St Giles was a local government district in the metropolitan area of London. The district was created by the Metropolis Management Act 1855, and comprised the civil parish of St Giles in the Fields and St George Bloomsbury, Middlesex: the two parishes had been combined for civil purposes in 1774. Its former area became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn and is now part of the London Borough of Camden.
District board[]
The district was governed by the St Giles District Board of Works, which consisted of forty-eight elected vestrymen: twenty-seven elected for the parish of St Giles, and 21 for that of St George.[1] The first elections were held in November 1855, when the entire membership of the board was elected. Thereafter elections for one third of the seats were held in May, beginning in the year 1857.[2]
St Giles District was originally in the area of responsibility of the Metropolitan Board of Works, to which body it nominated one member.[3] In 1889 the area of the MBW was constituted the County of London, and the District Board became a local authority under the London County Council.
Abolition[]
The district was abolished in 1900 by the London Government Act 1899, which divided the County of London into twenty-eight metropolitan boroughs. The area administered by the board became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Holborn.[4]
Hotels[]
- St Giles London Hotel - Centrally located in London’s West End, in Bloomsbury near the junction of Tottenham Court Road and Oxford Street.
- The Bloomsbury Hotel - 16-22 Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3NN, United Kingdom
References[]
External links[]
- Map of Parliamentary Borough of Finsbury showing boundaries of St Giles District. Report of the Boundary Commissioners for England and Wales. London Ancestor (1885). Retrieved on 2 October 2024.