County Surveyors Society

County Surveyors Society

The County Surveyors’ Society was established officially at a meeting of eleven County Surveyors for England on 19 November 1885.

It was a society for people working in local government in highways departments in senior positions known as County Surveyors. Over time most authorities stopped using the term County Surveyor, but the society and the magazine who support them Surveyor magazine both opted to retain the title, although the society has since been subsumed (see reference to ADEPT below). The first meeting, and many other early meetings, were concerned with conditions of service of Surveyors, mainly pay and hours of work. However, by 1890 the society had become increasingly involved with such matters as the rolling and watering of carriageways and repairs to footways.

The Development and Roads Improvement Act of 1909 created a Roads Board, which later became the Department for Transport with powers to give grants to Highway Authorities, normally part of local authorities to construct and maintain roads. Many meetings of the society at that time were concerned with these grants, attempting to ensure an even spread of money around England and Wales.

A Society of County Surveyors for Scotland was formed in 1931,although this was an extension of the earlier County Road Surveyors Association of Scotland founded in 1884, a year earlier than its English counterpart. In June 1937 it was agreed that they should join with their English and Welsh counterparts. In 1937 a Society delegation visited Germany and subsequently set out proposals in 1938 for a national motorway network, having been impressed with the work carried out by the then Nazi Government.

In 1955 with rationing that had hung over Great Britain since the end of World War II saw the end of the lean years of highway funding with the beginning of the motorway era, during which time the UK was transformed from a series of country lanes to having major ‘A’ routes and motorways, eventually including the M25. Following the publication of the Buchanan Report in 1964 County Surveyors became increasingly involved in transportation studies, traffic management and road safety, in addition to the existing work on road maintenance and new road construction. The 1970s saw the start of the greatest road building programme since the days of the Turnpikes and also a major change in the structure of local authorities. The Society played a significant part in these changes and was accepted as a principal channel for initiatives and advice.

The 1974 reorganisation of Local Government added waste disposal to County Surveyors’ responsibilities. At the same time Surveyors of the Counties in Northern Ireland became part of the Department of the Environment but in 1992 a Northern Ireland branch was formed which became part of the main Society.

Read more about County Surveyors Society:  Campaign For Safe Road Design

Famous quotes containing the words county and/or society:

    Don’t you know there are 200 temperance women in this county who control 200 votes. Why does a woman work for temperance? Because she’s tired of liftin’ that besotted mate of hers off the floor every Saturday night and puttin’ him on the sofa so he won’t catch cold. Tonight we’re for temperance. Help yourself to them cloves and chew them, chew them hard. We’re goin’ to that festival tonight smelling like a hot mince pie.
    Laurence Stallings (1894–1968)

    The Settlement ... is an experimental effort to aid in the solution of the social and industrial problems which are engendered by the modern conditions of life in a great city. It insists that these problems are not confined to any one portion of the city. It is an attempt to relieve, at the same time, the overaccumulation at one end of society and the destitution at the other ...
    Jane Addams (1860–1935)