1885–1918: In this period the constituency was a division of the
parliamentary borough of
Tower Hamlets in east London. The seat was centred upon the community of
Mile End including the Mile End Road, which adjoined the
Charrington Brewery. The brewery was headed by Spencer Charrington, MP for the area between 1885 and 1904. Before 1885 the division was administered as part of the county of
Middlesex. It formed part of The Metropolis from 1855 to 1889. In 1889 there was a change in the administrative arrangements covering the constituency, with the creation of the
County of London. In 1900 London was divided into
Metropolitan Boroughs. The Mile End Old Town Parish Vestry was abolished, with Mile End becoming part of the
Metropolitan Borough of Stepney.
1918–1950: The constituency became a division of Stepney. The
Representation of the People Act 1918 defined it as comprising four local government wards of Mile End Old Town (Centre, North, South and West) as well as the ward of
Whitechapel East. In 1945, the seat became one of only two seats in that Parliament to have a Communist MP elected. Phil Piratin had been a local activist and borough councillor. In 1950 the constituency was abolished. Its territory became part of the
Stepney seat. == Members of Parliament ==