(on the left) and the former County Buildings (on the right)
Historic local government Shires of Scotland traditionally mirrored
sheriffdoms with the county's
sheriff holding considerable powers. From 1667, Scotland's counties outside the
burghs were governed by
Commissioners of Supply with powers to raise taxes and administer local government. However the judicial roles of the sheriff continued to overlap with executive government in their shires. In 1794, the first
Lord Lieutenant of Renfrewshire,
William McDowall, was appointed when permanent lieutenancies were appointed by Royal Warrant to all the counties of Scotland as the monarch's military representative. Historically Renfrewshire's
Commissioners of Supply met at
Renfrew, as the
county town, along with the
Quarter Sessions and
freeholders of the county. The
sheriff court also met at Renfrew until 1705, when it was moved to Paisley. By the late 1800s the commissioners met at both Renfrew and Paisley. , 1868 Elected county councils were established in 1890 under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889, taking most of the functions of the commissioners (which were eventually abolished in 1930). The three Renfrewshire
burghs of
Greenock,
Paisley, and
Port Glasgow were deemed large enough to manage their own affairs and so were excluded from the administrative area of the county council. Renfrewshire County Council held its first meeting on 22 May 1890 at the County Hall in Paisley, a courthouse which had been built in 1820. The county council was chaired by the
convener of the county, a position formerly held by the convener of the Commissioners of Supply. The final Convener of the county to have chaired the Commissioners of Supply was West Renfrewshire's Member of Parliament
Archibald Campbell MP. Further local government reform in 1930 under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1929 brought Greenock, Paisley, and Port Glasgow under the control of the county council. During this time, several parts of eastern Renfrewshire were transferred into the growing city of Glasgow, including
Cathcart, parts of
Govan, and parts of the Parish of
Renfrew lying north of the
River Clyde (containing
Yoker,
Scotstoun and
Jordanhill). Following the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973, Renfrewshire was incorporated into the
Strathclyde region and divided amongst three
districts:
Renfrew District,
Eastwood District and
Inverclyde District. The Act created a two-tier local government structure, with both districts and regions having elected councils and sharing responsibility for local government. The
Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994 abolished district and regional councils, replacing them with the current
unitary council areas which in Renfrewshire were broadly based on the districts created by the 1973 Act. These local government areas are
Renfrewshire, formed from Renfrew District excluding
Barrhead;
Inverclyde, formed from Inverclyde District and
East Renfrewshire formed from Eastwood District plus Barrhead.
Divisions Before the creation of current single tier local authorities, there were typically a number of divisions within counties with varying levels of local government powers.
Burghs generally covered urbanised areas with rural parts of a county divided into districts. The
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1947 (
10 & 11 Geo. 6. c. 43) defines the division of parts of the county which had pre-existed as: •
Large burghs: the towns of
Paisley,
Greenock and
Port Glasgow. These burghs continued to be responsible for most local services such as roads, water and housing. •
Small burghs: the towns of
Renfrew,
Johnstone,
Barrhead and
Gourock were responsible for services such as housing, parks and cleansing. •
Landward areas: all parts of the county that were not parts of a burgh, including the smaller settlements such as
Bishopton and
Clarkston. There were parish councils until 1930 when they were replaced by landward district councils with limited powers, such as over parks and recreation. Aside from burghs and parishes, the county was subdivided between a number of higher tiers of local government during certain points in its history. Between the 1880s and the early 20th century, it is recorded that the county is divided between an 'Upper Ward' consisting of the eastern two-thirds of the county centred on Paisley, and a 'Lower Ward' approximating the boundaries of the modern
Inverclyde council area and consisting of the parishes of
Inverkip,
Greenock,
Port Glasgow and
Kilmacolm, with Greenock as district centre.
County Buildings The county council formerly met in the County Buildings, a
Gothic style constructed in County Square in
Paisley 1817 and demolished in the 1960-70s. New County Buildings were constructed in 1890 on Paisley's St James's Street in the
Classical style and are now used to house Paisley's
Sheriff Court. The County Council Chamber is now Court 8 within the building.
Modern functions Lieutenancy Whilst no longer used as a local authority area, Renfrewshire remains used for ceremonial purposes as a
Lieutenancy area. The
Lord Lieutenant and a number of
Deputy Lieutenants represent the monarch in the county, performing a number of ceremonial functions and arranging and co-ordinating
Royal visits. When the county was abolished for local government purposes in 1975 the lieutenancy area was redefined to correspond to the new districts of Eastwood, Inverclyde, and Renfrew. The incumbent
Lord Lieutenant of Renfrewshire since 2019 is Colonel Peter McCarthy. The Renfrewshire lieutenancy operates out of the headquarters of East Renfrewshire Council in
Giffnock.
Registration county The County of Renfrew is a
registration county used for
land registration under the authority of the Land Registration (Scotland) Act 1979. For this purpose, the county is defined as it existed in 1868 and so includes several areas subsequently annexed to Glasgow. The Renfrewshire registration county was the first to introduce the new Land Register of Scotland on the 6 April 1981. Councillors from the three local councils also join, in association with other local groups, to form the Renfrewshire Education Trust which makes educational-related grants in the county. There is a Renfrewshire Civil Contingencies Service, the first
civil contingencies planning body in Scotland to adopt the shared services model of co-operation between local authorities. Central government bodies also use the historic boundaries of the area for some purposes. '
Scottish Enterprise Renfrewshire', a
non-departmental public body accountable to the
devolved Scottish Parliament which encourages enterprise and economic development, covers the three modern council areas in the county. Renfrewshire was officially a
postal county used for administrative purposes by
Royal Mail. Whilst this system has not been used for sorting mail since 1996, Royal Mail still keeps and distributes data relating to postal counties in the United Kingdom.
Parliamentary representation Following the
Act of Union 1707, which created
Great Britain as a
sovereign state,
Renfrewshire was a
county constituency for elections to the
House of Commons in
Parliament. The town of Renfrew was not included in the county constituency, being a
parliamentary burgh, and from 1832 the other burghs of Greenock, Paisley and Port Glasgow were similarly excluded. Following the
Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, Renfrewshire was mainly divided into four
constituencies . These were the
county constituencies of
East Renfrewshire and
West Renfrewshire; and the
burgh constituencies of
Paisley and
Greenock. From 1832,
Port Glasgow and
Renfrew had been part of the
Kilmarnock Burghs constituency and remained as such, only being absorbed into West and East Renfrewshire respectively in 1918 with the passage of the
Representation of the People Act 1918. The distribution of seats remained generally stable during Renfrewshire's time as an administrative county. In 1974, the constituency of Greenock was abolished and joined with Port Glasgow to create the
constituency of Greenock and Port Glasgow. With counties abolished for local government purposes, more wholesale reform of the constituency system in Scotland occurred in the 1980s, following the
Third Periodic Review carried out by the
Boundary Commission for Scotland, and a number of alterations were made before settling on the present system for the
2005 General Election laid out in the
Fifth Periodic Review. Today, two of the three local council areas in the County of Renfrew have a single constituency:
East Renfrewshire and
Inverclyde, whilst the
Renfrewshire council area is divided into the constituencies of
Paisley and Renfrewshire North and
Paisley and Renfrewshire South. ==Geography==