Humberside
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- East Yorkshire
- Holderness
- Kingston upon Hull
- Beverley
- Boothferry
- Scunthorpe
- Glanford
- Great Grimsby
- Cleethorpes
- Kingston-upon-Hull
- East Riding of Yorkshire : Beverley, East Yorkshire, Holderness, and northern Boothferry
- North Lincolnshire : Glanford, Scunthorpe and southern Boothferry
- North East Lincolnshire : Great Grimsby, Cleethorpes
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Humberside was an administrative county of England from 1974 until April 1, 1996. It was composed of two halves either side of the Humber estuary, created using part of Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire. Its county town was Beverley, its largest city Kingston upon Hull.
Related Topics:
Administrative county - England - 1974 - April 1 - 1996 - Humber - Yorkshire - Nottinghamshire - Lincolnshire - Beverley - Kingston upon Hull
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It had several districts - Beverley, Boothferry, Cleethorpes, East Yorkshire, Glanford, Great Grimsby, Holderness and Scunthorpe.
Related Topics:
Beverley - Boothferry - Cleethorpes - East Yorkshire - Glanford - Great Grimsby - Holderness - Scunthorpe
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It bordered North Yorkshire to the north and west, South Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire to the south-west, and Lincolnshire to the south. It faced east towards the North Sea.
Related Topics:
North Yorkshire - South Yorkshire - Nottinghamshire - Lincolnshire - North Sea
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At the time of its creation, there was very little connecting the two parts of the county. The addition of the northern Lincolnshire areas had been a late change, originally the plan was for it to cover the area of the current East Riding of Yorkshire and Hull. It was promised by the government that the Humber Bridge would make it a more viable unit. The opening of the Bridge on 24th June 1981 provided a permanent link between North and South Humberside but did not secure the County's future. To the relief of its many detractors, the County of Humberside (and Humberside County Council) was abolished on 1st April 1996 when The Humberside (Structural Change) Order 1995 came into force.
Related Topics:
East Riding of Yorkshire - Hull - Humber Bridge - Humberside County Council
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This resulted in four successor unitary authorities:
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The office of Lord-Lieutenant of Humberside was also abolished. The Yorkshire part became the ceremonial county of the East Riding of Yorkshire (which included Hull); the Lincolnshire part reverted to Lincolnshire for ceremonial purposes.
Related Topics:
Lord-Lieutenant - Ceremonial county
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The name 'Humberside' is an ancient name for the area surrounding the Humber river, and, despite the abolition of the administrative area, the term 'Humberside' has not fallen out of use as a general geographic designation. There is still a Humberside Police, a Humberside Airport (roughly halfway between Scunthorpe and Grimsby), a Humberside Fire Service and BBC Radio Humberside.
Related Topics:
Humber - Humberside Police - Humberside Airport - Scunthorpe - Grimsby - Humberside Fire Service - BBC Radio Humberside
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Also, the whole of the area once covered by the former administrative county of Humberside, including the Lincolnshire parts, is part of the government office region of Yorkshire and the Humber (originally 'Yorkshire and Humberside').
Related Topics:
Government office region - Yorkshire and the Humber
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