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METROPOLITAN BOROUGH OF WESTMINSTER


The 'Metropolitan Borough of Westminster' was a metropolitan borough in the County of London, England, from 1900 to 1965.
It was abolished in 1965 and its area became part of the City of Westminster along with the Metropolitan Borough of Paddington and the Metropolitan Borough of St Marylebone.

Contents
City status
Arms and motto
Area
Area and population
See also
External link
References

City status


By royal charter dated 29 October 1900 the borough was granted the title 'City of Westminster'. Westminster had originally been created a city and seat of the shortlived Diocese of Westminster in 1541. The diocese was suppressed in 1550, but the area was still known as a "city", although without official sanction.

Arms and motto


The arms of Westminster represent two monarchs, closely associated with the City. Edward the Confessor, who rebuilt the church of St Peter (Westminster Abbey), and Henry VII, who added a chapel, within the Abbey. The portcullis and rose emblems are derived from the Tudor dynasty - from whom Westminster first achieved its status; and they appear throughout many public and religious buildings in Westminster, and the portcullis was adopted by the House of Commons. The supporting lions are adopted from the Cecil family, who have had a long association with the borough. The arms were first granted in 1601.
The motto ''Custodi Civitatem Domine'', is translated as ''O Lord, watch over the City''[1].

Area


It consisted of the area that is now part of the City of Westminster and south of Oxford Street and Bayswater Road. It included Soho, Mayfair, St. James's, The Strand, Westminster, Pimlico, Belgravia, and Hyde Park.
It was formed from various parishes:

★ St Anne within the Liberty of Westminster (usually known as St Anne's Soho)

St Clement Danes

St George Hanover Square

St Martin in the Fields

St Mary le Strand

St Paul Covent Garden

★ St James Westminster (usually called St James Piccadilly)

★ St Margaret and St John Westminster

★ And the extra parochial places of the Close of the Collegiate Church of St Peter (or Westminster Abbey), the Precinct of the Savoy and the Liberty of the Rolls.
Previous to the borough's formation it had been administered by five separate local bodies.

Area and population


The Borough covered 2,503 acres. The population recorded in the Census was:
'Civil Parishs 1801-1899'
Year[2] 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891 1901
Population 160,759 168,657 189,543 209,229 229,473 244,531 257,232 248,714 229,784 198,871 183,011

See also



Liberty of Westminster

External link



Metropolitan Borough of Westminster at Vision of Britain

References


1. Civic Heraldry accessed 20 Jun 2007
2. Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV); Census tables for Metropolitan Borough of Westminster


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