Broxtowe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Borough of Broxtowe | |
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![]() Shown within Nottinghamshire |
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Geography | |
Status: | Borough |
Region: | East Midlands |
Admin. County: | Nottinghamshire |
Area: - Total |
Ranked 264th 80.10 km² |
Admin. HQ: | Beeston |
ONS code: | 37UD |
Demographics | |
Population: - Total (2005 est.) - Density |
Ranked 201st 109,100 1,362 / km² |
Ethnicity: | 95.5% White 2.0% S.Asian |
Politics | |
![]() Broxtowe Borough Council http://www.broxtowe.gov.uk/ |
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Leadership: | Leader & Cabinet |
Executive: | Labour / Liberal Democrats |
MPs: | Geoff Hoon, Nick Palmer |
Broxtowe is a local government district with borough status in Nottinghamshire, England, west of the city of Nottingham. It is part of the Greater Nottingham metropolitan area. Broxtowe's neighbour to the west is the Borough of Erewash in Derbyshire.
Contents |
[edit] Settlements
Settlements include Beeston where the council is based, Awsworth, Bramcote, Brinsley, Chilwell, Cossall, Eastwood, Giltbrook, Kimberley, Moorgreen, Newthorpe, Nuthall, Stapleford, Swingate, Toton, Broxtowe estate, and Watnall.
[edit] Formation
The district formed on April 1, 1974 by a merger of the Beeston and Stapleford urban district, the Eastwood urban district and part of Basford Rural District. The borough's name was derived from the old Broxtowe wapentake of Nottinghamshire, which covered a larger area. Broxtowe Estate is not within the borough, but is instead within the boundaries of the City of Nottingham.
The district was granted borough status in 1977.
[edit] Politics
The first elections to the council took place in 1973, with the Conservatives gaining control. The party held power until 1995 when it lost control to the Labour party. Since 2003 no party has been in overall control, and the Labour and Liberal Democrats groups operate a power-sharing arrangement.[1]
[edit] Parliamentary Constituency
Since 1983 Broxtowe has also been a Parliamentary constituency. The constituency boundaries do not exactly match the borough boundaries, with some wards of Broxtowe borough (Brinsley, Eastwood East, Eastwood North and Eastwood South), being in the Ashfield constituency. Recent MPs have been:
- 1992 Sir Jim Lester (Conservative)
- 1997 Nick Palmer (Labour)
- 2001 Nick Palmer (Labour)
- 2005 Nick Palmer (Labour)
A Broxtowe constituency also existed form 1918 to 1970. The area of the former constituency was very different, including Hucknall and Kirkby in Ashfield, but excluding Beeston.[2]
[edit] Twinning
Broxtowe is twinned with Gütersloh in Germany
[edit] References
- ^ Cabinet and Committees Broxtowe Borough Council
- ^ F. A. Youngs, Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England, Vol. II (London, 1991)
Amber Valley • Ashfield • Bassetlaw • Blaby • Bolsover • Boston • Broxtowe • Charnwood • Chesterfield • Corby • Daventry • Derby • Derbyshire Dales • East Lindsey • East Northamptonshire • Erewash • Gedling • Harborough • High Peak • Hinckley and Bosworth • Kettering • Leicester • Lincoln • Mansfield • Melton • Newark and Sherwood • Northampton • North East Derbyshire • North Kesteven • North West Leicestershire • Nottingham • Oadby and Wigston • Rushcliffe • Rutland • South Derbyshire • South Holland • South Kesteven • South Northamptonshire • Wellingborough • West Lindsey
Counties with multiple districts: Derbyshire - Leicestershire - Lincolnshire - Northamptonshire - Nottinghamshire
Unitary authorities: | Nottingham |
Boroughs/Districts: | Ashfield • Bassetlaw • Broxtowe • Gedling • Mansfield • Newark and Sherwood • Rushcliffe |
Cities/Towns: | Arnold • Beeston • Blidworth • Carlton • Cotgrave • Eastwood • Hucknall • Kimberley • Kirkby-in-Ashfield • Mansfield • Mansfield Woodhouse • Newark • Nottingham • Rainworth • Retford • Ruddington • Stapleford • Southwell • Sutton-in-Ashfield • West Bridgford • Worksop See also: List of civil parishes in Nottinghamshire |