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LOCAL GOVERNMENT

STOKE DAMEREL AND DEVONPORT

As related on the Local Government of Sutton-on-Plym page, one of the parishes that the Saxons set up was Stoke.  This later was owned by a Robert De'Albermal, whose title became corrupted over time into Stoke Damerel.  The parish was bordered by Plymouth's St Andrew's and by the chapelries of Pennycross and St Budeaux.  It was governed by the officers of the parish church.

With the coming in 1690 of the Royal Dockyard, the situation began a slow process of change.  Soon after the South Yard was constructed, houses for the workers were built and this area soon became known as Plymouth Dock.  But the inhabitants of this "new town" were anxious to break away from Plymouth and indeed from Stoke Damerel.

In 1781 an Act was obtained for the better maintaining of the poor and for the paving, cleansing and watching the streets, lanes and passages and preventing encroachments, nuisances and annoyances.  This Act was followed in 1814 by additional powers.  The experience gained in getting sanction to these Acts no doubt spurred the inhabitants to their next success, a petition to King George IV that resulted in Plymouth Dock being renamed Devonport from January 1st 1824.

The Representation of the People Act 1832, which received the Royal Assent on June 7th 1832, allowed Stonehouse to be combined with Devonport into a single parliamentary borough.

Then on September 9th 1835 the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 received the Royal Assent and the inhabitants of Devonport seized their chance.  A clause in the Act allowed the Crown, after receiving a petition from the inhabitants and with the advice of the Privy Council, to grant incorporation to any place.  As soon as the Act was on the statute books a public meeting was called to form a committee to press Devonport's case and this took place in the November 1835, under the chairmanship of Mr Edward Abbott.

A problem soon emerged.  Although Devonport had joined with East Stonehouse in order to send elected representatives to Parliament, the people of Stonehouse did not want to be absorbed into Devonport when it became a borough.  However, agreement was quickly reached and they were left out of the draft petition that was presented to the Privy Council in April 1837.

The Borough of Devonport 

As a result, Devonport was incorporated as a Municipal Borough by letters patent of Queen Victoria on Friday October 13th 1837.  This established a Council consisting of a mayor, twelve aldermen and thirty-six councillors elected by six wards.  On Monday October 16th 1837 a public meeting was held in the Town Hall in Ker Street to receive the official document of incorporation.  On the following day a procession was formed and the charter was read at the Town Hall and in all the principal streets within the Borough.  It was said at the time that it was expected Mr G Leach, of Messrs Leach, Little and Woollcombe, solicitors, would be chosen to be the first Mayor.

Mr Edward Abbott was put in charge of the first Council election and at the first meeting of the Town Council on October 12th 1837, Mr Edward St Aubyn was chosen to be the first Mayor of Devonport.  Read more .....

Subsequently the Council petitioned Queen Victoria to be granted quarter sessions as the nearest sessions at Exeter were a long way away and this was granted by letters patent on June 30th 1848.

The commissioners formed in 1781 were disbanded when the Devonport Local Board was established under the Local Government Act 1858 by order of the Home Secretary on May 10th 1866.  They were in turn absorbed by the Corporation in 1872.

Devonport was granted a Coat of Arms on November 6th 1876, with the motto "Prorsum Semper Honeste", 'Straight on always to honourable achievement'.

Coat of Arms-Devonport

The Devonport coat of arms, from the collection
of the Plymouth Local Studies Library

The County Borough of Devonport

The Town became a County Borough under the Local Government Act 1888 (section 31) as a result of the fact that on June 1st 1888 it had a population in excess of 50,000.

Part of the parish of St Budeaux was added to the County Borough by virtue of the Devonport Extension Act 1898, possibly from August 12th 1898.

Local Government Board Order No. P1462 dated November 9th 1898 added parts of Weston Peverell and St Budeaux civil parishes to the County Borough.

Pennycross 1920s map.jpg

1920s map showing the Devonport boundary extension of 1898.   The yellow line
is the old Stoke Damerel boundary; the brown line is the 1898 extension taking
in the land around Langstone Road,Beauchamp House and Beaconsfield. Thus

Pennycross Vicarage remained in the parish but the Church Hall found itself
moved into Devonport and the parish of Stoke Damerel.

By the Devonport Corporation Act 1900 dated November 9th 1900, part of the civil parish of Weston Peverell was added to Devonport and by a Local Government Board Order of 1908, Devonport also absorbed most of the parish of St Budeaux.

Amalgamation with Plymouth and Stonehouse

Finally, Devonport was amalgamated with Plymouth and Stonehouse by the Local Government Board Provisional Order Confirmation No. 18 and a Local Act (5 & 6 Geo. V Ch.clxxxiii), which received the Royal Assent on August 10th 1914.  Devonport County Borough Council held its last meeting on Thursday October 29th and the amalgamation with Plymouth took place from November 1st 1914.  For more information see the Amalgamation of the Three Towns page.

Next - Local Government in Stonehouse

 

©  Brian Moseley, Plymouth, UK

Page updated:  26 September 2008

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