Predecessor authorities The borough was the successor to two local authorities: the
vestry of
Stoke Newington parish in the County of London and the
South Hornsey Urban District Council in
Middlesex. Under the
Metropolis Management Act 1855 Stoke Newington had been grouped with the neighbouring parish of
Hackney under the administration of the
Hackney District Board of Works. The union with Hackney was very unpopular with the inhabitants of Stoke Newington, and following unsuccessful attempts to end it in 1864, 1880 and 1890, the parish regained independence in 1894. Stoke Newington Vestry consisted of 60 vestrymen, elected from five
wards. South Hornsey formed the southern part of the
parish of Hornsey, consisting of the
Brownswood Park area south of
Finsbury Park, of
Clissold Park and two detached areas entirely surrounded by the parish of Stoke Newington. The exclaves of South Hornsey effectively cut off the south-eastern section of Stoke Newington from the rest of the parish. A
local board was formed to govern the area in 1867, becoming an urban district under the
Local Government Act 1894.
Formation The London Government Act 1899 provided that the County of London should be divided into metropolitan boroughs. The new authorities were to based on existing parishes with simplified boundaries. It was intended that each borough would have a population of between 100,000 and 400,000 inhabitants. Where an area fell below the threshold of 100,000 inhabitants, it might still be constituted a borough if it had a rateable value exceeding 500,000 pounds. Stoke Newington presented a problem, as its population fell well below the prescribed limits. It was recognised that there were three possibilities: to recombine the parishes of Hackney and Stoke Newington into a single borough; to divide the existing parish of Hackney and combine the wealthier northern section with Stoke Newington to form a municipality with the boundaries of the
Hackney North parliamentary constituency; or to add neighbouring areas of Middlesex to increase the population. The first two options were rejected due to the experience of
"intolerable and interminable feuds" between the districts when they were previously
"forced together", and because the
First Lord of the Treasury,
Arthur Balfour recognised that there was
"great ill-feeling and mutual ill-will... between the inhabitants of the two districts"; it was therefore decided to merge the bulk of South Hornsey, with a population about 20,000, with Stoke Newington. While this still created a borough of only about 50,000 inhabitants, and thus
"the smallest borough in London, the anomaly would be a gradually diminishing one, because the population in this district was rapidly increasing. When dividing London up into boroughs they could not avoid creating some anomalies as to size." Boundaries Under the 1899 legislation, boundary commissioners were appointed to set the boundaries of the new boroughs. The existing parish boundaries frequently divided houses or related to field boundaries that had disappeared with the urbanisation of the area. The commissioners realigned the boundary lines so that for the most part they ran down the centre of roads, railways or watercourses. To the north, the borough had a boundary with Middlesex, marked by the course of the
New River and the
Seven Sisters Road. Stoke Newington's boundaries with the two neighbouring metropolitan boroughs within the County of London were as follows: •
Islington to the west and south: the centres of Blackstock Road, Mountgrove Roads, Green Lanes, (diverting to take in Petherton Road and Leconfield Road) Matthias Road and Boleyn Road. •
Hackney to the east and north east: the centre of the ancient
Ermine Street, known here as Kingsland High Street, Stoke Newington Road and Stoke Newington High Street, then following the
North London Railway from
Stoke Newington railway station to Bethune Road. (The area to the east of the main road, including
Stoke Newington Common, never formed part of Stoke Newington administratively, lying within the
parish of Hackney). ==Coat of arms==