Independent city
An
independent city is a
city that does not form part of another
local government entity.
As a formal term it is mainly used in the
U.S. Commonwealth of Virginia; however, there are equivalent entities in a number of other
jurisdictions throughout the world.
Independent cities should not be confused with
city-states (such as
Singapore), which are fully sovereign cities that are not part of any other nation-state.
In the
United States, an independent city is a
city that does not belong to any particular
county. Because counties have historically been a strong institution in local government in most of the United States, independent cities are relatively rare outside of
Virginia (see below), whose
state constitution makes them a special case. The
U.S. Census Bureau uses counties as its base unit for presentation of statistical information, and treats independent cities as county equivalents for those purposes. Independent cities should not be confused with
consolidated city-counties, such as
Denver, Colorado, the
City and County of San Francisco, California or
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
Virginia
Of the 42 independent cities in the United States
, 39 are in Virginia.
In the
Commonwealth of Virginia, all municipalities incorporated as "cities" have also been "independent cities," also called "free cities," since 1871. Other municipalities, even though they may be more populous than some existing independent cities, are incorporated as "
towns", and as such form part of a county. An independent city in Virginia may serve as the
county seat of an adjacent county, even though the city by definition is not part of that county.
Several Virginia counties, whose origins go back to the original eight
shires of the colony formed in 1634, have the word
city in their names; however, politically they are counties. Examples are
Charles City County and
James City County.
=List of Virginia's independent cities
=The independent cities in Virginia are (as of January 2006):
*
Alexandria*
Bedford (also the seat of
Bedford County)
*
Bristol*
Buena Vista*
Charlottesville (also the seat of
Albemarle County)
*
Chesapeake (formed through consolidation of City of South Norfolk and Norfolk County)
*
Colonial Heights*
Covington (also the seat of
Alleghany County)
*
Danville*
Emporia (also the seat of
Greensville County)
*
Fairfax (also the seat of
Fairfax County)
*
Falls Church (at 2 sq. miles, the smallest county-level political subdivision in the United States, by area)
*
Franklin*
Fredericksburg*
Galax*
Hampton (formed through consolidation with the Town of Phoebus and Elizabeth City County)
*
Harrisonburg (also the seat of
Rockingham County)
*
Hopewell*
Lexington (also the seat of
Rockbridge County)
*
Lynchburg*
Manassas (also the seat of
Prince William County)
*
Manassas Park*
Martinsville*
Newport News (current city formed through consolidation with the City of Warwick, itself formerly Warwick County)
*
Norfolk*
Norton*
Petersburg*
Poquoson*
Portsmouth*
Radford*
Richmond (also the seat of
Henrico County)
*
Roanoke*
Salem (formerly the seat of
Roanoke County, which has relocated its government offices into an unicorporated section of the County in the Cave Spring District, although the Roanoke County Courthouse remains located in Salem)
*
Staunton (also the seat of
Augusta County)
*
Suffolk (formed through consolidation with the City of Nansemond, itself formerly Nansemond County)
*
Virginia Beach (formed through consolidation of the City of Virginia Beach and Princess Anne County)
*
Waynesboro*
Williamsburg (also the seat of
James City County)
*
Winchester (also the seat of
Frederick County)
=Notes
=
*Only consolidations and mergers of localities since 1950 are specifically noted above. Most independent cities also grew through earlier consolidations, mergers and annexations.
*While most counties and cities in Virginia with similar names are contiguous, the independent
City of Richmond is located nowhere near
Richmond County. The latter is located in the state's
Northern Neck region, about 50 miles to the east from the capital city.
=Arlington County
=
Arlington County, commonly referred to as just "Arlington," is not an independent city. However, it is often thought of as a city because it is fully urbanized, is close in size to other independent cities in the state, and includes no municipalities within its borders. It consists solely of areas ceded by Virginia to the Federal Government to form
Washington D.C. in the late 18th century, and retroceded to Virginia in 1846.
See also Alexandria County, D.C.=Former cities
=
See also: Lost Counties, Cities and Towns of Virginia.Former independent cities now extinct that were long extant in Virginia include:
*
Clifton Forge, which gave up its
city charter in 2001, and is now an
incorporated town in
Alleghany County.
*
Manchester, which was consolidated by mutual agreement with the
City of Richmond in 1910.
*
South Boston, which gave up its city charter in 1994, and is now an
incorporated town in
Halifax County.
*
South Norfolk, which merged with
Norfolk County in 1963 to form the
City of Chesapeake.
Two other independent cities existed only for a short time:
*
Nansemond, created from the former
Nansemond County in 1972, was merged in 1974 with the then-City of Suffolk and three
unincorporated towns within the county's former boundaries to form today's
City of Suffolk.
*
Warwick, which was formed from the former
Warwick County in 1952, was in 1958 consolidated by mutual agreement with the newly-expanded
City of Newport News.
Other states
Some states have created independent cities in order to cater for the special requirements of governing their largest cities and/or capitals:
*The
City of Baltimore,
Maryland, has been separate from
Baltimore County since 1851.
*The
City of St. Louis,
Missouri, was separated from
St. Louis County in 1876.
*
Carson City,
Nevada consolidated with
Ormsby County in 1969; however, Ormsby County was simultaneously dissolved.
Other entities similar to independent cities
An independent city is not the same as:
* A
consolidated city-county (such as
San Francisco,
Philadelphia,
Jacksonville,
Indianapolis,
Nashville,
New Orleans, or
Louisville), in which both city and county (or in New Orleans' case, parish) government has been merged.
* A completely urbanized county such as
Arlington,
Virginia.
* The
City of New York, which is a
sui generis jurisdiction: the city is made up of five
boroughs, each of which is territorially contiguous with a county.
*
Washington, D.C., which, like the capitals of many other countries (see below), has a special status. It is not part of any
state; instead, it comprises the entirety of the
District of Columbia, which, in accordance with Article 1, Section 8 of the
U.S. Constitution, is under the jurisdiction of the
U.S. Congress. When founded, the District was in fact divided into two counties and two independent cities.
Alexandria County (which now forms
Arlington County and a portion of the independent city of
Alexandria) was given back to Virginia in 1846, while the three remaining entities (the City of Washington,
Georgetown City and
Washington County) were merged into a consolidated government by an act of Congress in
1871 and Georgetown was formally abolished as a city entity by another act in
1895. Congress has established a
home rule government for the city, although city laws can be overridden by Congress. This is fairly rare, however, and so in practice the city operates much like other independent cities in the United States, although technically, it does not meet the legal definition of one.
* Cities and towns in
New England traditionally have very strong governments while counties have correspondingly less importance. Today, most counties in southern New England (
Connecticut,
Rhode Island, and
Massachusetts) have almost no governmental institutions or roles associated with them (aside from serving as a basis for court districts). However, somewhat like the
ceremonial counties of England, counties in southern New England still have a nominal existence, and so no city or town in those three states is truly separate from a county. The U.S. Census Bureau still uses counties, and not cities or towns, as its base unit of statistical measurement in New England.
In the
Canadian province of
Ontario, the same type of city is referred to as a
single-tier municipality. In
Quebec they are often called separated cities, as they are not
Regional County Municipalities.
Austria
In
Austria, a similar concept is the
Statutarstadt.
Germany
See also: List of German urban districts.In
Germany, different
states have either the
Stadtkreis ("Urban District") or
Kreisfreie Stadt (literally, "District-Free City").
Examples of German independent cities are:
*
Flensburg*
Neuburg an der Donau*
Salzgitter*
MunichHungary
See also: List of towns in HungaryIn
Hungary 23 of the cities are "cities with county rights", these cities have equal rights with the 19 counties of Hungary.
United Kingdom and Ireland
Some cities in the
United Kingdom are a
unitary authority, and could be considered to be independent cities. In the UK, however, "city" has no inherent status;
city status depends on a grant from the
monarch and merely confers on the place so-designated the right to call itself a city. The standard for such a right is typically based on whether the entity has a cathedral.
County borough referred to a
borough or a city independent of
county council control in
England and
Wales from 1889 to 1972 with the term continuing in use in
Northern Ireland and the
Republic of Ireland. Wales re-introduced the term in 1994 for use with certain unitary authorities.
Under the
administrative division system of the
Republic of China (effectively controlling
Taiwan and
islands since 1949), some cities are
directly administered by the
Executive Yuan, some are
administered by provinces, and some are
subordinate to counties. The centrally-adminsitered and province-administered ones are like independent cities under this definition.
A number of countries have made their national capitals into separate entities. For example
Copenhagen, the capital of
Denmark, is outside of the country's system of counties, as is the capital of Romania,
Bucharest. The capital of the United States is not within any of the 50 states.
Federal capitals
In countries with a
federal structure, the federal capital is usually separate from other jurisdictions in the country, and frequently has a unique system of government.
Examples include:
*The
Australian capital,
Canberra, is situated in the
Australian Capital Territory;
Bogotá,
Colombia, is formally
Bogotá, Distrito Capital (Capital District).
India has a
National Capital Territory of Delhi, which includes
New Delhi, the capital, and
Delhi.
*
Buenos Aires,
Brasília,
Caracas, and
Mexico City, the capitals of
Argentina,
Brazil,
Venezuela, and
Mexico respectively, are each located in a
Federal District.
*
Consolidated city-county*
County borough*
Unitary authority*
City-state