Amblecote and the neighbouring village of Wordsley were two villages in Staffordshire near the River Stour which formed the border with the county of Worcestershire. During the nineteenth century a glassworks opened at Amblecote and is still producing glass to this day. There has also been a hospital in the area, Wordsley Hospital, for more than 100 years, although the National Health Service announced a plan several years ago to demolish the older parts of the hospital and maintain the modern buildings as a maternity centre.
In 1894, Amblecote Urban District Council was created. It was one of the smallest municipal authorities in Britain during its 72 years of existence.
Amblecote U.D.C remained in existence until 1966, when it merged with Stourbridge Urban District Council to form Stourbridge Metropolitan Borough Council. The county border was also moved a mile north to include Amblecote and Wordsley as part of Worcestershire. Along with Stourbridge, the Amblecote area became part of the DY8 postal district.
In 1974, Amblecote and the rest of the Stourbridge borough became part of the Dudley Metropolitan Borough and the metropolitan county of the West Midlands.
Amblecote and the neighbouring village of Wordsley were two villages in Staffordshire near the River Stour which formed the border with the county of Worcestershire.
Amblecote U.D.C remained in existence until 1966, when it merged with Stourbridge Urban District Council to form Stourbridge Metropolitan Borough Council.
In 1974, Amblecote and the rest of the Stourbridge borough became part of the Dudley Metropolitan Borough and the metropolitan county of the West Midlands.
Once a fiercely independent local authority, Amblecote was absorbed into Brierley Hill and Stourbridge in 1966 and in turn into the new and artificial Metropolitan Borough of ‘Dudley’ within the so-called County of West Midlands in 1974, thus severing an independent existence of over millennia and disinheriting Amblecote from its ancient County affiliations.
The Parish of Amblecote is within Worcester, even though the district itself was traditionally, although perhaps not anciently, with the county of Staffordshire