This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 84.9.210.202 (talk) at 15:19, 26 February 2006 (revert POV edits.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 15:19, 26 February 2006 by 84.9.210.202 (talk) (revert POV edits.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The Association of British Counties is a political pressure group in the United Kingdom dedicated to reviving the traditional counties of Britain.
It publishes a biannual journal. Its president is the astrologer Russell Grant, who owns the title Lord of the Manor of Ashford in Middlesex. The Chairman of the Association is Peter Boyce. The size of its membership is not publicly available.
It believes that the traditional counties are an important part of Britain's cultural heritage and should be preserved and promoted. To this end it has produced a postal directory putting British place names in the corresponding traditional county with respect to the Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844, in addition 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 bring about an official change in government terminology to bring it in line with the Local Government Act 1888 — the original piece of legislation which created the modern administrative counties of England and Wales, though there have since been several further changes. 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 the unitary authorities that currently use it.
It says it wishes this to happen because it will remove what it sees as the confusion that has resulted over the status of various entities termed counties since 1889. In particular, it uses scare quotes around the word 'county' when not referring to the traditional counties.
Quote
- 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:
- Compelling the Ordnance Survey to mark traditional county borders on their maps
- Lobbying for the erection of boundary signs at the boundaries of traditional counties
- Making the ceremonial counties match the historic ones
- That the English regions should be tweaked in to order ensure that historic counties 'be brought wholly within one region or another'
The latter point would mean various local authorities would need to be changed. Currently the border between the London region and the South-East and East regions straddles numerous traditional borders - so these regions would probably need to be merged. Some areas not part of Yorkshire and the Humber would be moved 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, where the administrative county of Lincolnshire is located. This policy is mainly designed to safeguard the local attachment and identification with the historic counties, should England be split in regional assemblies. Otherwise, the ABC fears, having a single historic county falling within more than one region could have an adverse effect on people's cultural ties to their home county.
However, it also states on its FAQ:
- Q. Does ABC seek further local government reorganisation ?
- A. No, but we do wish to see reforms to certain parts of local government terminology.
See also
External link
- ABC web site (generally does not work after midnight UK time)