Just in case you don’t recognise it, this is the flag of
Tyne & Wear – the much maligned new ‘county’ formed as a result of the
controversial reshuffling of the shire borders of England in 1974. As a
consequence of legislation passed since, it has both ceased to exist in one
sense, yet continues to exist in another. It has left us locals all rather
confused.
The area in question is neatly illustrated thus:
Formerly,
the mini-county was shared between Northumberland to the north and County Durham
to the south, with the boundary being provided by the River Tyne. After years
of humming and hawing, the powers-that-be decided to carve up the land thereabouts
as illustrated above. ‘Tyne & Wear’ was the name given to the new creation
(born, ironically, on 1st
April 1974), it being officially known as a ‘metropolitan county’.
The venture was seen as a way of giving the largely urban population of the area
a more efficient and properly focussed way of governing their patch of the UK,
independent of the old historical counties which continued to exist in reduced
form.
The
Tyne & Wear brand proved difficult to sell to a resident population that
was, remember, traditionally split between Northumberland and Durham and (more importantly) between Geordie
and Mackem. It had its own county council, of course, and it can be argued that
much good was done in its name; but after limping on for a decade or so the
council was abolished in 1986, with the five ‘metropolitan authorities’ of
Newcastle, Sunderland, Gateshead, North Tyneside and South Tyneside going their
separate ways, essentially becoming self-governing.
Rather
than reverting back to a clean Northumberland/Durham split, though, it was
decided to maintain the ‘Tyne & Wear’ brand in a somewhat half-cocked way.
Many services continued to be run jointly by the five authorites (transport,
fire & rescue, museums & archives, etc.), and the ‘Tyne & Wear
metropolitan county’ continued (and continues) to exist in law and as a
‘geographical frame of reference’. It also still exists as a ‘ceremonial county’,
which means that it has a Lord Lieutenant acting as a representative of the
monarch. There is, however, no longer any Tyne & Wear-wide administrative/governmental body.
It
seems only a matter of time before the term ‘Tyne & Wear’ disappears into
history – there being quite a clamour, generally, for a return to the historic
county boundaries across the whole of England. Royal Mail officially
doesn’t care whether we use Northumberland, Co.Durham, Tyne & Wear or,
indeed, nothing at all for the county line of addresses on our envelopes. For
the moment, though, we stagger on somewhat confusedly – and under the banner of
our proud blue flag, if you feel so inclined.