Tyne and Wear is bounded on the east by the North Sea, and as a Ceremonial
county, shares borders with Northumberland to the
north, and County Durham to the
south.Tyne
and Wear County Council was abolished in 1986, and so its districts (the
metropolitan boroughs) are now effectively unitary authorities.
However, the metropolitan county continues to exist in law and as a geographic
frame of reference. The territory comprising the county of Tyne and Wear previously formed part
of the counties of Northumberland and County Durham.
History
Newcastle upon Tyne, Gateshead, South
Shields and Sunderland were all
constituted as county boroughs under the Local Government
Act 1888. These were joined by Tynemouth in 1904. Between the
county boroughs various settlements were part of the administrative counties of Durham and Northumberland.The need to reform local government on Tyneside was recognised as early as
1935, when a Royal Commission to Investigate the Conditions of Local
Government on Tyneside was appointed. The three commissioners were to "examine the system of local government in
the areas of local government north and south of the river Tyne from the sea to
the boundary of the Rural District of Castle Ward and Hexham in the County of
Northumberland and to the Western boundary of the County of Durham, to consider
what changes, if any, should be made in the existing arrrngements with a view to
securing greater economy and efficiency, and to make recommendations."
The report of the Royal Commission was published in 1937. It
recommended the establishment of a Regional Council for Northumberland and
Tyneside (to be called the "Northumberland Regional Council") to administer
services that needed to be exercised over a wide area, with a second tier of
smaller units for other local government purposes. The second-tier units would
be formed by amalgamating the various existing boroughs and districts. The
county boroughs in the area would lose their status. Within this area, a single
municipality would be formed covering the four county boroughs of Newcastle,
Gateshead, Tynemouth, South Shields and other urban districts and boroughs.
A minority report proposed amalgamation of Newcastle, Gateshead, Wallsend,
Jarrow, Felling, Gosforth, Hebburn and Newburn into a single "county borough of
Newcastle-on-Tyneside". The 1937 report was not acted upon : local
authorities were unable to agree on a scheme and the legislation of the time did
not allow central government to compel one.
Tyneside (excluding Sunderland) was a Special
Review Area under the Local Government
Act 1958. The Local
Government Commission for England came back with a recommendation to create
a new county of Tyneside based on the review area, divided into four separate
boroughs. This was not implemented. The Redcliffe-Maud
Report proposed a Tyneside unitary authority,
again excluding Sunderland, which was to form a separate East Durham unitary
authority.The White Paper that led to the Local Government
Act 1972 proposed as "area 2" a metropolitan county including Newcastle and
Sunderland, extending as far south down the coast as Seaham and Easington, and
bordering "area 4" (which would become Cleveland). The
Bill as presented in November 1971 pruned back the southern edge of the area,
and gave it the name 'Tyneside'. The name 'Tyneside' was controversial on Wearside, and
the name changed to 'Tyne and Wear' by a government amendment upon the request
of Sunderland County Borough Council.