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9 - The Reform of the Port of London – Again

from Part II - The Steam Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2024

Sarah Palmer
Affiliation:
University of Greenwich
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Summary

The British State intervened in the Port of London in 1800. It did so again a hundred years later by appointing a Royal Commission, which provided the basis for eventual reform in 1908. The immediate reason for the Royal Commission was a dock proposal to abolish free entry to docks by river. But the wider context was long-standing, loudly voiced, shipping company grievances about river governance, licensing of lighterage and compulsory pilotage. The Commission’s conclusion that London should have a port authority was generally accepted. However, issues of constitution and compensation bedevilled the Conservative attempt to legislate. In the event, it was a Liberal government, with all-party support, which established the Port of London Authority, effectively nationalising London’s port. In an ironic coda, the port unions soon discovered their new public employer to be a more formidable opponent than their dock company predecessors had ever been.

Type
Chapter
Information
Maritime Metropolis
London and its Port, 1780–1914
, pp. 240 - 263
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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