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McPherson, E., 'The impact of
the Second World War on local authorities in South Lancashire
1935-45'
Ph.D thesis, 1995. Manchester University
Abstract: This thesis is an
attempt to ascertain the war's effects on local government and
its work using evidence contained in thousands of documents from
the archives of some fifty local authorities in south Lancashire
during the period 1935-46. It details the impact on the major
traditional functions such as education, transport and fire services,
in addition to the new duties which central government was happy
to be able to pass on to local authorities for implementation.
These included ARP, shelters, nurseries, salvage, emergency feeding,
fire prevention and the responsibility for evacuees and refugees.
Consideration is also given to broader issues such as finance,
staffing and the work of the councils - including (for the first
time) the effect of the banning of elections for the duration
of the war, and the changes which took place in the balance of
power both within the local authority and between central and
local government. The local authority had that unique combination
of features which no other organisation could boast. It had the
local structures in place, the contacts, the local knowledge and
the roots within the communities. It was well-experienced and
well-equipped with the organisational ability to cope with most
problems, and it was an apposite choice in the early 1930s to
be the agency charged with providing ARP. Consequently, whenever
the Government had a messy, unpopular, cumbersome and essentially
local service to administer and organise, it deposited the problem
immediately and firmly into the convenient lap of the local authority.
This study shows that in spite of the enormous pressures which
local authorities were called upon to bear; the unexpected and
unfamiliar duties they were required to carry out and the depressing
shortages in staff and resources with which they had to cope,
they performed magnificently during the war.
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