Elected county councils were established in 1889 under the
Local Government Act 1888, taking over administrative functions previously carried out by unelected
magistrates at the
quarter sessions. The boroughs of
Gateshead,
South Shields and
Sunderland were considered large enough to provide their own county-level services and so they were made
county boroughs, independent from Durham County Council. The county council was elected by and provided services to the rest of the county, which area was termed the
administrative county. Additional county boroughs were later created at
West Hartlepool in 1902 and
Darlington in 1915. In 1967 West Hartlepool merged with the neighbouring borough of
Hartlepool (which had just covered the
old town), with the enlarged county borough thereafter being called Hartlepool.
Stockton-on-Tees,
Billingham and surrounding areas were removed from the administrative county in 1968 to become part of the
County Borough of Teesside. The first elections took place in January 1889 and the county council formally came into being on 1 April 1889. On that day its first official meeting was held at the old
Shire Hall on Old Elvet in Durham, the courthouse (built 1811) which had served as the meeting place of the quarter sessions which preceded the county council. The first chairman of the council was
John Lloyd Wharton, who was the
Conservative Member of Parliament for
Ripon (in
Yorkshire); he had also been chairman of the Durham Quarter Sessions since 1871. Durham was the first county council to be controlled by the
Labour Party, which won the most seats in 1919. Until 1974, the lower tier of local government comprised numerous
boroughs,
urban districts and
rural districts. The districts were also reorganised in 1974 into eight
non-metropolitan districts:
Chester-le-Street,
Darlington,
Derwentside,
Durham,
Easington,
Sedgefield,
Teesdale, and
Wear Valley. In 1997, Darlington became a unitary authority, removing it from county council control. Durham County Council itself became a unitary authority on 1 April 2009, when the seven remaining non-metropolitan districts of the county were abolished and the county council absorbed their functions. The legislation which made the county council a unitary authority allowed the council to omit the word 'County' from its name to become 'Durham Council', but in the event the name 'Durham County Council' was kept. In 2024 a
combined authority was established covering Durham,
Gateshead,
Newcastle upon Tyne,
North Tyneside,
Northumberland,
South Tyneside and
Sunderland, called the
North East Mayoral Combined Authority. It is chaired by the directly elected
Mayor of the North East and oversees the delivery of certain strategic functions across the area. ==Governance==