COUNTIES OF CUMBERLAND & WESTMORLAND "STILL EXIST"
>From Cumbria Crack

On St George's Day, the government will formally acknowledge England's
traditional counties in the life of the nation. A significant number of
counties were 'administratively abolished' by the government in the Local
Government Act 1972.

In a symbolic move, Eric Pickles will assert that England's historic and
traditional counties still exist, and are now recognised by the government -
including the likes of Cumberland, Huntingdonshire, Westmorland and
Middlesex. Previously, many parts of Whitehall and municipal officialdom
have shunned these counties, many of which date back over a thousand years
of English history. Mr Pickles today (23 April 2013) will announce that the
government will seek to encourage the marking and continued use of such
traditional county names. He will encourage local residents to continue to
champion such local identities, irrespective of current tiers of local
administration.

This move complements this government's abolition of the 'artificial'
Government Office regions, based on European Union's NUTS1 administrative
boundaries. Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles said: "The tapestry of
England's counties binds our nation together. This government has binned the
arbitrary Government Office euro-regions, and instead, we are championing
England's traditional local identities which continue to run deep.
Administrative restructuring by previous governments has sought to suppress
and undermine such local identities. Today, on St George's Day, we
commemorate our patron saint and formally acknowledge the continuing role of
our traditional counties in England's public and cultural life."

Tim Farron MP said: "This is great news and really welcome it on St George's
Day. I hope the government will now use the terms Westmorland and Cumberland
more often and support our historic counties. I will keep asking them to use
the titles and to fly our flags on community buildings throughout our area.
The next time there is a reorganisation of local government it is essential
that there are moves to restore Westmorland and Cumberland as administrative
counties too."

Rupert Barnes Vice-Chairman of the Association of British Counties added:
"The counties are the basic tapestry on which countless generations have
made their lives. They have shaped our identities and our view of ourselves
and have remained a constant throughout centuries of change to become a
vital part of British culture, geography and heritage. The counties predate
any transient lines drawn for convenience or administration and predate the
kingdom itself, rooted in history and cultural identity, so that the ancient
counties are of the people not of the state. Statutes on administration have
respectfully left the ancient counties alone. This pattern 
of the counties brought down to us through the centuries then is the pattern
around which the nation has grown and grown great, and worthy of
celebration."

The traditional counties are fundamental to our culture. Older than
cathedrals, more historic than stately homes, county names like
Lincolnshire, Cornwall, Middlesex are basic to our life. Many of these
pre-date the Norman conquest. They are an indelible part of our history and
important cultural entities. Yet several have fallen by the wayside. From
1888 to 1965 local government 'administrative counties' were closely based
upon the traditional counties. A modern local government map now bears far
less resemblance to the traditional counties. The tendency for the media,
map-makers, publishers etc. to use local government areas as a basis for
popular geography has obscured the identities of the counties. The
Association of British Counties encourages the use of the historic counties
in postal addressing, in guide books, on boundary signs and maps and
encourages their further use as a basis for sporting, social and cultural
activities and organisations.

Westmorland in northern England is one of the 39 historic counties of
England. The Normans conquered it in 1092 and created the baronies of Kendal
and Westmorland, which were then formed into the single county of
Westmorland in 1226. It formed an administrative county in 1889 under the
Local Government Act 1888, until 1974 after which it became part of the
county of Cumbria. But there is still the Westmorland Gazette or the
Westmorland Shopping Centre in Kendal. 

Middlesex County ceased as an administrative council in 1965. The former
area of Middlesex now corresponds to much of Greater London and parts of
Berkshire, Hertfordshire and Surrey. Middlesex is still used in the names of
organisations based in the area, such as Middlesex County Cricket Club and
Middlesex University.

Cumberland is a historic county of north-west England that had an
administrative function from the 12th century until 1974. The first record
of 'Cumberland' was in 945. In 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972,
the council was abolished and combined with parts of Lancashire and the West
Riding of Yorkshire to form part of the new county of Cumbria. But the name
continues today most famously as in Cumberland sausage, the HMS Cumberland,
nicknamed 'The fighting sausage', the Cumberland County Cricket Club, and as
the local newspaper The Cumberland News.

Huntingdonshire covers Huntingdon, St Ives, Godmanchester, St Neots, and
Ramsey. Between 1889 and 1965 it formed an administrative county. Under the
Local Government Act 1972, Huntingdon and Peterborough merged to form the
new non-metropolitan county of Cambridgeshire. Huntingdonshire still has its
own cricket board.

The 39 historic English counties were:
Bedfordshire (Bedford, Luton, Dunstable, Leighton Buzzard, Biggleswade,
Sandy)
Berkshire (Reading, Bracknell, Maidenhead, Newbury, Windsor, Wokingham,
Abingdon)
Buckinghamshire (Aylesbury, Milton Keynes, Slough, Buckingham, High Wycombe)
Cambridgeshire (Cambridge, Wisbech, Ely, March, Whittlesey, Chatteris,
Linton)
Cheshire (Chester, Stockport, Ellesmere Port, Birkenhead, Wallasey, Runcorn,
Macclesfield, Crewe)
Cornwall (Bodmin, Truro, Camborne, Redruth, St. Austell, Falmouth, Penzance,
Newquay)
Cumberland (Carlisle, Whitehaven, Workington, Penrith, Keswick, Brampton)
Derbyshire (Derby, Chesterfield, Glossop, Ilkeston, Long Eaton, Swadlincote,
Buxton, Matlock, Ashbourne)
Devon (Exeter, Plymouth, Torquay, Paignton, Barnstaple, Tiverton, Newton
Abbot, Tavistock)
Dorset (Dorchester, Poole, Weymouth, Sherborne, Wimborne Minster,
Shaftesbury)
Durham (Durham, Sunderland, Stockton-on-Tees, Darlington, Hartlepool,
Gateshead, Washington)
Essex (Chelmsford, Basildon, Romford, Southend, Colchester, Harlow,
Brentwood, West Ham)
Gloucestershire (Gloucester, Bristol, Cheltenham, Stroud, Cirencester,
Tewkesbury)
Hampshire (Winchester, Southampton, Portsmouth, Bournemouth, Basingstoke,
Newport)
Herefordshire (Hereford, Ross-on-Wye, Leominster, Ledbury, Bromyard,
Kington)
Hertfordshire (Hertford, Watford, St. Albans, Hemel Hempstead, Stevenage,
Hatfield)
Huntingdonshire (Huntingdon, St. Ives, St. Neots, Ramsey, Yaxley)
Kent (Maidstone, Canterbury, Bromley, Rochester, Margate, Folkestone, Dover,
Greenwich)
Lancashire (Lancaster, Liverpool, Manchester, Preston, Bolton, Warrington,
Barrow-in-Furness)
Leicestershire (Leicester, Loughborough, Hinckley, Melton Mowbray,
Coalville, Lutterworth)
Lincolnshire (Lincoln, Grimsby, Scunthorpe, Boston, Grantham, Stamford,
Skegness, Louth)
Middlesex (City of London, Harrow, Enfield, Staines, Ealing, Potters Bar,
Westminster)
Norfolk (Norwich, Great Yarmouth, King's Lynn, Dereham, Cromer, Hunstanton)
Northamptonshire (Northampton, Peterborough, Corby, Kettering,
Wellingborough)
Northumberland (Alnwick, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Morpeth, Hexham,
Berwick-upon-Tweed)
Nottinghamshire (Nottingham, Mansfield, Worksop, Newark, Retford, Southwell)
Oxfordshire (Oxford, Banbury, Witney, Bicester, Henley-on-Thames, Carterton,
Thame)
Rutland (Oakham, Uppingham. Cottesmore)
Shropshire (Shrewsbury, Telford, Oswestry, Bridgnorth, Whitchurch, Market
Drayton, Ludlow)
Somerset (Taunton, Bath, Weston-super-Mare, Yeovil, Bridgwater, Wells,
Glastonbury)
Staffordshire (Stafford, Stoke-on-Trent, Wolverhampton, Walsall, Cannock,
Lichfield)
Suffolk (Ipswich, Bury St. Edmunds, Lowestoft, Felixstowe, Sudbury,
Haverhill, Bungay)
Surrey (Guildford, Croydon, Woking, Sutton, Kingston-on-Thames, Wandsworth,
Wimbledon, Brixton)
Sussex (Chichester, Brighton, Worthing, Crawley, Hastings, Eastbourne,
Bognor Regis, Horsham)
Warwickshire (Warwick, Birmingham, Coventry, Nuneaton, Rugby, Solihull,
Stratford-upon-Avon)
Westmorland (Appleby, Kendal, Windermere, Ambleside, Kirkby Lonsdale)
Wiltshire (Trowbridge, Salisbury, Swindon, Chippenham, Devizes, Marlborough,
Warminster)
Worcestershire (Worcester, Dudley, Kidderminster, Stourbridge, Halesowen,
Malvern, Evesham)
Yorkshire North Riding (Northallerton, Middlesbrough, Scarborough, Whitby) 
East Riding (Beverley, Hull, Bridlington, Driffield, Hornsea, Filey) 
West Riding (Wakefield, Leeds, Sheffield, Bradford, Halifax, Harrogate) York
(within the Walls)

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