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The district was formed on 1 April 1974 as part of a general reorganisation of local administration throughout England and Wales carried out under the Local Government Act 1972. Chester-le-Street was one of eight non-metropolitan districts into which County Durham was divided, and was formed from the areas of the abolished urban district of ...
Chester-le-Street was a rural district in County Durham, England from 1894 to [1] It surrounded the urban district of Chester-le-Street . The district was split in 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972 , with the bulk going to the new Chester-le-Street district.
[39] [40] Chester-le-Street United F.C. were founded in 2020 and compete in the Northern Football League Division Two. In the 2022/23 season they finished above their local rivals Chester-le-Street Town F.C. who were founded in 1972 and compete in the Northern Football League Division Two and based just outside Chester-le-street in Chester Moor.
In 1949, Pentland was elected as a checkweighman, and by this time, he was heavily involved in the Durham Area of the National Union of Mineworkers, and the local Labour Party. [3] Pentland served on Chester-le-Street Rural District Council, and became its chair in 1952. [1] That same year, he was elected to the executive committee of the ...
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le NF from archaic French lès, [59] in the vicinity of, near to Chester-le-Street, Burgh le Marsh, Stanford-le-Hope: interfix: Hartlepool appears to contain le by folk etymology; older spellings show no such element. lea, ley, leigh OE from leah, a woodland clearing Barnsley, [60] Hadleigh, Leigh, Beverley, Keighley, Batley, Abbots Leigh ...
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Cuncacestre was the centre of Christianity for much of the northeast, because it was the seat of the Bishop of Lindisfarne, making the church a cathedral. [6] The diocese stretched between the boundaries of Danelaw at Teesside in the south, of Alba at Lothian in the north and the Irish Sea in the west.