CITY GOVERNMENT, 1835-1914
The Reforms of the 1830s
Under the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835 Chester
became a municipal borough governed by a corporation
of 30 councillors and 10 aldermen. (fn. 9) Its boundaries were
extended to match those of the slightly larger parliamentary constituency created in 1832, (fn. 10) and it was
divided into five wards, each with six councillors. (fn. 11) As
elsewhere, the latter were elected for three-year terms,
two places falling vacant in each ward each year. Aldermen were elected by the councillors for six-year terms,
half standing down every three years. The mayor was
chosen by the full council on 9 November each year. As a
county of itself, the corporation was permitted to
appoint a sheriff and a coroner, but was thwarted in
its desire to nominate an undersheriff so as to retain the
traditional double shrievalty. (fn. 12)
The police powers of the improvement commission
were transferred to the city council by the 1835 Act, (fn. 13)
but the commission at first kept charge of the fire
service and street lighting and cleansing. (fn. 14) There was
some confusion over street repairs: the extent of the
old corporation's liability had never been clear, the
improvement commission maintained some streets,
though not to widespread public satisfaction, (fn. 15) and it
was uncertain after 1835 whether the council was
allowed to apply the rates to that purpose. The
matter was resolved in 1837, when, using a provision
of the 1835 Act, the improvement commission dissolved itself and transferred its powers to the council. (fn. 16)
In 1836 the Crown reconfirmed the city's separate
quarter sessions and appointed a recorder to replace
the old corporation's nominee, who had died early in
the year. (fn. 17)
Other local government bodies, unchanged during
the 1830s, were the bridge commissioners (fn. 18) and the
poor-law guardians: in the latter case, the union of
Chester parishes established in 1762 was not affected
by the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834. (fn. 19)
At first, with duties enlarged only by the addition of
policing and street repairs, the council managed with
committees for finance, watch (i.e. police), paving, city
lands, repairs and lettings, and markets, the last three
merging in 1838 as the corporate estate committee. (fn. 20)
Much council business in the very early years was
similar to that conducted before 1835, not least
because the city's gownsmen and almshouses remained
under corporation control until the Municipal Charities Trustees were formed as a separate body in
1837. (fn. 21) The council was also active in attempting to
recover corporation property leased on disadvantageous terms by the Assembly, in fending off the
Crown's claim to part of the Roodee, (fn. 1) and in taking
immediate steps to repair the streets. (fn. 2) Rather more
significant for continuity was the reappointment as
town clerk of John Finchett-Maddock. (fn. 3) Whether symbolically or simply from a distaste for unnecessary
expense, he had the new council's proceedings minuted in the old Assembly Book. (fn. 4)
The most obvious change in 1836 was financial. The
finance committee's estimate for its first year was for
an outlay of nearly £6,500, but the traditional sources
of income (rents and other revenues due to the old
corporation) produced just under £4,000, leaving
almost £2,500 (38 per cent of the total) to be found
from the rates. (fn. 5) Escalating expenditure and static nonrate income briefly took the proportion to over 50 per
cent in the early 1840s. (fn. 6)
Council Policies and Activities
The expanding scope of local government in Chester
between 1835 and 1914 largely followed the national
pattern and was driven as much by the changes in what
central government required of urban local authorities
as by the aspirations of Chester's councillors and
aldermen.
The first extension in the council's activities was
effected under a local Improvement Act of 1845, which
gave it powers similar to those exercised a little later by
local boards of health. (fn. 7) The Act was prompted in part
by the need for additional borrowing powers so that
the corporation could provide the services which had
fallen to it on taking over from the improvement
commission. The commissioners had borrowed only
£1,000 and their rating powers were tightly constrained; (fn. 8) the Act allowed the council to borrow
£10,000 and to raise an improvement rate of up to
9d. in the pound and a lamp rate (to pay for the fire
service and street cleansing as well as lighting) of up to
6d. in the pound, (fn. 9) both of them additional to the
borough rate. The council set up an improvement
committee in 1846 to implement its new executive
powers and take over the role of the paving committee.
At first progress was slow, except in the greater
effectiveness with which it pursued existing policies
in minor matters such as obliging property owners to
keep the steps giving access to the Rows in repair. (fn. 10)
The more important business of improving the
sewerage system was delayed by the corporation's
parsimony and by the incompetence and corruption
of its first engineer: work on the main streets was not
completed until 1854 and much had to be redone in
the 1870s. (fn. 11) The council was more energetic in providing better facilities for the markets, another reason for
obtaining the Act, but it took time to implement its
new powers to buy land and replace inadequate
buildings: the cattle market was improved in 1850
but a new building for the main retail markets
opened only in 1863. (fn. 12)
Although the council thus began putting into place
measures similar to those required under the Public
Health Act of 1848 it did not adopt the Act itself,
partly on grounds of cost and partly through a dislike
of central government intervention in its affairs. On
the other hand, faced with an influx of poor Irish
migrants during the Potato Famine of the later 1840s,
and with deteriorating social conditions in parts of
the city, it used powers available under the Nuisances
Removal and Diseases Prevention Act of 1848,
through a new sanitary committee on which representatives of the poor-law guardians also sat.
Although the committee relied on persuasion rather
than compulsion in its relations with property
owners, it took the lead, in advance of legislation in
1851, in inspecting the common lodging houses
where many of the poorest Cestrians lived, and was
credited with averting many deaths during the cholera
epidemic of 1848-9. (fn. 13)
The council could also be forceful when it did not
have to spend ratepayers' money, notably over shortcomings in the supply of water and gas by private
companies. (fn. 14) From 1835 it repeatedly sought improvements to the water supply, while baulking at the cost of
buying out the company. The sanitary committee was
much concerned with water purity and with the inadequacy of the supply to the mainly working-class district
of Handbridge. A water supply committee was set up in
1852 with a brief to consider taking over the company: it
pressed for filtration, an extension of the mains, and a
constant supply, and by threats and cajoling eventually
pushed the company into action in the later 1850s. (fn. 15)
The Chester Gas Light Company was of concern mainly
because it provided street lighting. Again, the council
was eager to complain about the service but unwilling to
provide its own; in 1851 it backed a rival new company
by renting a site to its promoter and giving him the
street-lighting contract, but was outwitted when the
new company re-established a monopoly. (fn. 1)
Other issues concerned with public health were
handled whenever possible at a distance, though
there were occasional signs of more direct involvement. A much needed new public cemetery was
provided by a private company in 1848 but the
mayor was an ex officio director and part of the land
had belonged to the corporation. (fn. 2) In the same year the
council facilitated a private initiative to provide a
public baths and wash-house by leasing a suitable
plot and making a grant; more remarkably, when the
promoters ran into financial difficulties, the council
took over the baths in 1850 (albeit on a split vote) and
in so doing became only the eighth local authority in
the country to adopt the 1846 Baths and Wash-houses
Act. (fn. 3) The powers obtained under the 1845 Act to buy
land as places of public recreation were never exercised, though Chester acquired an early public park in
1867 when the Grosvenor family donated the site of
what became Grosvenor park, paid for it to be laid out,
and provided an endowment towards its upkeep. (fn. 4)
The council's unsystematic approach to public
health policy and its implementation was exemplified
by the establishment of no fewer than five separate
committees dealing with interconnected aspects
between 1848 and 1852. (fn. 5) Only when the Public
Health Act of 1872 made Chester an urban sanitary
authority and required it to appoint a medical officer
of health was a wider-ranging unitary public health
committee formed. (fn. 6) The first medical officer of health,
appointed in 1873, also acted for adjoining districts in
west Cheshire. (fn. 7)
The council was more successful in its reluctance to
spend public money on education. The extra school
places required after the 1870 Education Act were
provided by voluntary efforts rather than through a
school board. After 1877, conforming with national
legislation, it appointed a school attendance officer and
committee. (fn. 8) A minor educational initiative was to
acquire the Mechanics' Institution library and
museum in 1875-6; (fn. 9) Chester thus adopted the Free
Libraries Acts well ahead of many towns of similar size
and character. (fn. 10)
The Chester union became a regular poor-law
union in 1869 and was enlarged by the addition of
43 rural townships in 1871. (fn. 11) The guardians built a
new workhouse in Hoole Lane in 1877-8 to accommodate the larger numbers, (fn. 12) and the old workhouse
on the Roodee then reverted to the corporation, which
rented it for commercial use, latterly as a jam factory,
before selling it in 1900. (fn. 13) The city was made into a
single civil parish in 1885 so that poor rates could be
equalized between the parishes and to save on the
costs of collection. (fn. 14)
The Chester Improvement Act of 1884 marked a
further increase in the council's powers, (fn. 15) notably in its
capacity to borrow £15,000 towards buying out the
bridge commissioners' interest in the Dee and Grosvenor Bridges and abolishing the tolls, and £35,000 for
future street improvements. For the first time it was
able to issue stock as well as raise mortgages against its
rate income. (fn. 16) Otherwise the new powers were mainly
regulatory: for acquiring closed burial grounds, controlling infectious diseases, and passing bylaws to limit
advertising hoardings, for example. It was also permitted to enforce more stringent building regulations,
lease the Roodee for public entertainments, and control pleasure boating on the river as far upstream as
Aldford, well beyond the city boundary. (fn. 17)
Chester became a county borough in 1889. (fn. 18) Its
boundaries were those delimited in 1835, and apart
from minor adjustments in 1898 remained the same
until the 1930s, (fn. 19) leaving the city on the eve of the First
World War as the second smallest county borough in
England and Wales (after Canterbury). (fn. 20) In 1898-9 the
council applied in vain to extend its boundaries into
both Cheshire and Flintshire, (fn. 21) and negotiations in
1905-6 about incorporating Hoole into the city also
failed, ostensibly over the period during which Hoole's
rates would be capped. (fn. 22) In 1914 the city thus excluded
significant parts of the built-up area, notably the heavy
industries in Saltney and the important residential
suburb of Hoole. Saltney, which had a population of
perhaps 2,000 in 1911, was merely a township and civil
parish, (fn. 1) but Hoole acquired its own local board in
1864 under the provisions of the 1858 Local Government Act. The built-up part of the township became an
urban sanitary district under the 1872 Public Health
Act and an urban district in 1894; by 1914 it had a
population of almost 6,000. (fn. 2) The local board's main
activities were sewerage works in the 1860s, the organization of street lighting and cleansing, and building
new offices for itself in Westminster Road in 1893. (fn. 3)
The urban district council, which was divided into two
wards each electing six councillors, (fn. 4) was initially preoccupied with laying out new residential streets, (fn. 5) but
built a fire station for a volunteer brigade in 1898 (fn. 6) and
opened a small public park in 1904. (fn. 7)
At the end of the 19th century Chester city council
was still largely reactive, unwilling to commit itself to
major new initiatives except when compelled by
central government. For example, it acquired powers
to supply electricity in 1890 largely to forestall private
suppliers, then, like many other towns, delayed
making use of them for years; (fn. 8) it opened a recreation
ground in Handbridge in 1892 only when the duke of
Westminster paid for it; (fn. 9) and it undertook a much
needed reform of the race meeting in 1893 only to
outflank those who wished to abolish it altogether. (fn. 10)
After 1900, however, the council was more interventionist, partly because national legislation compelled it
to be, but partly by choice. As a county borough,
Chester became a local education authority in 1902,
and educational provision immediately became its
most onerous and expensive duty. (fn. 11) It spent heavily
on a new public baths opened in 1901, (fn. 12) bought the
horse-drawn tramway, electrified the system, and
extended it between 1901 and 1906, (fn. 13) and opened
discussions on taking over the privately funded Grosvenor Museum in 1904. (fn. 14) The council's most farsighted visions were often shaped in committee or
by its salaried officers. As early as 1905, for example,
the tramways committee wanted to start a motor-bus
service which would have been one of the earliest
municipal services in the country, though the full
council vetoed the idea; (fn. 15) while in Sydney Britton,
appointed in 1904, the council took into its service
one of the most innovative municipal electrical engineers of his generation. Among his early projects was
the hydroelectric power station opened at the Dee
Bridge in 1913 on the site of the Dee Mills which the
council had earlier bought and demolished. (fn. 16)
The council also began cautiously providing public
housing at a time when few towns of similar size and
status were doing so. It set up a housing committee in
1899 and used the legislation of 1890-1900 to build 12
cottages at Tower Road near the canal basin in 1904.
Plans for 28 more were first approved in 1906 but
delayed by the First World War. (fn. 17) Smallholdings were
laid out at Lache in 1911-13 under the 1908 Act. (fn. 18)
The growing complexity of local government was
recognized in 1902 when the council reorganized its
committee structure, set out the duties of its chief
officers, and determined on a fuller record of its
business. (fn. 19) The council and committee minutes had
been printed since 1896 and were henceforth indexed
too. (fn. 20) From 1903 the town clerk was a full-time
salaried official. (fn. 21)
The council's increasing activity in the early 20th
century was exemplified by its efforts to attract
visitors. It had already acquired good and early
public parks and recreation areas with a minimum
of its own expenditure. (fn. 22) From small beginnings in
1900, by 1906 it was advertising widely and distributing 10,000 copies ofan annual illustrated handbook. (fn. 23)
The work was thought sufficiently important by 1905
to justify a separate advertising committee, (fn. 24) which
co-opted three representatives of the Chester Traders'
Association. (fn. 25) Its budget was limited by the lack of
powers to spend rate income on advertising, but the
council set aside £100 a year from the issue of
boating licences, and the Traders' Association contributed too. (fn. 1)
The council also showed itself increasingly responsive to local lobbying for often quite minor improvements to the city centre, above all in matters where the
impression made on visitors was either a real issue or
could be invoked. Thus in 1902 it referred unauthorized city guides to the chief constable on the grounds
that they were a nuisance to visitors, and in 1904
provided waste baskets in Grosvenor Park and the
Groves, in both cases following up requests from
residents. (fn. 2) At around the same time, and for similar
motives, it concerned itself with the location of urinals
and the discouragement of spitting. (fn. 3)
By 1914 local government in Chester was thus far
more complex and wide-ranging than it had been in
1835. The council's committee structure had burgeoned with its responsibilities, (fn. 4) and its paid staff had
grown in numbers, the salary bill for the core staff
rising from under £700 a year in the 1850s to
c. £2,500 in 1914. (fn. 5) Because Chester was so small a
town, however, the scale of local government was
rather limited. In 1906 the city employed only 630
people, the fourth lowest total of all the county
boroughs, of whom a mere 59 were clerical staff.
Per head of population its workforce was commensurate with those of several other resorts and small
county towns. (fn. 6) Although small, the council embraced
modernity in office practice, buying its first typewriter apparently in 1903, and by 1905 installing
typewriters and duplicating machines in its main
departments. (fn. 7)
Finance
Until the 1860s the corporation's finances were relatively stable. (fn. 8) In the 1850s annual income was in the
order of £10,000 to £12,000, of which about £1,500
came from rents, £1,200 from market tolls, £2,000-
£3,500 from the borough rate, between £1,500 and
£3,250 from the watch rate, and smaller sums from a
great variety of other sources. The largest fixed items of
expenditure were the police force (up to £2,000 a year),
the city gaol (usually about £1,600), and servicing the
council's debt (normally about £1,100). They
remained the largest recurrent annual costs until the
1870s. From 1853 to 1872, for instance, the gaol
always cost over £1,300 a year, occasionally over
£2,000, towards which only a few hundred pounds a
year was ever recovered from the sale of prisoners'
labour in oakum-picking and stone-breaking.
Capital projects which required borrowing were few
before the 1860s. Apart from the £10,000 borrowed
under the 1845 Improvement Act, (fn. 9) the only sums
raised were £900 in 1852 to buy the baths, £2,446 in
1853 to extend the cattle market, and £800 in 1856 for
repairs to the Exchange. From the 1860s, however,
ever-larger sums were borrowed for capital works. The
biggest items were £11,000 in 1863 for a new market
hall, £35,000 in 1867 and 1870 for a new town hall
after the Exchange was destroyed by fire (the balance of
the cost coming from insurance), and £50,000 over the
period 1873-9 for sewerage works. Even the smaller
amounts spent on buying up property for extending
the markets were large by earlier standards, so that by
the time of the 1884 Improvement Act the council had
raised a little over £120,000 in loans. (fn. 10) Of £101,000
outstanding in 1878-9, the main source was public
works loans, accounting for 46 per cent; private
individuals had advanced 30 per cent, the governors
of the Chester infirmary 11 per cent, and the trustees of
the Owen Jones charity 10 per cent. (fn. 11) The Act itself
sanctioned loans of a further £50,000, (fn. 12) and allowed
the corporation to create £150,000 of 3½ per cent
stock, mostly redeemable in 40 years; by 1891-2 over
£136,000 of stock had been issued. (fn. 13)
The total borrowed over the period 1884-1914 was
over £½ million. By far the largest object of capital
expenditure in that period was electricity generation
and supply, for which £143,000 was borrowed between
1895 and 1913, together with the electric tramway
system, which required another £82,000. (fn. 14) Street
improvements took £64,000 and sewerage schemes
£88,000, principally for the new sewage works in
Sealand. £64,000 was spent on school buildings
between 1902 and 1914, and other building works
required about as much: £21,000 for the isolation
hospital, £19,000 for the swimming baths, £8,000 to
buy and then replace the fire station, £13,000 on
repairs and improvements to the town hall, and £5,000
on the market buildings.
Revenue expenditure continued to rise throughout
the period from the 1860s, not least as the council took
on a greater range of tasks. Almost every service that it
already provided in the 1850s cost far more by 1914.
Taking 1853-4 as a base, street repairs and related
works, for example, cost three times as much, the
police force four and a half times, street lighting
almost six times, and the fire brigade over eight
times, all during a period free of price inflation. The
services newly provided by the corporation - whether
voluntarily or imposed by central government - inevitably added further to its expenditure, and on an
increasing scale. The new public markets, for example,
cost on average £662 a year to run before they were
enlarged in 1882, and £1,062 afterwards. Average
annual expenditure on the parks was £325 before the
1890s and £582 after 1900; on the swimming baths
under £150 before the new baths were opened in 1901
but over ten times as much later. The public health
committee was spending c. £700 a year between 1884
and 1892 but c. £1,400 between 1892 and 1914, while
the annual running costs of the sewage works grew
from £1,400 to £5,200 after they were enlarged in
1900-5. Even one-off costs were higher: the 1884
Improvement Act cost the corporation under £1,200,
the 1896 Chester Corporation Act over £7,600. At the
same time the rising tide of capital expenditure added
inexorably to the cost of servicing the council's debt,
from under £2,000 in a typical year before 1866 to over
£7,000 c. 1900.
After c. 1900 the council's expenditure was growing
even more sharply. The isolation hospital opened in
1898, for instance, incurred a net average running cost
(after taking into account charges for patients from
other local authorities) of £1,889 between 1900 and
1914. By far the largest new item, however, was the
cost of schools after 1902. By the earlier 1910s the
council was spending on average £13,838 a year,
representing in 1913-14 some 46 per cent of a total
education budget of £30,000, the balance coming from
Board of Education grants and other outside sources.
The council's income other than the rates was
inelastic. Traditional sources carried over from before
1835 were far outstripped by the rising cost of providing services. Rents from the corporation's land and
houses in particular were scarcely higher in 1914 than
they had been in the 1820s, while the public markets,
profitable as they were, brought in only three times the
revenue of the 1850s on the eve of the First World
War, and the Roodee generated only £2,000 a year by
1914, though that was almost ten times what it had
made in the 1850s.
Ratepayers bore the brunt of the increase in council
expenditure. In cash terms the main borough rate
produced c. £2,000 in 1853-4 but almost £38,000 in
1913-14; as a proportion of expenditure from the
main account it needed to cover only about a third
in the 1850s and 1860s, 60 per cent from the 1870s to
the 1890s, and almost three quarters by 1914. The total
sum raised from all the rates was stable in the range
£21,000-£23,000 a year in the period 1878-92, then
jumped by stages to twice that level in 1903-7. From
1908 it was rising year on year and had reached
£57,000 by 1914. Ratepayers were normally required
to pay between 2s. 9d. and 3s. 4d. in the pound
between the 1870s and 1897 but thereafter saw a
huge increase which took the rate over 4s. every year
after 1902 and to almost 6s. by 1914. The rate was
made up of four components, of which the three
smaller parts other than the borough rate were a
watch rate for the police force (3d. in the pound
1876-1904, then 4d.), a lamp rate for lighting and
cleansing the streets and for the fire brigade (always the
maximum permissible of 6d. in the pound except for
1884), and from 1876 a library rate of 1d. in the
pound.
The corporation's two large new enterprises, electricity and tramways, were both remunerative. The
revenue accounts of the electricity department
showed a surplus over the period 1896-1914 of
£155,000. Although most of it had to be spent on
servicing the debt incurred in setting up the business,
£23,000 was available for sinking and reserve funds,
£10,000 for new capital expenditure, £8,000 for
repairs, and £7,000 to subsidize the rates. (fn. 1) The tramways, which began working in 1903, were less profitable, but of a total working surplus before 1914 of
£49,000, £7,000 remained as the net balance after
paying interest and creating a sinking fund. (fn. 2) Those
sums went only a little way towards offsetting the
council's expenditure in other areas, and in 1907-8,
for example, neither business produced as big a surplus
as the markets. (fn. 3) The total subsidy to the rates from
Chester's municipal trading was nevertheless as much
as 5¼d. in the pound in 1908-9, about the middle of
the range for those towns where a profit was made,
when many others were losing money on similar
enterprises. (fn. 4)