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Encyclopedia > County of Avon

The County of Avon was a short-lived administrative county in the west of England, named after the River Avon which ran through it.


Avon was formed from the City and County of Bristol and parts of Gloucestershire and Somerset by the Local Government Act 1972, and came into being on April 1, 1974. It had six districts: Bristol, Bath, Northavon, Kingswood, Woodspring and Wansdyke. To the north it bordered Gloucestershire, to the east Wiltshire and to the south Somerset. In the west it had a coast on the Bristol Channel.


The area of Avon was 1347km2 (520mi2) and its population in 1991 was 919,800. Cities and towns in Avon included (in approximate order of population) Bristol, Bath, Weston-super-Mare, Yate, Clevedon, Midsomer Norton & Radstock, Bradley Stoke, Nailsea, Yatton, Keynsham and Thornbury.


The County of Avon was never a well-loved institution: many Bristolians regretted the removal of the "county" title from their city, and many people in parts of Gloucestershire and Somerset that now came under Avon felt they had been cut off from their traditional counties. In particular there was a long-running campaign to return Weston-Super-Mare to Somerset.


The county did however have a fairly strong rational basis, being largely co-terminus with the Bristol 'Travel to Work Area' defined since the 50s/60s for planning purposes.


The County of Avon no longer exists; it was dissolved into four unitary authorities as a result of the Local Government Act 1992 and the Avon (Structural Change) Order 1995 on April 1, 1996. These four authorities are The City and County of Bristol, South Gloucestershire (formerly Kingswood and Northavon), North Somerset (formerly Woodspring) and Bath and North East Somerset (formerly Bath and Wansdyke).


Some governmental bodies still cover the whole area of the former county of Avon - for example the Avon Fire Brigade, the Avon Coroner's District and the West of England Strategic Partnership. Additonally the whole of the area is covered by Avon and Somerset Constabulary. The term Severnside is sometimes used as a euphemism for 'Avon'; so too is CUBA, the "County that Used to Be Avon".


For ceremonial purposes, Bristol has regained its own Lord Lieutenant and High Sheriff, while the other authorities were returned to their traditional counties.


Some people are opposed to these small authorities, regarded as inefficient and unecessary. There is currently a campaign to restore the historic county border of Somerset in the South of former Avon.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Avon (county) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (861 words)
The County of Avon was a short-lived non-metropolitan county and ceremonial county in the west of England, named after the River Avon which ran through it.
Avon was one of the counties in the "first tranche" of reviews conducted by the Banham Commission in the 1990s.
The demise of the County of Avon was the focus of a documentary called The End of Avon by the BBC produced by Linda Orr and Michael Lund broadcast in 1996.
County of Avon - definition of County of Avon in Encyclopedia (407 words)
Avon was formed from the City and County of Bristol and parts of Gloucestershire and Somerset by the Local Government Act 1972, and came into being on April 1, 1974.
The County of Avon was never a well-loved institution: many Bristolians regretted the removal of the "county" title from their city, and many people in parts of Gloucestershire and Somerset that now came under Avon felt they had been cut off from their traditional counties.
The County of Avon no longer exists; it was dissolved into four unitary authorities as a result of the Local Government Act 1992 and the Avon (Structural Change) Order 1995 on April 1, 1996.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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