Berkshire County Council
The Council of the Royal County of Berkshire, also known as the Berkshire County Council, was the top-tier local government administrative body for Berkshire from 1889 to 1998. The local authority had responsibilities for education, social services, public transport, planning, emergency services and waste disposal, and had 87 members. Berkshire County Council shared power with six lower-tier district councils, each of which directed local matters.
On 1 April 1998, under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1992, it was abolished and replaced by its six former districts, the unitary authorities of West Berkshire, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham, Bracknell Forest, Reading and Slough.
History
Creation
The Local Government Act 1888 created County Councils to replace the Court of Quarter Sessions and elections in 1888 brought about the county council's launch.From A History of the first Berkshire County Council:
Berkshire County Council established its meeting place in the assize courts in Reading. Meanwhile the administrative staff and committee rooms of the County Council were accommodated in the shire hall next door. Following the Local Government Act 1972, the council found a need to move to bigger premises at Shire Hall in Shinfield Park in the winter of 1980/1981, at an estimated cost of £27.5 million.
List of Chairmen
Berkshire County Council had both a council leader and the mostly ceremonial role of chairman.Chairmanships were unlimited in duration or number of times.
In 1965, Chairman Sir Louis Dickens changed the term of office to 3 years, to be changed one year before elections. In 1974, the Local Government Act changed the size of and nature of the council, hence the distinction between 'Old' and 'New' County Councils.
Old Berkshire County Council (1889-1974)
1889-1905 ConservativeAlbert Richard Tull 1905-1906
William Hew Dunn 1906-1911
Sir Robert Gray Cornish Mowbray 1911-1916
James Herbert Benyon 1916-1926
Sir William Arthur Mount 1926-1930
Thomas Skurray 1931-1938
- Known by the famous poem:
Alderman Arthur Thomas Loyd OBE 1938-1944 Conservative
Sir George Robert Mowbray 1944-1946
Henry Arthur Benyon 1946-1947
Herbert James Thomas 1947-1954
William John Cumber CBE 1954-1957
Colonel Granville Watson CMG OBE 1957-1960
Sir George Robert Mowbray 1960-1965
Air Commodore Sir Louis Walter Dickens 1965-1968
Derrick Aylmer Frederick Henry Howard Hartley Russell OBE 1968-1971
Richard Henry Carilef Seymour 1971-1974
New Berkshire County Council (1974-1998)
Frederick Derrick Pickering CBE 1974-1977 ConservativeLt. Col. Richard Watt MBE 1977-1980 Conservative
Lewis David Moss CBE 1980-1982 Conservative
W.T. Timperley DFC 1982-1983 Labour
Ian Morgan 1983-1986 Conservative
Frederick Gareth Robert Gimblett CBE 1986-1989 Conservative
William Anthony Wiseman 1989-1992 Conservative
Ronald James Day 1992-1995 Liberal Democrat
C.C. Trembath 1995-1998 Liberal Democrat
Abolition and creation of the Unitary Authorities
The 1990s led to the restoration of county boroughs under a new name, unitary authorities which radically changed the administrative map of England. The Banham Review of 1992 sought to consolidate local authorities where possible and abolish unnecessary tiers of government. The changes to Berkshire County council were part of the final wave of changes in 1998, resulting from the act.The council was abolished, and the ceremonial county is now governed by the six unitary authorities: West Berkshire, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham, Bracknell Forest, Reading and Slough. The general secretary of the National Association of Local Government Officers described the re-organisation as a "completely cynical manoeuvre".
Aftermath
One of the last Chairmen of Berkshire County Council, Tony Wiseman, went on to found CRAG with a number of other former members of the council. CRAG successfully opposed Wokingham borough council's plan for building of houses between Reading and Basingstoke.After the abolition and until the 2009 local government reforms, the ceremonial county of Berkshire was unique in England as being the only non-metropolitan county to have no County Council throughout its entire area, with the entire county governed by unitary authorities.
Powers and composition
As stated above, under the Local Government Act 1972 the chief responsibilities of Berkshire County Council, in common with other non-metropolitan county authorities, included education, social services, public transport, planning, emergency services and waste disposal. It served to provide a strategic county-wide framework within which the differing plans of its six district councils could be harmonised.As with many County Councils, the Local Government Act 1972 changed the structure of the council, and a large area around Abingdon and the Vale of the White Horse became part of Oxfordshire while Slough, which had been within Buckinghamshire, became part of Berkshire. The former County Borough of Reading - which had been part of the historic assize and ceremonial county - also became part of the administrative county.
Elections to the Berkshire County Council
Elections were held to Berkshire County Council every 3 years, with chairmen being selected in the second year of each term. After the 1974 re-organisation elections were held every four years, the last full election taking place in 1993.Political Composition
Between 1889 and 1945, the Council was fairly apolitical, although two of the Chairmen went on to become Conservative MP's.Following the 1945 General election, the Labour Party won 17 councillors in 1945. Despite this win, Labour were still a minority and party politics didn't really come to the fore until 1974, with the Local Government Act 1972. This Act also brought representatives of the former County Borough of Reading on to the County Council for the first time and brought the Borough of Slough into the County from Buckinghamshire while the northern part of the county was transferred to Oxfordshire.
The council was then dominated by the Conservatives, until 1990 when they lost overall control but continued to run the Council's administration.
In 1992 a Lib Dem coalition with Labour took majority control of the Council and, following the 1993 elections, dominated the council until the coalition fractured in 1996. A Lib Dem administration with the Conservatives then ran the Council until it was split into unitary authorities.
Coat of arms
Owing to the reorganisation of the council under the Local Government Act 1972, the coat of arms for Berkshire County Council is different before and after 1974.Pre 1974 (1947-1974)
Arms and Crest granted 18 July 1947. Crest changed and supporters granted 7 April 1961.The coat of arms granted by the College of Arms to the Berkshire County Council are described as:
From Civic Heraldry:
Post 1974 (1974-1998)
Again from Civic Heraldry:And from Berkshire History:
In popular culture
- The main setting for BBC comedy show "The Wrong Mans" and the workplace for the main two characters.