River board

Authorities controlling drainage and rivers


title: "River board" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["environmental-agencies-in-the-united-kingdom", "defunct-public-bodies-of-the-united-kingdom", "defunct-environmental-agencies"] description: "Authorities controlling drainage and rivers" topic_path: "geography/united-kingdom" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_board" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Authorities controlling drainage and rivers ::

River boards were authorities who controlled land drainage, fisheries and river pollution and had other functions relating to rivers, streams and inland waters in England and Wales between 1950 and 1965.

Background

Prior to the 1930s, land drainage in the United Kingdom was regulated by the Statute of Sewers, passed by King Henry VIII in 1531, and several further acts which built upon that foundation. However, the administrative bodies with responsibility for managing the drainage of low-lying areas did not have sufficient resources to do this effectively. Complaints to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries made during the 1920s by existing drainage boards and those who lived and worked in the areas they covered led to the government deciding that a thorough review of the situation should be carried out.

A royal commission was set up, under the chairmanship of Lord Bledisloe, which produced a final report on 5 December 1927. The report described the existing laws as "vague and ill-defined, full of anomalies, obscure, lacking in uniformity, and even chaotic." It recommended that any replacement should have powers to carry out the work necessary for efficient drainage, together with the provision of financial resources to enable them to carry out their duties.

At the time there were 361 drainage authorities covering England and Wales, and the proposed solution was the creation of catchment boards responsible for each main river, with powers over the individual drainage boards within each catchment. The report formed the basis for a subsequent bill, which became the Land Drainage Act 1930 (20 & 21 Geo. 5. c. 44) when it became law on 1 August 1930. It repealed most of the legislation that had preceded it, with 16 acts dating from 1531 to 1929 falling into this category, and another three were amended. When the Act was published, however, it contained only 47 catchment areas of the original 100 suggested by the Royal Commission.

River Boards Act 1948

River boards were established by the River Boards Act 1948, and replaced the catchment boards that had been created following the passing of the 1930 Act. Although the Act proposed river board areas, the precise details were not included in the legislation, and a consultative committee was convened to resolve issues with the boundaries for the areas. This involved liaising with catchment boards, fishery boards, county councils and county boroughs.

By 19 May 1949, the borders of 17 areas had been settled, and a draft order to create the first river board, that for the River Severn, had been deposited before Parliament. A total of 32 boards were eventually created, covering the whole of England and Wales, with responsibilities for land drainage, fisheries and river pollution. Where there were existing catchment boards, they inherited these powers, and where there were not, they took over the duties of flood prevention on main rivers from local authorities. The provisions of the 1930 Act ceased to apply to the new river boards. The exceptions were the River Thames Catchment Board and the Lee Conservancy Catchment Board, which did not become river boards, and still operated under the older powers. Each river board area had a board which was partly nominated by county councils and county borough corporations, and partly appointed by the government.

The Act allowed that "orders defining river board areas and establishing river boards may be made at different times for different areas". It was not until 1955 that all the boards had been established.

::data[format=table]

River boardFormer catchment boards
Avon and Dorset
Bristol Avon
Cheshire
Cornwall
Cumberland
Dee and Clwyd
Devon
East Suffolk and Norfolk
East Sussex
Essex
Glamorgan
Great Ouse
Gwynedd
Hampshire
Hull and East Yorkshire
Isle of Wight
Kent
Lancashire
Lincolnshire
Mersey
Nene
Northumberland and Tyneside
Severn
Somerset
South West Wales
Trent
Usk
Wear and Tees
Welland
West Sussex
Wye
Yorkshire Ouse
::

The powers of river boards were extended by the Land Drainage Act 1961, which allowed them to raise additional finance and to act as an internal drainage board (IDB) where land drainage was necessary for the improvement of agricultural land, but no IDB existed. The river boards were replaced by twenty-seven river authorities on 1 April 1965, under the Water Resources Act 1963. The new authorities comprised the area of one or two river boards.

Bibliography

  • {{cite journal |last=Anon |title=Land Drainage |journal=Nature |issue=3293 |date=10 December 1932 |volume=130 |pages=875 |doi=10.1038/130875a0 |bibcode=1932Natur.130Q.875. |doi-access=free
  • {{Cite book |title=The Land Drainage Act 1930 |first1=Alban |last1=Dobson |first2=Hubert |last2=Hull |year=1931 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=
  • {{cite book |first=H.C. |last=Darby |title=The Draining of the Fens (2nd Ed.) |year=1956 |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-40298-0
  • {{cite book |first=A S|last=Wisdom |title=Land Drainage |year=1966 |location=London |publisher=Sweet & Maxwell

References

References

  1. "Archive of the National Rivers Authority, Southern Regions". The National Archive.
  2. {{harvnb. Dobson. Hull. 1931
  3. (19 May 1949). "River Boards (Proposed Areas)". Hansard.

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