Dunbartonshire's origins as a
shire (the area administered by a
sheriff) are obscure, but it had become a shire by the end of the twelfth century. The shire of Dumbarton was initially similar in area to the earldom of
Lennox, covering an area north of the
River Clyde and around
Loch Lomond. In the thirteenth century an area north-east of Loch Lomond was transferred to
Stirlingshire, whilst the two parishes of
Kirkintilloch and
Cumbernauld were transferred from Stirlingshire to Dunbartonshire, despite not adjoining the rest of the county. The changes were reversed in 1504, when Kirkintilloch and Cumbernauld were restored to Stirlingshire and the area north-east of Loch Lomond came back to Dunbartonshire, but the change was short-lived, being reverted again in 1509. The county council held its first meeting on 22 May 1890 at the
County Buildings (which also served as the sheriff court) on Church Street in Dumbarton. The 1889 act also led to a review of boundaries; in the case of Dunbartonshire the parish of
New Kilpatrick had previously straddled Dunbartonshire and
Stirlingshire, with the town of
Milngavie being in the part of the parish in Stirlingshire. The parish was brought entirely within Dunbartonshire on 15 May 1891. Reforms to local government in 1930 saw the burgh of Dumbarton brought within the administrative area of the county council. The county council was based at the old county buildings at the sheriff court until 1965, when it moved to new
County Buildings on Garshake Road in Dumbarton. The new building was formally opened by
Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the
Duke of Edinburgh, on 28 June 1965 during a royal visit to the area. Dunbartonshire was abolished for local government purposes in 1975 under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973, becoming part of the large
Strathclyde Region. Strathclyde was divided into nineteen
districts, with Dunbartonshire being divided between
Dumbarton,
Bearsden and Milngavie,
Clydebank,
Cumbernauld and Kilsyth and
Strathkelvin Districts. The combined area of these five districts continued to be used as a
lieutenancy area. Local government in Scotland was reorganised again in 1996, with the regions and districts abolished and replaced with unitary
council areas. Two of the new council areas include Dunbartonshire in their name. Since 1996 the area of the pre-1975 county of Dunbartonshire has been split between four
council areas: •
East Dunbartonshire Council, with its administrative headquarters at
Kirkintilloch (also includes parts of the pre-1975 counties of Stirlingshire and Lanarkshire). •
West Dunbartonshire Council, with its administrative centre at
Dumbarton. •
Argyll and Bute Council (which took over the
Helensburgh and Lomond part of Dumbarton District). •
North Lanarkshire (for the
Cumbernauld area). The
Dunbartonshire lieutenancy area continues to be defined in terms of the five districts that existed between 1975 and 1996, with the only change made to the lieutenancy areas at the time of the 1996 local government reorganisation being that the
Chryston area of Strathkelvin district was transferred to the
Lanarkshire lieutenancy. The historic boundaries of Dunbartonshire are still used for land registration purposes, being a
registration county. ==Geography==