Under the Local Government Act 1894, Rural Sanitary Districts became Rural Districts from 28 December 1894. The link with the Poor Law Union continued, with all the elected councillors of the Rural District Council being ex officio members of the Ampthill Board of Guardians. The first meeting of the new council was held on 3 January 1895 in the board room of the Ampthill Union Workhouse. The council's first chairman, Edward Crouch, had been the chairman of the previous Board of Guardians.[3]
In 1900 the district was significantly enlarged, when the neighbouring Woburn Rural District was abolished, with the majority of the former Woburn district becoming part of the Ampthill Rural District.
The rural district contained the following civil parishes. All the parishes added to the district in 1900 were from the abolished Woburn Rural District:
Until the 1930s the council continued to use the board room of the Ampthill Union Workhouse at 1 Dunstable Street in Ampthill as its meeting place. Administrative office functions were carried out at various premises both in the town of Ampthill and in neighbouring Flitwick.[5] The council acquired a large house called The Limes at 12 Dunstable Street in Ampthill, which became their offices and meeting place in 1939.[6]
The Limes was demolished and replacement offices built on the site in 1963–1965 to the designs of Sir Albert Richardson.[7]
Abolition
In 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972, it was merged with other districts to form the new Mid Bedfordshire district. The new Mid Bedfordshire District Council continued to use the offices at 12 Dunstable Street until 2006. The area now forms part of Central Bedfordshire.