Administration Devon County Council was established in 1889 under the
Local Government Act 1888, which created elected county councils to take over the administrative functions previously performed by unelected
magistrates at the
quarter sessions. Three boroughs within the
geographical county of Devon were excluded from the county council's authority:
Devonport,
Exeter, and
Plymouth, which were each considered large enough for their existing councils to take on county-level functions. They were therefore made
county boroughs. The county council was elected by and provided services to the remainder of Devon outside those three boroughs, an area termed the
administrative county. : County Council's headquarters until 1964. The first county council elections were held on 16 January 1889, and the council formally came into being on 1 April 1889. On that day it held its first official meeting in the courthouse at
Rougemont Castle (also known as Exeter Castle), which had been the meeting place of the quarter sessions which preceded the county council.
Charles Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 20th Baron Clinton, a
Conservative peer, was the first chairman of the council. He had been the chairman of the Devon quarter sessions since 1863 and was also the
Lord Lieutenant of Devon. The council's budget in its first year was £50,000 (). In 1907, women became eligible for election and the first female councillor was elected in 1931.
Stonehouse was removed from the administrative county in 1914 when it and Devonport were absorbed into the county borough of Plymouth. Torbay was created as a new county borough in 1968, removing it from the administrative county. In 1971, Devon County Council signed a
twinning charter with the Conseil General of Calvados to develop links with the French department of
Calvados. The council was significantly reformed in 1974 under the
Local Government Act 1972. Exeter, Torbay and Plymouth were brought within the area controlled by the county council, which was reclassified as a
non-metropolitan county. The lower of local government was reorganised at the same time. It had previously comprised numerous
boroughs,
urban districts and
rural districts; after 1974 there were ten
non-metropolitan districts in the county. Torbay and Plymouth subsequently regained their independence from the county council in 1998 when their councils took over county council functions, making them
unitary authorities. Since 2025 the county council has been a member of the
Devon and Torbay Combined County Authority.
Data protection In 2012 the council was fined £90,000 by the
Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) after it sent confidential and sensitive information about twenty-two people, including criminal allegations and information about their
mental health, to the wrong recipient. Commenting on Devon and other authorities who had made similar data protection breaches, the ICO said "It would be far too easy to consider these breaches as simple
human error. The reality is that they are caused by councils treating sensitive personal data in the same routine way they would deal with more general correspondence. Far too often in these cases, the councils do not appear to have acknowledged that the data they are handling is about real people, and often the more vulnerable members of society."
Premises The county council is based at
Devon County Hall on Topsham Road in Exeter, which was completed in 1964 to the designs of
Donald McMorran. Prior to 1964 the council was based at Rougemont Castle in Exeter, where the quarter sessions for the county had been held for many years prior to the creation of the county council. An office building for the county council was built in 1895 adjoining the existing courthouse, which had been built in 1773 within the castle. ==Political composition==