Local board and urban district Bromley Local Government District was formed in 1867 when the
parish of Bromley adopted the
Local Government Act 1858, and a
local board of twelve members was formed to govern the town.
Incorporation The town was granted a
charter of incorporation to become a
municipal borough in 1903. The granting of the charter was celebrated by a public holiday in the town on 2 September 1903. The charter was brought by train to
Bromley South station where it was handed to the charter mayor. The mayor then rode in procession led by units of the
Royal Horse Artillery and the
Royal West Kent Regiment, accompanied by mayors and mace bearers of boroughs in Kent and the
County of London and watched by an estimated crowd of 20,000. A sports day and carnival was held at Queen's Mead. Under the charter a town council consisting of a
mayor, six
aldermen and eighteen councillors replaced the UDC. The council was initially based at the old Town Hall in the Market Square but moved to a new
Town Hall in Tweedy Road in 1907.
Boundary changes The area of the borough was increased in 1934, when a
county review order added parts of the abolished
Bromley Rural District (
Hayes and part of
Keston). The council was subsequently enlarged to seven aldermen and twenty-one councillors. In 1965 the municipal borough was abolished by the
London Government Act 1963 and its former area transferred to
Greater London from Kent. Its former area was combined with that of other districts to form the present-day
London Borough of Bromley. ==Borough council==