Place:Caterham and Warlingham, Surrey, England

Watchers
NameCaterham and Warlingham
TypeUrban district
Coordinates51.3°N 0.06°W
Located inSurrey, England     (1929 - 1974)
See alsoCaterham, Surrey, Englandparish from which it was formed in 1929
Warlingham, Surrey, Englandparish from which it was formed in 1929
Woldingham, Surrey, Englandparish from which it was formed in 1929
Chaldon, Surrey, Englandparish which joined in 1933
Tandridge District, Surrey, Englanddistrict municipality into which the urban district was merged in 1974
the following text is based on an article in Wikipedia

Caterham and Warlingham was an urban district in Surrey in England until 1974.

The urban district was pre-emptively formed in 1929, shortly before the major national 1933 reforms of boundaries and entities. It was a merger of the Caterham Urban District with the similar North Downs civil parish of Warlingham to the east, and the more rural and entirely hilltop civil parish of Woldingham from Godstone Rural District to the southeast.

In 1933 the Urban District absorbed the entirely hilltop segment of Chaldon to the west from defunct Reigate Rural District. In so doing, Chaldon shed 404 acres (1.63 km2) to the parish of Bletchingley and 268 acres (1.08 km2) to Coulsdon to the south and north respectively.

The part of Chaldon parish that joined Caterham and Warlingham was later renamed Whyteleafe. The new parish already its own railway station and church, and had always been identifiable as a village.

Caterham and Warlingham was abolished in 1974 due to the Local Government Act 1972 to form the northwest corner of the Tandridge District.

The map shows the original parishes.

Image:Tandridge District before 1974.png

Surrey Research Tips

Government

Administrative boundaries of the county of Surrey (Surrey History Centre. The centre has a website with a number of useful indexes--titheholders in various parishes, deaths at the county gaol, etc.)

Registration Districts

  • Registration Districts in Surrey from their introduction in 1837 to the present. By drilling down through the links you can follow any parish through the registration districts to which it was attached.

GENUKI provisions

The website GENUKI provides a very comprehensive list of reference sources for the County of Surrey. It includes:

  • Archives and Libraries
  • Church record availability for both Surrey and the former Surrey part of Greater London
  • 19th century descriptions of the ecclesiastical parishes
  • Lists of cemeteries
  • Local family history societies
  • A list of historic maps online

History

  • The Victoria History of the County of Surrey is a series of three volumes available online through British History Online. The volumes were written over the past hundred or so years by a number of authors and cover various sections of Surrey. A list of the volumes and what each contains can be found under the source Victoria History of the County of Surrey. Both volumes 3 and 4 contain areas which are part of Greater London and parts of modern Surrey.

Maps

  • The National Library of Scotland has a website which provides maps taken from the Ordnance Survey England & Wales One-Inch to the Mile series of 1892-1908 as well as equivalent maps for Scotland itself. The immediate presentation is a "help" screen and a place selection screen prompting the entry of a location down to town, village or parish level. These screens can be removed by a click of the "X". The map is very clear and shows parish and county boundaries and many large buildings and estates that existed at the turn of the 20th century. Magnification can be adjusted and an "overlay feature" allows inspection of the area today along with that of 1900. The specific map from the series can be viewed as a whole ("View this map") and this allows the inspection of the map legend (found in the left hand bottom corner. Becoming familiar with the various facilities of these maps is well worth the trouble.
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Caterham and Warlingham Urban District. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.