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Elliott Brown History & heritage
12 Feb 2023 - Elliott Brown
Did you know?

Guided tour of the Birmingham Back to Backs from the National Trust

Having pre-booked a guided tour of the Birmingham Back to Backs, we went to the National Trust property on Hurst Street and Inge Street in Southside on Friday 10th February 2023, for the 10:20am tour. Before starting there was an exhibition space to check out. The tour itself with a knowledgeable volunteer, took well over an hour and a half to get around the houses and the tailoring shop.

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Guided tour of the Birmingham Back to Backs from the National Trust





Having pre-booked a guided tour of the Birmingham Back to Backs, we went to the National Trust property on Hurst Street and Inge Street in Southside on Friday 10th February 2023, for the 10:20am tour. Before starting there was an exhibition space to check out. The tour itself with a knowledgeable volunteer, took well over an hour and a half to get around the houses and the tailoring shop.


Back to Backs

It is best to book your tour in advance for the Back to Backs, as they are usually fully booked if you arrive without pre-booked tickets at the Visitor Centre (corner of Hurst Street and Inge Street).

National Trust members go free (they will scan your card in the Visitor Centre). Otherwise, tickets for adults are £7.50 and for children £3.75 (ground floor only). The full guided tour costs for £9.50 for adults and £4.75 for children.

 

Hurst Street

The Visitor Centre is at the corner of Hurst Street and Inge Street, while the former George Saunders tailoring shop you will see during the guided tour. To the far left is the second hand book shop. Upstairs on the 1st and 2nd floors are the special exhibition rooms.

 

 

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Bham%20Back%20to%20Backs%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here's the exterior of George Saunders Tailoring. The tailor was here on Hurst Street from 1974 to 2001. You will see more of that from the guided tour.

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Bham%20Back%20to%20Backs%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

Inge Street

The guided tour starts outside the three terraced houses on Inge Street. The tour guides take the group of about 10 people through the gate.

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Bham%20Back%20to%20Backs%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

Special exhibition

In 2023, the Back to Backs is the proud host of a special exhibition called From City of Empire to City of Diversity. This is on the floors above the second hand bookshop.

The exhibition tells the tale of Birmingham from City Status in 1889 to the present day, with people of South Asian and Caribbean heritage very much part of this exhibition. It is on the 1st and 2nd floors, accessed via the narrow spiral style staircases (with hand rails and grips to go up and down).

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/FCECD%20BBtB%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/FCECD%20BBtB%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Back to Backs" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/FCECD%20BBtB%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

Court 15 - inner courtyard

This is the only surviving courtyard in the block. Built after 1801, there used to be other courts of back to back houses down Hurst Street, Bromsgrove Street, Essex Street and Inge Street. The rest were demolished. Court 15 was restored after 2001, and opened as a museum by the National Trust in 2004.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

To the far left are three outdoor privies (toilets). The one on the left was just a hole with a bucket below. The second was a flushing toilet with long pull cord. 

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

On this side is the Wash House, women would work hard all day washing and cleaning clothes and sheets etc, manually.  There was no plumbing or mod cons back in the 19th century.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Outside is a bike, a child's wheelchair and what looks like a skateboard.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(4).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Some rooms above had windows with views to the courtyard below. Here's the Wash Room again.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(5).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Other groups were visiting Back to Backs at different times. This group were near the privies, so at the end of their guided tour.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(6).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

We were taken into three houses. The left was set up as the 1840's for the Levy's. Then the 1870's for the Oldfield's. Finally the 1930's with the Mitchell Brothers.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(7).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

There is a bicycle outside of one of the houses.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(8).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here's the 1840's house in the corner.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(9).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

This is the alleyway we came into at the beginning of the tour from Inge Street. They lock the gate now, but it never used to be locked back in the day.

dndimg alt="Court 15" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/C15%20Birm%20BtB%2010022023%20(10).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

Wash Room

The Wash Room or laundry room is accessed from the inner courtyard. There is so much manual equipment and tools here to wash and dry your clothes and women would be doing this all day long. There is also shoe polish and a basic iron for ironing clothes.

dndimg alt="Wash Room" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/WR%20Bham%20BtB%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Wash Room" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/WR%20Bham%20BtB%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

House 1 - 1840's Levy's

The first house you enter from the inner courtyard is on the far left. It is set up as an 1840's home of the Levy's, who were Jewish. The dining table is set up with bread and wine with candles on the table. Although the candle sticks would normally be close together. 

dndimg alt="1840's Levy's" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201840s%20Levys%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

The daughter had to share a room with her parents, but the boys had their room on the top floor. They got the beds through the window, as the staircase was way too narrow to carry beds up to the rooms. There was a potty under the bed.

dndimg alt="1840's Levy's" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201840s%20Levys%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here is the fireplace in the bedroom and a dressing table.

dndimg alt="1840's Levy's" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201840s%20Levys%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Three beds are in the boys room on the 2nd floor. There was also unfurnished rooms on the top floor to show how bad a condition the property was before it was restored from 2001-4.

dndimg alt="1840's Levy's" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201840s%20Levys%2010022023%20(4).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

House 2 - 1870's The Oldfield's

30 years later, the middle house in the 1870's was the home of the Oldfield family.

There is a bedroom workstation for making clock hands during the day. They would put their own thing onto the attachment at the front.

dndimg alt="1870s Oldfields" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201870s%20Oldfields%2010022023%20(4).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

In one bedroom, a curtain divides the beds from the lodgers.

dndimg alt="1870s Oldfields" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201870s%20Oldfields%2010022023%20(1).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

There are some rabbit ornaments on the dressing table next to the light, with a hand mirror.

dndimg alt="1870s Oldfields" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201870s%20Oldfields%2010022023%20(2).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

Downstairs, there is a kitchen table with basic food and a candle stick lit in the middle.

dndimg alt="1870s Oldfields" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201870s%20Oldfields%2010022023%20(3).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

House 3 - 1930's The Mitchell Brothers

No, not the Mitchell Brothers from Eastenders! In this case, the Mitchell Brothers were elderly men in their 60's or 70's living during the 1930's. The decade of three Kings (George V, Edward VIII and George VI) and the start of WW2.

dndimg alt="1930s Mitchells" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201930s%20Mitchells%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

On the window sill on the ground floor, there is a potted plant, some jugs, playing cards etc.

dndimg alt="1930s Mitchells" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201930s%20Mitchells%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

A Bakelite radio is on the ground floor with a mirror and other objects.

dndimg alt="1930s Mitchells" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201930s%20Mitchells%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

There are items above a chest of drawers in one of the bedrooms. There are some books or notebooks plus a clock and candle sticks.

dndimg alt="1930s Mitchells" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201930s%20Mitchells%2010022023%20(4).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

1970's George Saunders Tailoring

George Saunders, from the West Indies, set up his tailoring business on Hurst Street in 1974. He stayed until he retired in 2001 (before the houses were restored). He mainly made suits for men. All of the contents are original as he left them.

dndimg alt="1970s Saunders" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201970s%20G%20Saunders%2010022023%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here is one of the machines for making or pressing buttons.

dndimg alt="1970s Saunders" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201970s%20G%20Saunders%2010022023%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here is a table with some magazines and a radio.

dndimg alt="1970s Saunders" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201970s%20G%20Saunders%2010022023%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Here is the ground floor shop, George's desk with phone, postcards etc.

dndimg alt="1970s Saunders" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/BBtB%201970s%20G%20Saunders%2010022023%20(4).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Photography by Elliott Brown

We hope you have enjoyed this post and tour of Back to Backs. 

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Elliott Brown Rivers, lakes & canals
17 Nov 2022 - Elliott Brown
Gallery

Selly Oak Winding Hole 2022 update

The Winding Hole in Selly Oak, near the Bristol Road was built and completed during 2022. At the Worcester & Birmingham Canal, the restoration of the Lapal Canal (Dudley No. 2 Canal) at Selly Oak Junction, which some day in the future will be restored to Halesowen. Until then, the area where narrowboats can turn onto this to be restored canal is now finished. Boats even moor there.

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Selly Oak Winding Hole 2022 update





The Winding Hole in Selly Oak, near the Bristol Road was built and completed during 2022. At the Worcester & Birmingham Canal, the restoration of the Lapal Canal (Dudley No. 2 Canal) at Selly Oak Junction, which some day in the future will be restored to Halesowen. Until then, the area where narrowboats can turn onto this to be restored canal is now finished. Boats even moor there.


Previous post from May 2021: Selly Oak Winding Hole until 2021.

 

During 2022, the Lapal Canal Trust worked to have the Winding Hole built. work was well underway in spring 2022, and was open by autumn 2022. In the future, they will need to dig out the canal under Sainsbury's and next to Selly Oak Shopping Park, towards Harborne Lane and through Selly Oak Park towards Weoley Castle. But that is a long way off for now.

The area, also called Whitehouse Wharf was open on the 25th September 2022 to boats.

 

May 2021

View from the Worcester & Birmingham Canal, the towpath near an entrance to Selly Oak Shopping Park, as a Cross Country Trains Class 170 passes over the railway. The future Winding Hole site is to the right of here. Seen on the 29th May 2021.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/XC170%20Selly%20Oak%20Jctn%20(May%202021).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

August 2021

Views from the passing train on the Cross City Line. There was still grass on the Winding Hole site at the time. View towards the Unite student accommodation with Sainsbury's behind it, on the 15th August 2021.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Winding%20Hole%20Selly%20Oak%20(Aug%202021)%20(1).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Winding%20Hole%20Selly%20Oak%20(Aug%202021)%20(2).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

January 2022

Early signs that they will soon be digging out the Winding Hole for the Lapal Canal Trust. Seen from the Worcester & Birmingham Canal towpath near the Unite student accommodation on the 8th January 2022.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/WB%20Canal%20Selly%20Oak%20SP%2008012022.jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

May 2022

By the spring of 2022, work was well underway to dig the grass and soil out of the Winding Hole site, as they secured the site so water didn't get in. Seen from the footbridge that will one day be the entrance to the Lapal Canal (under Sainsbury's) on the 21st May 2022.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Winding%20Hole%20Selly%20Oak%20WB%2021052022%20(1).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Winding%20Hole%20Selly%20Oak%20WB%2021052022%20(2).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

October 2022

By the autumn of 2022, the Selly Oak Winding Hole was complete, as can be seen from the footbridge and canal towpath. There was even a boat and narrowboat moored at it on the 2nd October 2022.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2002102022%20(1).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2002102022%20(2).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2002102022%20(3).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2002102022%20(4).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2002102022%20(5).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

A couple of weekends later, on the 16th October 2022, this time I got the Selly Oak Winding Hole from the pocket park on the other side of the canal, heading for the Selly Oak Shopping Park via the footbridge that opened in 2021. Two narrowboats moored here this time.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2016102022%20(1).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2016102022%20(2).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/SO%20Winding%20Hole%2016102022%20(3).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

November 2022

I got the train one way from Birmingham New Street to Selly Oak, on the 6th November 2022. Leaving via Bristol Road, it was raining, and saw this view to the Winding Hole. Much more pleasant to see than what it used to look like in the past.

dndimg alt="Selly Oak Winding Hole" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Selly%20Oak%20Winding%20Hole%2006112022.jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

Photography by Elliott Brown

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Elliott Brown Art; Culture & creativity
14 Nov 2022 - Elliott Brown
Gallery

Faraday statue by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi at the University of Birmingham

On the occasion of the Centenary of the University of Birmingham in the year 2000, the sculptor Sir Eduardo Paolozzi presented the University with a bronze statue called Faraday. It was placed at the West Gate of the University. Close to the School of Computer Science. It would be the first thing students, staff and visitors would see after getting off the train or bus nearby.

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Faraday statue by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi at the University of Birmingham





On the occasion of the Centenary of the University of Birmingham in the year 2000, the sculptor Sir Eduardo Paolozzi presented the University with a bronze statue called Faraday. It was placed at the West Gate of the University. Close to the School of Computer Science. It would be the first thing students, staff and visitors would see after getting off the train or bus nearby.


Faraday by Sir Eduardo Paolozzi

In the year 2000, when the University of Birmingham celebrated it's Centenary, the artist Sir Eduardo Paolozzi gifted a bronze statue called Faraday. It was placed at the West Gate, on University Road West, outside of the School of Computer Science. You would see it when arriving at University Station, and walking towards University Square and Old Joe (and other parts of the campus). Even if you get off a bus, or walk from the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, or Selly Oak Shopping Park (via Aston Webb Boulevard and New Fosse Way) you'd probably see it. Or it would be the last thing you see before heading into University Station, before catching a train on the Cross City Line up to Birmingham New Street.

The statue was probably inspired or named after Michael Faraday, who was an English scientist, who studied electromagnetism and electrochemistry. Various things were named after him. There is a statue of Faraday in London at Savoy Place.

 

Sir Eduardo Paolozzi CBE, RA (1924-2005) Faraday.
Bronze, 2000. West Gate, outside University Railway Station

Sir Eduardo Paolozzi said of this colossal bronze sculpture, commissioned to mark the centenary of the University of Birmingham's Royal Charter, that is was 'not of Faraday, but for him'. Faraday discovered the laws of electro-magnetic rotation and electrical induction and, among many other principles, explored the science of terrestrial magnetism. The loops of bronze between the figure's hands are a visual manifestation of natural fields of force.

Paolozzi has here articulated the achievements of all experimental scientists who unlock and transform understanding of natural phenomena, and has also created an allegorical figure representing the control of power. His figure of another great scientist, Newton (1995), stands outside the British Library (in London). Cut in the bronze around the base of the figure are lines from The Dry Salvages by T.S. Eliot. These reflect upon growth and change, and bear a valuable message for University students: 'Here between the hither and the further shore. While time is withdrawn, consider the future. And the past with an equal mind.'

 

I first photographed the Faraday statue in February 2013. There was a small bird on his head, and a tag around one of it's ankles. As a man looked on.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Faraday%20UoB%20(Feb%202013).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

 

Took Faraday again during January 2019. This time without any one or any objects on it. There appears to be a bench around the plinth.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Faraday%20UoB%20(Jan%202019).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

I next photographed the statue during June 2021. This time a view with 'Old Joe' the Joseph Chamberlain Memorial Clock Tower. At the time, the clock hands were being taken down, ahead of the clock getting repaired that year.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Old%20Joe%20Faraday%20(Jun%202021).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

In the other direction from behind Faraday, you can see part of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Faraday%20QEHB%20(Jun%202021).jpg" style="width: 100%;" />

I also found a bronze plaque about Faraday by Eduardo Paolozzi (1924 - 2005). A gift from the artist to mark the Centenary of the University. 2000.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Faraday%20UoB%20(Jun%202021).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

In late August 2022, there was still Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Game wraps on the School of Computer Science, behind Faraday, including an image of the infamous Perry the Bull (remember him?) and 'Sport is just the beginning'.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/B2022%20UoB%2027082022%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

 

By October 2022, these had been replaced by the University of Birmingham, behind Faraday with 'Proud to be a World Top 100 University' and 'Welcome Game Changers'.

dndimg alt="Faraday" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/UoB%20Game%20Changers%2016102022.JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Photography by Elliott Brown

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Elliott Brown Art; Culture & creativity
07 Nov 2022 - Elliott Brown
Gallery

Museum of the Moon at Lichfield Cathedral

Another Luke Jerram work of public art on display. Museum of the Moon was at Lichfield Cathedral from the 21st September to 31st October 2022. Elliott got a train on the Cross City Line to Lichfield City (on the 30th October 2022), and after a Costa stop at Three Spires, walked to the cathedral. During the day the entry ticket was free (paid evening tickets were sold out).

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Museum of the Moon at Lichfield Cathedral





Another Luke Jerram work of public art on display. Museum of the Moon was at Lichfield Cathedral from the 21st September to 31st October 2022. Elliott got a train on the Cross City Line to Lichfield City (on the 30th October 2022), and after a Costa stop at Three Spires, walked to the cathedral. During the day the entry ticket was free (paid evening tickets were sold out).


See also Gaia at Millennium Point (February 2022)

I was first aware of Museum of the Moon after Birmingham People with Passion Damien Walmsley and later Jack Babington visited and took photos at Lichfield Cathedral.

 

Museum of the Moon is a touring artwork by UK artist Luke Jerram.

Measuring seven metres in diameter, the moon features 120dpi detailed NASA imagery of the lunar surface. At an approximate scale of 1:500,000, each centimetre of the internally lit spherical sculpture represents 5km of the moon’s surface*.

Over its lifetime, the Museum of the Moon will be presented in a number of different ways both indoors and outdoors, so altering the experience and interpretation of the artwork. As it travels from place to place, it gathers new musical compositions and an ongoing collection of personal responses, stories and mythologies, as well as highlighting the latest moon science.

The installation is a fusion of lunar imagery, moonlight and surround sound composition created by BAFTA and Ivor Novello award winning composer Dan Jones. Each venue also programmes their own series lunar inspired events beneath the moon.

 

It has been over six years since I last got a train from Birmingham New Street to Lichfield City. Back then I did a spire climb at St Mary's in the Market Square.

I found out that this moon exhibit in Lichfield Cathedral was ending on the 31st October, so I got the train up on Sunday the 30th October 2022. It got in around 12:30pm, and was there around 20 minutes, including a look around the inside of the Cathedral on the ground floor.

It appears that there is other moons at other venues all around the world, same with Gaia, the Earth sculpture.

Submitted one photo to the Birmingham Post & Mail Flickr group, and it got published in the Birmingham Mail readers letters page on Tuesday 1st November 2022, you can see that photo at the end of the gallery below.

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(1).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(2).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(3).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(4).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(5).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(6).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(7).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(8).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

dndimg alt="Museum of the Moon" dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/MoM%20Lichfield%20Cath%20(Oct%202022)%20(9).JPG" style="width: 100%;" />

Photography by Elliott Brown

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Elliott Brown People & community
31 Oct 2022 - Elliott Brown
Inspiration
Northfield - Take a tour with us!

Northfield - Take a tour with us!

Birmingham has much more to offer than its magnificent city centre. There are some fascinating places to experience out in the neighbourhoods. Here's a look at Northfield. Well worth a visit. For history, there's St Laurence's Church and the Great Stone. Victoria Common is a great open space and not far away is Manor Farm Park.

Take our article.

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Northfield - Take a tour with us!





Birmingham has much more to offer than its magnificent city centre. There are some fascinating places to experience out in the neighbourhoods. Here's a look at Northfield. Well worth a visit. For history, there's St Laurence's Church and the Great Stone. Victoria Common is a great open space and not far away is Manor Farm Park.

Take our article.


How to get to Northfield?

Take the no 61 or 63 bus from Birmingham and travel along Bristol Road South to Northfield High Street; catch a train on the Cross City Line to Northfield station; or take a cycle ride which will take in some great sights along the canal.

If travelling by train, we recommend you buy a ticket in advance using the West Midlands Railway app and you will get a QR code to scan at the ticket gates at Birmingham New Street. Paper tickets are still available to buy at the automatic ticket machines or at staffed ticket desks.

The train takes a scenic route via Five Ways, Birmingham University, Selly Oak and Bournville, before arriving at Northfield. Some sections of this run alongside the Worcester & Birmingham Canal.

 

Northfield Station

Welcome to Northfield Station. You get off the train at Platform 4. Head towards the exit via the subway. You can either take the exit towards Station Road, or via the subway head to the station building and exit at Copse Close via Quarry Lane.

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Take the Station Road exit if you want to head to the old Northfield Village, where you will find St Laurence's Church and the Great Stone Inn.

From Station Road, walk up to Church Hill Road. Walk under the railway bridge, until you get to St Laurence's Church.

 

St Laurence's Church

St Laurence's Church has origins going back to the 12th century, with elements dating from the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries. The church is part of a conservation area.

The last major change to the church took place in the year 1900, when G F Bodley built the north aisle in the 14th century style.

The major 13th century feature is the chancel. The south chancel and lower stage of the west tower also dates to the 13th Century.

A 4 bay octagonal pier arcade at the south chancel dates to the 14th Century.

The upper tower was built during the 15th Century.

The roof is most likely a 15th century replacement of an earlier 13th century nave roof.

The church has Royal Arms from the Hanoverian period. The church was built of sandstone.

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After the church, it is a short distance to the Great Stone Inn and the Village Pound, at the corner of Church Hill and Church Road.

 

The Great Stone and the Village Pound

The Great Stone Inn is an historic public house at the corner of Church Hill and Church Road.

The Inn probably dates back to the 18th century. 

It is a timber-framed building with painted brick and a tile roof.

The Inn is close to St Laurence Church in the historic old Northfield village. It is now a traditional pub with a beer garden run by Great Pubs.

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A few meters away on Church Road is The Village Pound, and the current location of the historic Great Stone which the Inn was named after.

Dating back to the 17th century, The Village Pound was a high walled structure used to keep livestock in, such as stray cattle, pigs and sheep.

The Village Pound is now the home of the Great Stone, moved by Birmingham City Council to this site in 1954. It is a glacial bolder formed in a volcanic eruption 450 - 460 million years ago. 

For generations The Great Stone was at the corner of Church Road and Church Hill in Northfield, where it protected the Inn wall. A glacial erratic bolder that was former in an explosive volcanic eruption during the Ordovician period, 450-460 million years ago. During the ice age, possibly up to 400,000 years ago, it was carried by an ice sheet from the Snowdon area of North Wales and deposited with many others around Northfield when the area was a frozen wasteland.

Birmingham City Council moved the boulder to this site in 1954 for road safety reasons.

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Next, we recommend taking a short walk up Church Road towards Great Stone Road.

Cross over the road at the traffic lights, then walk towards Northfield Library.

Walk up Meeting House Lane to get into Victoria Common Recreation Ground.

 

Victoria Common

This is a great recreation ground hidden behind Northfield Shopping Centre.

You will find playgrounds and tennis courts here plus paths for walking. There's plenty of green open spaces to enjoy.

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After your walk round Victoria Common head to the path that leads to the Bristol Road South, and walk down Northfield High Street for a bit of retail therapy. 

You can alternatively walk down Sir Herbert Austin Way and pop into the Starbucks Coffee Drive Thru. Alternatively, there are many cafes and places to eat in Northfield.

If you fancy a meal in a traditional pub, in addition to the Great Stone Inn, there's The Black Horse located on Bristol Road South (near Frankley Beeches Road).

 

The Black Horse

The Black Horse opened on the 1st December1929  and was designed for the Davenport Brewery,by Francis Goldsbrough (from the local architectural practice of Bateman and Bateman).

The Black Horse is one of the largest and finest examples of a Brewer’s Tudor-style public house in the country.

It was registered a Grade II listed building in 1981. JD Wetherspoon refurbished the pub in May 2010. 

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If you are not too full, next have a walk to Ley Hill Park. Leave the Black Horse, and head past Sainsbury's via Sir Herbert Austin Way. Or if you had a toastie or panini with your coffee at Starbucks, you just have to walk up Vineyard Road, past Bellfield Junior School. The park is at the top of the hill.

 

Ley Hill Park

You can enter this park from the entrance at Merritt's Brook Lane. Take any path you want for your walk, or walk onto the grass if it's not too wet. Head up to the top of the hill for views down to the Northfield High Street.

There is a play area, plus benches to sit on.

You can exit the park at Merritt's Hill and walk down the road towards Brookside.

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Now head into Merritt's Brook Greenway, and walk along the path, following the Merritt's Brook towards Bell Hill. Cross over the road at the traffic lights near Whitehill Lane and enter Manor Farm Park.

 

Manor Farm Park

This park was once the home of George and Elizabeth Cadbury, who lived at the Northfield Manor House (until their respective deaths).

The park opened to the public in 1951.

Follow the paths around the park with a 2 kilometre walking route. See our suggested trail HERE.

You will walk past a lake. The Manor House is nearby. The park also has a play area and old farm buildings. dndimg dndsrc="../uploadedfiles/Manor%20Farm%20Park%20(April%202017)%20(1)%20.jpg" />

If you exit near the lake at New House Farm Drive, perhaps have a detour up to the Northfield Manor House? Just walk until you get to Manor House Drive.

 

Northfield Manor House

The original house was built in the early 1800s.

George Cadbury purchased the property in 1890, and he moved in with his wife Elizabeth in 1894.

They named it Manor Farm.

The lived here until his death in 1922 and her's in 1951.

The University of Birmingham took it over, and converted it into a hall of residence from 1958, but it ceased this function by 2007.

Years of dereliction lead to arsonists (teenagers) burning it down in 2014.

Partial demolition in 2015, followed by a full restoration between 2019 and 2021.

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Head down Manor House Drive, back onto New House Farm Drive and onto Bristol Road South.

Leave the park at Bristol Road South. A short walk away is another property once owned by George Cadbury. This is the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital.

 

Royal Orthopaedic Hospital

A house called The Woodlands was built on this site around 1840.

It was later to become one of George Cadbury's homes, who in 1907 gave it to the then named "Cripples Children's Union".

After various mergers, what has now become known as the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, was firmly based on this site.

At one point they had an Outpatients Department on Broad Street at Islington House (this lasted until the end of the 20th century). One of the surgeons based here was Mr Naughton Dunn (from 1913 to 1939), who was a national pioneer and Birmingham's first orthopaedic specialist.

The hospital has been part of the NHS since it's founding in 1948.

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We hope you enjoyed this tour of Northfield. 

If you have return tickets on the train, walk back to Northfield Station. Alternatively, head to a bus stop on Bristol Road South. If getting a bus, we recommend that you have a Swift card, and buy your ticket at National Express West Midlands in advance. Otherwise, you will need to pay a cash fare, or use contactless. Alternatively, you can have the NXWM app and buy your ticket on there. Bus routes include the 20, 61 and 63 from National Express West Midlands or the 144 from First Midland Red.

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Photography by Elliott Brown

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