Wards and Area Committees
Within London, population figures are not collected for localities, instead they are enumerated for political wards.
Ward | Area committee | Population (2011) | Parliamentary constituency |
---|---|---|---|
Brooklands | Romford | 14,957 | Romford |
Cranham | Upminster | 12,528 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Elm Park | Elm Park and Hylands | 12,466 | Dagenham and Rainham |
Emerson Park | Emerson Park and Harold Wood | 11,977 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Gooshays | Harold Hill | 14,692 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Hacton | Hornchurch | 12,262 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Harold Wood | Emerson Park and Harold Wood | 12,650 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Havering Park | North Romford | 13,000 | Romford |
Heaton | Harold Hill | 12,570 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Hylands | Elm Park and Hylands | 12,952 | Romford |
Mawneys | North Romford | 12,915 | Romford |
Pettits | Gidea Park | 12,955 | Romford |
Rainham and Wennington | South Hornchurch and Rainham | 12,482 | Dagenham and Rainham |
Romford Town | Romford | 15,921 | Romford |
St Andrew's | Hornchurch | 13,334 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
South Hornchurch | South Hornchurch and Rainham | 13,544 | Dagenham and Rainham |
Squirrel's Heath | Gidea Park | 13,194 | Romford |
Upminster | Upminster | 12,833 | Hornchurch and Upminster |
Read more about this topic: List Of Districts In Havering
Famous quotes containing the words wards, area and/or committees:
“Only by obedience to his genius; only by the freest activity in the way constitutional to him, does an angel seem to arise before a man, and lead him by the hand out of all the wards of the prison.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Whether we regard the Womens Liberation movement as a serious threat, a passing convulsion, or a fashionable idiocy, it is a movement that mounts an attack on practically everything that women value today and introduces the language and sentiments of political confrontation into the area of personal relationships.”
—Arianna Stassinopoulos (b. 1950)
“A committee is organic rather than mechanical in its nature: it is not a structure but a plant. It takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts, and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom in their turn.”
—C. Northcote Parkinson (19091993)