The parish is the most ancient type of
local government unit in Europe, and
in England it has been used for some
civil purposes since the eighth
century. The present parish and
community system, redefined and
modernised in 1974, is the latest
version of a local system that has
been developing since the sixteenth
century. Under Elizabeth 1 the parish
was the area for poor law
administration and thereafter
miscellaneous powers were given to a
number of different authorities
operating within the ancient
boundaries.
In 1834 the poor law authorities
began to group parishes into Unions,
and as the original ecclesiastical
units remained for church purposes, a
distinction was soon recognised
between civil and ecclesiastical
parishes, as well as between their
respective functions in the parish.
However, the civil functions had grown
up haphazardly to meet particular
needs, and were committed to the
management of the body which at the
time of their creation seemed the most
appropriate. By 1894 it was common for
six differently constituted parish
authorities to exercise different
functions in the same place. These
authorities included the incumbent,
the church-wardens, the overseers,
various combinations of these, rural
sanitary boards, highway boards and
the vestry. In addition, many parishes
had special Acts of Parliament and
ancient local customs.
The Local Government Act of 1894
created institutions having civil
origin, status and affiliations - the
parish meeting and the parish council
and transferred the civil functions of
the older authorities to the new
institutions leaving ecclesiastical
functions to the Church authorities.
In this way Church and State at parish
level were separated. The new civil
authorities divided between them the
powers appropriate to a local
authority, while the authorities of
the ecclesiastical parish were
confined to church affairs and
ecclesiastical charities. In 1920
these latter authorities were
modernised and most of their
administrative functions were given to
parochial church councils.
The considerations affecting the
drawing of civil and ecclesiastical
boundaries naturally differ, and the
power to redraw them is vested in
different authorities. Hence the areas
of parishes respectively for church
and local government have mostly
ceased to coincide.
The Local Government Act of 1972
made further changes and in pursuit of
the principle that the differences
between town and country should be
diminished, arrangements were made to
enable former boroughs and urban
districts to become parishes. In
England parishes can exist everywhere
except in Greater London, but in
practice most parishes are in the
countryside, in small towns, or on the
edge of conurbations but not all
parishes have councils.
The Act also modernised functions
and procedures by abolishing all but
two of the limitations on expenditure,
as well as controls previously
exercised by parish meetings over
powers, borrowing and dealings in
land. It also conferred many new powers, and rights. Of the latter the
most important is probably the right
to be notified of all planning
applications although, the parish only
has power to comment on applications,
approval or rejection is for the
appropriate Planning Authority -
Rother District Council or East Sussex
County Council.
Additionally provision was made for
later changes so that parish and
community boundaries could be adjusted
and new parishes created. As part of
this regular review of parishes, some
small changes to the boundaries of our
parish were made in 1999 and at the
suggestion of the Parish Council, the
name was changed from the Parish of
Salehurst to the Parish of Salehurst
& Robertsbridge to reflect the
area covered. |