Kingston Conservatives
The Royal Boroug of Kingston Upon Thames

The Royal Borough of Kingston is one of the smallest of the London Boroughs, and is situated in an attractive part of South West London, covering the Kingston and Surbiton parliamentary constituency, and part of the Richmond Park constituency.

It is an important commercial area, including the town centres of Kingston Town, Surbiton, New Malden, Chessington and Tolworth, and hosts twenty designated Conservation Areas. The population of the Royal Borough is approximately 150,000, and the area 9281 acres - fourteen square mile

Kingston shares its Royal status with only three other Boroughs in the country, Caernarfon, Kensington and Chelsea, and Windsor and Maidenhead. Of these four, Kingston is the oldest Royal Borough.

Kingston has had a long and lasting relationship with English monarchs, 7 Anglo-Saxon kings having been crowned on the Coronation Stone, now situated just outside the Guildhall. The first written record of "Cyningestune" referring to a great council in 838 AD presided over by King Egbert highlights the Royal connection.

Kingston has been many things over the centuries, a Royal Manor, a Hundred (an ancient administrative unit), a Parish, a Borough and a Royal Borough. It has long been an important commercial centre as revealed by the Doomsday survey of 1086 showing Kingston with 5 mills and 3 salmon fisheries. Kingston’s official emblem of 3 salmon on a blue background originates from this. Kingston’s success in the Middle Ages was largely due to it being well placed for a river crossing making it a focal point for trade. Kingston remains a great commercial centre today with its medieval past revealed by place names, such as Salters Lane, the Wool and Leather Markets, Souters Row, and Butchery and Cook Row.

The two palaces of Hampton Court and Richmond also had great influence over commercial and social life in the borough, stimulating trade and giving jobs to the craftsmen of the area. Urban life, however, was long confined to a small area by the river and bridge, with outlying areas remaining agricultural. The coming of the railway in the Nineteenth Century changed this. Surbiton Station, then Kingston-on-Railway, was opened in 1838. The railway promoted development that was furthered by the Kingston bypass built in 1927. The result of this and of centuries of improvement has made Kingston into an area appealing to people of all walks of life who appreciate its location, its great amenities, and its thriving community life.

Kingston Upon Thames consists of 4 neighbourhoods

Maldens & Coombe Neighbourhood
South of the Borough
Kingston Neighbourhood
Surbiton Neighbourhood

which are divided into 16 Wards:

Alexandra Ward
Berrylands Ward
Beverley Ward
Canbury Ward
Chessington North & Hook Ward
Chessington South Ward
Coombe Hill Ward
Coombe Vale Ward
Grove Ward
Norbiton Ward
Old Malden Ward
St James Ward
St Marks Ward
Surbiton Hill Ward
Tolworth & Hook Rise Ward
Tudor Ward

Stay Informed, subscribe to our newsletter
Index - Contact - Legal - Membership - Downloads - Subscribe - Unsubscribe
Web site designed, maintained and hosted by Rubber Duckiee Ltd (www.rubberdcukiee.com)
© Copyright. All Rights Reserved. Rubber Duckiee Ltd.