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 first elections to the new county council were held on 23 January 1889; the council had sixty seats, but in twenty-eight the candidate ran unopposed. The first provisional meeting of the council was held at
Devizes Assize Court on 31 January 1889. The council formally came into its powers on 1 April 1889, on which day it held its first official meeting at
Salisbury Guildhall. The first chairman was
John Thynne, 4th Marquess of Bath. The council was granted a
coat of arms in 1937. Until 1974 the lower tier of local government comprised numerous
boroughs,
urban districts and
rural districts. In 1974 the lower tier was reorganised and Wiltshire was left with five
districts:
Kennet,
North Wiltshire,
Salisbury,
Thamesdown and
West Wiltshire. In 1997, Thamesdown was renamed 'Swindon' and converted into a
unitary authority, removing it from the
non-metropolitan county (the area controlled by Wiltshire County Council). This reduced the population of the non-metropolitan county by almost a third. Swindon remains part of the wider ceremonial county of Wiltshire. As part of the
2009 structural changes to local government, Wiltshire's four remaining districts were abolished and their functions were taken over by Wiltshire County Council as from 1 April 2009. The way the changes were implemented was to create a single non-metropolitan district of Wiltshire matching the non-metropolitan county, but with no separate district council. Instead, the existing county council also took on the functions that legislation assigns to district councils, making it a unitary authority. The county council was given the option of omitting the word 'county' from its name as part of the reforms, which it took, becoming 'Wiltshire Council'. ==Governance==