Metropolitan Borough of Deptford

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Deptford
London County Council County of London
Metropolitan Borough of Deptford shown within the County of London
Status: Metropolitan borough
Admin. HQ: New Cross Road
Created: 1900
Abolished: 1965
Successor: London Borough of Lewisham

The Metropolitan Borough of Deptford was a metropolitan borough in the County of London between 1900 and 1965, when it became part of the London Borough of Lewisham along with the Metropolitan Borough of Lewisham.

Deptford Town Hall was built in 1903 - 1905 on New Cross Road. The building is in a grand baroque style, featuring carvings of tritons and admirals to emphasise Deptford's maritime heritage. It is now used by Goldsmith's College.

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The borough covered the same area of the parish of St Paul Deptford, which had been separated from the neighbouring parish of St Nicholas Deptford to its north in 1730. The rateable values of the two parishes had been roughly equal when they were separated, but St Paul contained all the farmland to the south, the majority of which was built on over the next 170 years.

When the Metropolitan Borough was created, consideration was given to reuniting the two parishes, but a closer equalisation of rateable value was served by uniting St Nicholas with Greenwich to the east.

The growth of the London conurbation had reached Deptford by the end of the eighteenth century but it had been a large industrial town well before this time: the Royal Docks and the Victualling Yard, which provisioned the Navy, and the various private dockyards, meant it was a prosperous and cosmopolitan town.

The borough bordered Bermondsey, Greenwich, Lewisham and Camberwell.

The borough covered an area of 1,563 acres (6.4 square kilometres) and included the localities of St Paul Deptford, Brockley, New Cross, and St John's.

The area of the borough was 1,563 acres. The population from each census was:[1]

  • 1801: 11,349
  • 1811: 12,748
  • 1821: 14,481
  • 1831: 15,314
  • 1841: 18,664
  • 1851: 24,899
  • 1861: 37,834
  • 1871: 53,714
  • 1881: 76,752
  • 1891: 101,286
  • 1901: 110,398
  • 1911: 109,496
  • 1921: 112,534
  • 1931: 106,891
  • 1951: 75,495
  • 1961: 68,829

The unofficial arms of the borough
The unofficial arms of the borough

The borough did not have an officially granted coat of arms, instead using a device of their own design.

The three choughs in the first quarter represent the county of Surrey. They were taken from the arms of Onslow family, one-time lords of the manor of Guildford. The fourth quarter showed a white horse on red, representative of the county of Kent. Before 1889 the area of the borough was divided between the two counties. The second quarter showed a quarter ship on the stocks, for the naval dockyard. The remaining quarter of the shield was a portarit of Peter the Great of Russia, who learnt the art of naval architecture in Deptford.

Above the shield was a mural crown, representing municipal government. On either side was an heraldic dolphin entwining a trident.

  1. ^ Statistical Abstract for London, 1901 (Vol. IV).


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