1811 20,577 19,929 8,738 10,669 214,946 92,538 54,550 272,966 14,409 55,484 70,489 1,796 166,438 953,774
1821 24,771 23,479 9,806 12,285 272,131 119,802 70,808 339,075 16,966 56,174 74,765 1,546 186,584 1,144,531
1831 26,930 26,976 11,315 13,568 341,981 151,409 87,961 427,090 19,204 55,778 73,442 1,271 206,116 1,358,130
1841 30,683 34,943 12,487 15,893 399,218 185,174 122,795 513,501 21,298 54,626 74,758 1,708 226,241 1,574,416
1851 32,109 35,828 12,956 18,463 480,942 239,788 169,317 641,918 22,107 54,702 79,096 1,398 241,450 1,886,576
1861 40,885 42,274 15,341 23,610 551,487 312,553 223,305 773,621 24,795 44,400 73,125 1,272 254,463 2,206,485
1871 57,332 46,996 21,291 30,463 604,891 381,702 350,688 902,056 33,069 28,093 50,733 1,138 246,592 2,539,765
1881 94,185 51,932 27,029 35,206 622,865 482,264 524,122 1,018,337 40,400 18,851 32,389 1,011 228,993 2,920,485

Modern history

Expansion of the metropolis

During the 19th century, the East End of London had expanded to the eastern boundary with Essex and the Tower division had reached a population of over a million. Following the coming of the railways, the north western suburbs of London had steadily covered large parts of the county. The areas closest to London were served by the Metropolitan Police from 1829 and from 1840 the entire county was included in the Metropolitan Police District. Local government in the county was unreformed by the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 and civic works were instead carried out by individual parish vestries or ad-hoc improvement commissioners. In 1855 the parishes of the densely populated area to the south east, but excluding the City of London, came within the responsibility of the Metropolitan Board of Works. Despite this innovation, the system was described by commentators at the time as one 'in chaos'. In 1889, under the Local Government Act 1888, the metropolitan area of approximately became part of the County of London. The Act also provided that the part of Middlesex in the administrative county of London should be "severed from [Middlesex], and form a separate county for all non-administrative purposes". It was divided in 1900 into the following metropolitan boroughs, which were merged in 1965 to form seven of the present-day inner London boroughs:

Middlesex
Divisions
County of London
Metropolitan boroughs (1900-1965)
Greater London
London boroughs
Holborn (part) Hampstead, Holborn, St Pancras Camden
Tower (part)
Finsbury (part)
Hackney, Shoreditch
Stoke Newington
Hackney
Kensington (part) Hammersmith, Fulham Hammersmith
(later renamed Hammersmith and Fulham)
Finsbury (part) Finsbury, Islington Islington
Kensington (part) Chelsea, Kensington Kensington and Chelsea
Tower (part) Bethnal Green, Poplar, Stepney Tower Hamlets
Holborn (part)
Liberty of Westminster
Paddington, St Marylebone
Westminster
Westminster

Extra-metropolitan area

Following the Local Government Act 1888, the remaining county came under the control of Middlesex County Council except for the parish of Monken Hadley which became part of Hertfordshire. The area of responsibilty of the Lord Lieutenant of Middlesex was reduced accordingly. Middlesex did not contain any county boroughs, so the county and administrative county (the area of county council control) were identical. The Local Government Act 1894 divided the administrative county into four rural districts and thirty-one urban districts, based on existing sanitary districts. One urban district, South Hornsey was a detached part of Middlesex within the County of London until 1900, when it was transferred to the latter county. The rural districts were Hendon, South Mimms, Staines and Uxbridge. Because of increasing urbanisation these had all been abolished by 1934. Urban districts had been created, merged, and many had gained the status of municipal borough by 1965. The districts as at the 1961 census were:

  1. Potters Bar
  2. Enfield
  3. Southgate
  4. Edmonton
  5. Hendon
  6. Harrow
  7. Friern Barnet
  8. Finchley
  9. Uxbridge
  10. Ruislip-Northwood
  11. Wood Green
  12. Tottenham
  13. Hornsey
  1. Wembley
  2. Willeseden
  3. Ealing
  4. Hayes and Harlington
  5. Acton
  6. Southall
  7. Yiewsley and West Drayton
  8. Brentford and Chiswick
  9. Heston and Isleworth
  10. Feltham
  11. Staines
  12. Twickenham
  13. Sunbury-on-Thames

After 1889 the growth of London did not cease and the county became almost entirely urbanised by its suburbs with a significant rise in population density. This process was accelerated by the Metro-land developments which covered a large part of the county. Public transport in the county, including the extensive network of trams, buses and the London Underground came under control of the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933 and a New Works Programme was devised in order to further enhance services during the 1930s. Because of its proximity to the capital, the county had a significant role during World War II. The county was subject to aerial bombardment and contained part of a series of bases, such as RAF Uxbridge and RAF Heston, which were involved in the Battle of Britain.

Arms of Middlesex County Council

Coats of arms were attributed by the medieval heralds to the Kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy. That assigned to the Kingdom of the Middle and East Saxons depicted three "seaxes" or short notched swords on a red background. The seaxe was a weapon carried by Anglo-Saxon warriors, and the term "Saxon" may be derived from the word. These arms became associated with the two counties that approximated to the kingdom: Middlesex and Essex. County authorities, militia and volunteer regiments associated with both counties used the attributed arms. In 1910 it was noted that the county councils of Essex and Middlesex and the Sheriff's Office of the County of London were all using the same arms.

The Middlesex County Council decided to apply for a formal grant of arms from the College of Arms, with the addition of an heraldic "difference" added to the attributed arms. Colonel Otley Parry, a Justice of the Peace for Middlesex and author of a book on military badges, was asked to devise an addition to the shield. The chosen addition was a "Saxon Crown", derived from the portrait of King Athelstan on a silver penny of his reign, stated to be the earliest form of crown associated with any English sovereign. The grant of arms was made by letters patent dated 7 November 1910. The blazon of the arms was:

Gules, three seaxes fessewise points to the sinister proper, pomels and hilts and in the centre chief point a Saxon crown or.

The undifferenced arms of the Kingdom were eventually granted to Essex County Council in 1932. Seaxes were also used in the insignia of many of the boroughs and urban districts in the county, while the Saxon crown came to be a common heraldic charge in English civic arms. On the creation of the Greater London Council in 1965 a Saxon crown was introduced in its coat of arms. Seaxes appear in the arms of several London borough councils and of Spelthorne Borough Council whose area was in Middlesex.

Creation of Greater London

The population of the County of London was in decline since its creation in 1889, and following World War II the exodus continued. In contrast, the population trend of Middlesex had seen steady increase during that period. From 1951 to 1961 the population of the inner districts of the county started to drop and growth was experienced only in eight of the suburban outer districts.

Municipal history 1894 - 1965 Borough
incorporation
District/borough in 1965 Population
1951
Population
1961
1965 fate
Acton UD formed 1894 1921 Acton MB 67,471 65,586 LB Ealing
Brentford UD, Chiswick UD formed 1894,
amalgamated as Brentford and Chiswick UD 1927
1932 Brentford and Chiswick MB 59,367 54,833 LB Hounslow
Ealing UD created 1894,
absorbed Greenford UD, Hanwell UD 1926
1901 Ealing MB 187,323 183,077 LB Ealing
Edmonton UD created 1894 1937 Edmonton MB 104,270 91,956 LB Enfield
Enfield UD created 1894 1955 Enfield MB 110,465 109,542 LB Enfield
Feltham UD created 1904 from Staines RD,
absorbed East Bedfont, Hanworth on abolition of Staines RD 1934
n/a Feltham UD 44,861 51,047 LB Hounslow
Finchley UD created 1894 1933 Finchley MB 69,991 69,370 LB Barnet
Friern Barnet UD created 1894 n/a Friern Barnet UD 29,163 28,813 LB Barnet
Harrow on the Hill UD created 1894,
Harrow UD formed 1934 from Harrow on the Hill UD
part of abolished Wealdstone UD,
Harrow Weald, Pinner, Little Stanmore, Great Stanmore
from abolished Hendon RD
1954 Harrow MB 219,494 209,080 LB Harrow
(boundaries unchanged)
Hayes UD created 1904 from part of Uxbridge RD,
Hayes and Harlington UD created 1930 by merger of Hayes UD
and Cranford and Harlington from abolished Staines RD
n/a Hayes and Harlington UD 65,596 67,915 LB Hillingdon
Hendon UD created 1894, absorbed Edgware from Hendon RD 1931 1932 Hendon MB 155,857 151,843 LB Barnet
Heston and Isleworth UD created 1894 1932 Heston and Isleworth MB 106,847 103,013 LB Hounslow
Hornsey UD created 1894 1903 Hornsey MB 98,159 97,962 LB Haringey
South Mimms RD created 1894, became Potters Bar UD 1934 n/a Potters Bar UD 17,172 23,376 Hertfordshire
Created 1904 from part of Uxbridge RD n/a Ruislip-Northwood UD 68,288 72,791 LB Hillingdon
Southall Norwood UD created 1894, renamed Southall 1936 1936 Southall MB 55,896 52,983 LB Ealing
Southgate UD created 1894 1933 Southgate MB 73,377 72,359 LB Enfield
Created 1894,
absorbed Ashford, Laleham and Stanwell from abolished Staines RD 1930
n/a Staines UD 39,995 49,838 Surrey
Created 1894,
absorbed Littleton and Shepperton from abolished Staines RD 1930
n/a Sunbury-on-Thames UD 23,394 33,437 Surrey
Tottenham UD created 1894 1934 Tottenham MB 126,929 113,249 LB Haringey
Twickenham UD created 1894,
absorbed Hampton UD, Hampton Wick UD, Teddington UD 1937
1926 Twickenham MB 105,663 100,971 LB Richmond
Uxbridge UD created 1894,
absorbed Cowley, Harefield, Hillingdon East and Ickenham
from abolished Uxbridge RD 1929
1955 Uxbridge MB 55,960 63,941 LB Hillingdon
Wembley UD created 1894,
absorbed Kingsbury UD, part of abolished Wealdstone UD 1934
1937 Wembley MB 131,384 124,892 LB Brent
Willesden UD created 1894 1933 Willesden MB 179,697 171,001 LB Brent
Wood Green UD created 1894 1933 Wood Green MB 52,228 47,945 LB Haringey
Yiewsley UD created 1911 from part of Uxbridge RD,
absorbed Harmondsworth, West Drayton from abolished Uxbridge RD
to become Yiewsley and West Drayton UD 1929
n/a Yiewsley and West Drayton UD 20,468 23,723 LB Hillingdon

According to the 1961 census, Ealing, Enfield, Harrow, Hendon, Heston and Isleworth, Tottenham, Wembley, Willesden and Twickenham had all reached a population of greater than 100,000, which would usually have entitled them to seek county borough status. If granted to all these boroughs, it would have reduced the population of the administrative county of Middlesex by over half, to just shy of a million. Following the Royal Commission on Local Government in Greater London nearly all the remainder of Middlesex became part of Greater London in 1965 and formed the new outer London boroughs of Barnet (part only), Brent, Ealing, Enfield, Haringey, Harrow, Hillingdon, Hounslow and Richmond upon Thames (part only). The remaining areas were Potters Bar Urban District which became part of Hertfordshire, while Sunbury-on-Thames Urban District and Staines Urban District became part of Surrey.

Following the changes, local acts of Parliament relating to Middlesex were henceforth to apply to the entirety of the nine "North West London Boroughs". In 1974 the three urban districts that had been transferred to Hertfordshire and Surrey were abolished and became the districts of Hertsmere (part only) and Spelthorne respectively. In 1995 the village of Poyle was transferred from Spelthorne to the Berkshire borough of Slough. Additionally, since 1965 the Greater London boundary to the west and north has been subject to a significant number of small changes.

Legacy

Middlesex is used in the names of organisations based in the area such as Middlesex County Cricket Club and Middlesex University. There is a Middlesex County Football Association and two teams that are now within Surrey, Staines Town and Ashford Town (Middlesex) as well as Potters Bar Town in Hertfordshire, compete in the Middlesex County Cup. Sir John Betjeman, a native of North London and Poet Laureate published several poems about Middlesex and the suburban experience. Many were featured in the televised readings Metroland. As part of a 2002 marketing campaign, the plant conservation charity Plantlife chose the wood anemone as the county flower. In 2003, an early day motion with two signatures, noted 16 May is the anniversary of the Battle of Albuera and in recent years has been celebrated as Middlesex Day, commemorating the valiant efforts of the Middlesex Regiment (the “Die-hards”) in that battle. The idea is to recognise and celebrate the historic county. On its creation in 1965, Greater London was divided into five commission areas for the administration of justice. One was named "Middlesex" and consisted of the boroughs of Barnet, Brent, Ealing, Enfield, Haringey, Harrow, Hillingdon and Hounslow. This was abolished on 1 July 2003.

County town

Middlesex does not have a single established historic county town, with different locations having been used for different county purposes. The County Assizes for Middlesex were held at the Old Bailey in the City of London. Until 1889 the Sheriff of Middlesex was chosen by the City of London Corporation. The sessions house for the Middlesex Quarter Sessions was at Clerkenwell Green from the early eighteenth century. The quarter sessions at the Former Middlesex Sessions House performed most of the administration of the county until the creation of the Middlesex County Council in 1889.

New Brentford was first described as the county town in 1789, on the basis that it was the location of elections of knights for the shire (or Members of Parliament) from 1701. In 1795 New Brentford was "considered as the county-town; but there is no town-hall or other public building". Middlesex County Council, which took over the administrative duties of the Quarter Sessions in 1889 was based at the Middlesex Guildhall, in Westminster. This was in the County of London, and thus outside the council's area of jurisdiction.

Former postal county

Middlesex (abbreviated Middx) is also defined as a former postal county; an element of postal addressing in routine use until 1996 and now an optional component. The postal county was retained after 1965 because Royal Mail was unable to follow all the changes to county boundaries and could not adopt Greater London as a postal county. However, much of inner Middlesex (Willesden, Hornsey etc.) was within the London postal district, within which addresses included 'LONDON' and did not include a county. The transfer of Potters Bar to Hertfordshire was adopted by the Royal Mail, but the transfers of Staines and Sunbury to Surrey were not. The remaining postal county consisted of two unconnected areas (Enfield and the rest) and comprised the following post towns:

Postcode area Post towns
EN (part) ENFIELD
HA EDGWARE • HARROW • NORTHWOOD • PINNER • RUISLIP • STANMORE • WEMBLEY
TW (part) ASHFORD • BRENTFORD • FELTHAM • HAMPTON • HOUNSLOW† • ISLEWORTH • SHEPPERTON • STAINES • SUNBURY-ON-THAMES • TEDDINGTON • TWICKENHAM†
UB GREENFORD • HAYES • NORTHOLT • SOUTHALL • UXBRIDGE • WEST DRAYTON

† = postal county was not required

The postal county included many anomalies where the post towns it consisted of encroached on neighbouring counties, such as the village of Denham, Buckinghamshire, which is included in the post town of Uxbridge and was therefore within the postal county of Middlesex; conversely Hampton Wick was not included in the Middlesex postal county as it was served by post towns based in Surrey. This gave rise to the misconception that Hampton Court Palace was located in Surrey. Wraysbury, Berkshire and Egham Hythe, Surrey are served by the Staines post town and thus were also included in the Middlesex postal county.

Bibliography

  • Middlesex: The Jubilee of the County Council 1889–1939 by C W Radcliffe

References

External links



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