The case for founding Peterlee was put forward in
Farewell Squalor by
Easington Rural District Council Surveyor C. W. Clarke, who also proposed that the town be named after celebrated Durham miners' leader
Peter Lee. It is one of the few places in the
British Isles named after a recent individual, and unique among post-
Second World War new towns in having its existence requested by local people through their
MP. A deputation, consisting mostly of working
miners, met the Minister of Town and Country Planning to put the case for a new town in the district. The minister,
Lewis Silkin, responded by offering a half-size new town of 30,000 residents. The subsequent new residents came largely from surrounding villages in the District of Easington. Peterlee Development Corporation was founded in 1948, first under Dr Monica Felton, then under A.V. Williams. The original master plan for tower blocks of flats by
Berthold Lubetkin was rejected as unsuitable for the area's geology, which had been weakened by mining works, and Lubetkin resigned in 1950.
George Grenfell Baines' plan was accepted, and construction quickly began, but it was of poor quality. Williams invited artist
Victor Pasmore to head the landscaping design team. ==Governance==