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It also seeks to officially change the government terminology to bring it in line with the 1888 Local Government Act - the original piece of leglislation which created the modern administrative counties. This act specifically called them "administrative counties", and the ABC wishes to see this terminology consistently used to describe them. Also it wishes to see the term "county" stripped from most unitary authorities. It also seeks to officially change the government terminology to bring it in line with the 1888 Local Government Act - the original piece of leglislation which created the modern administrative counties. This act specifically called them "administrative counties", and the ABC wishes to see this terminology consistently used to describe them. Also it wishes to see the term "county" stripped from most unitary authorities.


It says it wishes this to happen because it will remove confusion that has resulted over the status of various entities termed counties since 1965. Activists of the group usually use the term 'confusion' to describe any opposition to their viewpoint. In particular, it uses ] around the word 'county' when not referring to the traditional counties in order to emphasise its opposition to the use of this term. It says it wishes this to happen because it will remove confusion that has resulted over the status of various entities termed counties since 1965. In particular, it uses ] around the word 'county' when not referring to the traditional counties in order to emphasise its opposition to the use of this term.


''The historic Counties of Great Britain are fundamental to our culture. Older than cathedrals, more historic than stately homes, Counties like Lincolnshire, Cornwall, Middlesex, Anglesey and Fife are basic to our life. Their names belong to the ground we tread. They are an indelible part of our history. They are important cultural entities.'' ''The historic Counties of Great Britain are fundamental to our culture. Older than cathedrals, more historic than stately homes, Counties like Lincolnshire, Cornwall, Middlesex, Anglesey and Fife are basic to our life. Their names belong to the ground we tread. They are an indelible part of our history. They are important cultural entities.''

Revision as of 14:58, 4 January 2004

The Association of British Counties is a pressure group in the United Kingdom dedicated to preserving the traditional counties Britain. It publishes a bi-annual journal, and despite its name is an association of people, not counties. Its president is the popular astrologer, Russell Grant.

It believes that the traditional counties are part of Britain's cultural heritage and should be preserved. To this end it has produced a postal directory putting British place names in what it considers to be the correct historic county, in additional to cross-referencing this with various other administrative areas, noting alternatives where the correct county is debatable and providing detailed discussion of these instances where they occur.

It also seeks to officially change the government terminology to bring it in line with the 1888 Local Government Act - the original piece of leglislation which created the modern administrative counties. This act specifically called them "administrative counties", and the ABC wishes to see this terminology consistently used to describe them. Also it wishes to see the term "county" stripped from most unitary authorities.

It says it wishes this to happen because it will remove confusion that has resulted over the status of various entities termed counties since 1965. In particular, it uses scare quotes around the word 'county' when not referring to the traditional counties in order to emphasise its opposition to the use of this term.

The historic Counties of Great Britain are fundamental to our culture. Older than cathedrals, more historic than stately homes, Counties like Lincolnshire, Cornwall, Middlesex, Anglesey and Fife are basic to our life. Their names belong to the ground we tread. They are an indelible part of our history. They are important cultural entities.

Other policies include

The latter point would mean annexing areas not part of Yorkshire and the Humber to a different local authority in order that they could be part of this region, as region boundaries never split authorities. Also North East Lincolnshire and North Lincolnshire would become part of the East Midlands Region.

External link