There are three tiers of local government covering Woodstock, at
civil parish (town),
district, and
county level: Woodstock Town Council,
West Oxfordshire District Council, and
Oxfordshire County Council. The town council is based at the Town Hall in the Market Place.
Administrative history The original settlement of Woodstock, now known as Old Woodstock, is to the north of the
River Glyme. It was historically a small hamlet at the southern end of the parish of
Wootton. The later town appears to have been laid out as a planned settlement in the 12th century on a previously unoccupied site in the parish of
Bladon, south of the Glyme. The town was officially called New Woodstock until the 19th century. New Woodstock subsequently came to be treated as a separate
civil parish from Bladon. In the
Hundred Rolls of 1279 Woodstock is described as a
vill, but a
burgess is alluded to in the same document, and it returned two members to parliament as a
borough in 1302 and 1305. The earliest known
municipal charter was that from
Henry VI in 1453, establishing the vill of New Woodstock a free borough, with a merchant
guild, and incorporating the burgesses under the title of the "Mayor and Commonalty of the Vill of New Woodstock." The
Woodstock parliamentary borough was then exempted from sending representatives to
parliament, but it subsequently resumed electing two members in the 16th century. The borough was
left unreformed when most boroughs across the country were standardised under the
Municipal Corporations Act 1835. Government commissioners had concluded that the borough corporation had too few functions and the town was too small to justify the cost of reform. The borough corporation continued to exist, but did not qualify to take on any subsequent new local government powers. The
Municipal Corporations Act 1883 directed that the remaining unreformed boroughs, including New Woodstock, would be abolished in 1886 unless they managed to secure a new charter converting them into a modern
municipal borough. A new charter was granted in 1886; the reformed borough covered a larger area, also taking in Old Woodstock and part of the neighbouring parish of Hensington (formerly a hamlet in the parish of Bladon which had become a separate civil parish in 1866). The enlarged borough, which after the 1886 enlargement included both Old Woodstock and New Woodstock, was renamed Woodstock. The borough of Woodstock was abolished in 1974 under the
Local Government Act 1972. District-level functions passed to the new West Oxfordshire District Council. A
successor parish called Woodstock was created covering the area of the abolished borough, with its parish council taking the name Woodstock Town Council. ==Media==