Walsall Wood brave, but blocked by Basford

Photos and captions from yesterday’s Basford match kindly supplied by David Evans

Yesterday afternoon (Saturday 21st March 2015) Walsall Wood travelled to Nottingham to square off against Basford United, who they lost to at Oak Park a couple of weeks ago. Sadly, the Wood failed to reverse the situation, but put up a brave show against the league leaders.

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

Another battling performance by the Wood, I make no apologies for quoting word for word from the Basford programme about the game a week last Tuesday.

‘Walsall Wood that night showed exactly what they are capable of with a first half performance that ranks as one of the best against us all season. Only some dogged defending and to be honest, a slice of luck, ensured we reached half time in front. The match was great entertainment and we look forward to the same today.’

Well we weren’t disappointed in the quality of the game, only the result. Basford took the three points but it could so easily have gone against them, the contest was that close. The difference being we don’t have a ball magnet like Ruben Wiggins-Thomas who could be found from anywhere on the field. Let’s face it, his goal tally is unbelievable and he’s still a few games to go, question is can he make 50 for the season?

Next up for Wood it’s Alvechurch at Oak Park on Tuesday night 27th March. Because of ongoing ground work there is NO VEHICULAR ACCESS TO THE GROUND AFTER MONDAY 26TH MARCH 2015 – sorry everyone.

Next Saturday it’s Westfield the visitors, vehicular access should be back to normal for this game.

Basford Unted 3 v 1 Walsall Wood

Wood again gave Champions elect Basford United a run for their money, with them 2-1 down and pressing for an equaliser a miskick out of defence was presented to Ruben Wiggins-Thomas who immediately released Ryan Whitehurst who raced into the box to slot home goal No. 3 and condemn Wood to their first double defeat of the season and with Coleshill and Long Eaton losing extend Basford’s lead to six points.

Wood started the better, after just a minute Corey Currithers crossed from the left to find Max Black, his first time low drive deflecting off a defender and just clearing the bar. A minute later a ball inside was collected at full pace by Black, his low drive just wide. On four minutes a powerful forward header by Anthony Juxon was touched back by Joey Butlin to Harry Harris to fire a rising first time effort just too high. From a right wing corner on seven minutes the ball was played short to Craig Deakin, his low cross cut out by Daniel Fletcher, Jamie Sauntson onto the loose ball, Fletcher blocking his shot.

Having weathered the storm Basford forced a left wing corner, Rob Darkin seeing his header come back off a defender to Ryan Whitehurst, his first time shot blocked by Deakin. Disaster for Wood when on 12 minutes a quickly taken free kick on halfway put Ruben Wiggins-Thomas racing into the centre of the box only to be brought down from behind by Lee Stretton. No argument about the penalty, Wiggins-Thomas from the spot 1-0.

Four minutes later skipper Deon Meikle ghosted in to head just wide from a left wing corner.

Wood went close two minutes later, Butlin was fouled 25 yards out, he took the free kick himself, the ball deflecting off the wall, Saul Deeney tipping the ball over. The corner was headed just wide by Stretton. Five minutes later Currithers won the ball on halfway, his ball through the defence just eluding Black, Deeney saving bravely. An awful mistake in midfield let in Joshua Thornton who raced into the left of the box, keeper Mario Kisiel with a brave full length save.

Black hit a 25 yard low drive wide on 31 minutes and seven minutes later a 20 yard Butlin free kick was tipped over by Deeney at full stretch. The corner easily cleared.

The home side had the last word, Wiggins-Thomas capitalising on a bounce off Stretton on halfway and racing for goal, Stretton racing back to push the ball behind for a right wing corner. The flag kick to the near post powered home from the head of Darkin.

It was all Wood from the restart, pressuring the home side into attempted hurried clearances, but on 48 minutes with the ball flying around the box Black took charge to hammer the ball into the roof of the net, to put Wood right back in the contest.

The goal galvanised the home side into action, Wiggins-Thomas racing clear on 54 minutes, Kisiel racing from his line to make another superb full length save. Two minutes later Kisiel denying him again with another great save. Then Wiggins-Thomas put Ben Fairclough into the left of the box, he set up Stuart Hendrie at the far post who stabbed the ball wide. It was Wiggins-Thomas racing into the right of the box on 62 minutes, another great save from Kisiel denying him.

A minute later Deakin came in at pace from wide right but was fouled just outside the box, Harris saw his free kick collected at the second attempt by keeper Deeney.

Then a rampaging right wing run by Jahred Russell saw him cut inside, his low far post just in front of Whitehurst. A miskick from the resulting goal kick went straight to Wiggins-Thomas who instantly released Whitehurst into the right of the box to run on and hammer the ball past the advancing Kisiel.

Wood tried to get back into the game but just couldn’t make the all important breakthrough that would have made the last few minutes intriguing. Then right on 90 minutes Russell raced into the right of the box, turned his marker inside out and fired a rising drive over the far angle. Now that would have been an injustice had it gone in.

This is Wood’s second season at this level, Basford United are the first side to do the double over them in 72 games, it says how good the Champions elect are – enough said.

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

Walsall Wood are a good team and an excellent, community-spirited club. They need and deserve

our support.

As ever, thanks to Bill for the report – always appreciated – for The Good of the Wood!

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

July 1993 – Sister’s anguish over grave theft

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Brownhills Gazette July 1993 issue 46 – heartbreaking theft, a youngster winning a ballroom medal, Clayhanger Common wildlife, carnival picture special, and some great archive material. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 46 of the long lost freesheet, from July 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

Sadly, issue 44 (May 1993) is missing from the archive. If anyone has a copy we could scan please, do shout up!

This is another large 20 page issue, with a heartbreaking theft, a youngster winning a ballroom medal, Clayhanger Common wildlife, carnival picture special, and some great archive material.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 46 July 1993 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Aldridge Cinema – come see The Lego Movie this afternoon!

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A true star of the silver screen – Russell sets up the screen in preparation for the launch.

Ages ago, I ran a piece about a project to start a community cinema at Aldridge Youth Theatre, to bring films back to the local community – including Brownhills. The project would be in support of Aldridge Youth Theatre, where the screenings would take place.

I must confess I missed the fact that Aldridge Cinema was now up and running, but now I’m down with it I’ll be giving the project regular plugs.

The project garnered huge support on Facebook, and now has it’s own website. It’s getting fantastic reviews and is very busy!

This afternoon at 2:30pm (Saturday 21st March 2015), they are showing The Lego Movie. It’s just £4 a ticket and as normal popcorn and drinks are only 50p.

There are films running to a variety of tastes Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays.

Find out more about the Aldridge Cinema project here.

The-Lego-Movie

Great fun for all the family!

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Walsall Wood away to Basford this afternoon!

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Can the Woodmen slay the league leaders? Image from The Groundhopper.

Saturday 21st March 2015

Basford United entertain Walsall Wood

Get behind the local lads

Kick off is 3:00pm

Hopefully, a match report will follow…

For the Good of the Wood!

Check out Walsall Wood FC’s website here.

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Plea to find family of man who passed away in local hostel

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Stafford Street in Walsall. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

Yet another in a sudden spate of requests from Walsall Council to help trace the family of unfortunate souls who passed away locally seemingly without immediate friends or relatives.

I will always run these requests when I receive them – it must be horrid to lose a relative and not know; and nobody should pass unmourned if at all possible. Please share this request as widely as possible.

Yesterday, Walsall Environmental Heath Department have issued an appeal to trace the family of Alexander Grey, who passed away in a local hostel on the 9th March 2015.

The Department issued the following request:

Plea for family of deceased man

Local residents are being asked for their help in finding family members of a man who’s recently passed away.

Mr Alexander Grey, aged 58, was born on 25 January 1957.

He passed away on 9 March 2015 at Happy Times hostel in Stafford Street, Walsall.

Neil Harris, principal environmental health officer, said: ‘Mr Grey has been estranged from his family.

‘His wife died about 14 years ago and he has children but has had no contact with them for many years.

‘We understand that he used to travel as a psychic.

‘He was transferred to Happy Times from East Staffs Council but we are uncertain of where he lived before arriving in Walsall.

‘We would encourage anyone who thinks they may have information to get in touch.’

Please contact Rebecca Evans on 01922 653052 with any information.

Thanks in advance. If anyone would prefer no to contact the council directly for whatever reason, email me at BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot come and I’ll pass any messages on. 

Thanks.

Posted in Environment, Local History, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Brownhills Canal Festival – thanks – all stalls sorted!

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The 2014 Canalised festival was a real success, and I’m sure 2015’s will be even better!

The Clayhanger Kid – Brian Stringer who this week requested applications for new stalls for the Brownhills Canalside Festival, has been overwhelmed by the positive response, and would like to say thank you to all who contacted him and expressed an interest.

I personally have been forwarding mail to Brian like crazy, and I’m shocked at the number of enquiries – thanks from both Brian and Myself for such a wonderful, positive response. This year’s festival – on the 28th June 2015 – will be the best ever, thanks to you guys.

Brian sent me the following lovely message

Hi Bob.

Wow, what a response!

Wish we had more space but I think we’ll have to call a halt now. So if you could just put the word out for me, and thanks once again.

Cheers mate,
Brian

Again, thanks for the wonderful response. You guys are brilliant.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, cycling, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local media, Local music, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Still looking for Willian ‘Bill’ Baker please

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Walsall Wood: a fine place.

Thank you all for your wonderful response to my request last weekend to contact William John Baker, once resident in Walsall Wood.

It is thought William was born in 1943, and was either a son of Walsall Wood, or lived there for a while, and certainly around 1965.

Any further details for William would be a huge help, please. This is not bad news and there’s absolutely nothing to worry about, but it would be nice if we could get in touch.

I give you my word that I will not share personal details without the permission of those involved. This is one of those enquiries I get from time to time here on the blog, which I’m happy to run, but I can’t actually give information about publicly.

Cheers to those who’ve helped so far. You’re wonderful, thanks.

Mail me please: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Thanks
Bobk

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Walsall Wood not at home at the Rangers

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Stafford Rangers ground at Astonfields Road. Image from The Groundhog.

Last Tuesday evening (17th March 2015) the Woodmen were away at Stafford angers, and after a promising first hour, slid into a defeat in extra time.

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

So near and yet so far, we were well worth the two goal lead after an hour, but we let a nasty incident on 70 minutes unsettle us and Rangers capitalised in a crazy three minute spell just afterwards. The players have to learn however that sometimes there aint no justice, but if an official or his assistant doesn’t see an incident he can’t act on it, no matter how much you get upset, rant and rave at him.

It’s a little easy game to recuperate with, with us away at Champions elect Basford United on Saturday before we entertain Alvechurch on Tuesday night.

As I mentioned in the match report, we moved up to seventh in the league and it also means we finish the season on Saturday April 25th, without having to play three games per week, weather permitting of course.

Staffs Senior Cup Semi-Final
Stafford Rangers 4 v 2 Walsall Wood (AET)

Another night of high drama as Wood came close to upset No. 3 in this competition, before going out in extra time heartbreak.

It was Rangers who put Wood under early pressure, after five minutes Alex Curtis hitting a first time effort that was well held by keeper Mario Kisiel. He turned provider three minutes later, his high bouncing cross from wide left fired high over by Christian Dacres. Next it was James Dance powering down the right on 12 minutes, cutting inside and his far post cross was headed goal-wards by Dacres, Kisiel saving comfortably.

Wood’s first effort on goal came after 20 minutes, Corey Currithers winning a corner, Shawn Boothe’s header was hacked off the line but was collected by Max Black 20 yards out to send a first time effort inches wide. After an end to end spell with neither defence unduly troubled it was Harry Harris with a 60 yard pinpoint crossfield ball into the right of the box to find Craig Deakin, who ran on and fired a rising drive just too high.

A minute later it was Dance racing clear wide right, his high ball inside found Curtis who under pressure fired high over.

Wood came out all guns blazing at the start of the second half and deservedly went ahead on 52 minutes, Currithers cutting inside from wide right, going through three tackles and crossing low into the centre to Joey Butlin to fire home to open the scoring. It was the on fire Currithers causing mayhem on 59 minutes, again he scythed inside from wide right, his powerful low cross deflecting into the net off a defender to put Wood in dreamland.

On 63 minutes Nathan Smith’s ball into the centre of the box put Dacres in on goal, Andre Gonzales saving Wood with a brilliantly timed last ditch challenge.

Five minutes later Wood nearly made it three, Ben Evans racing into the right of the box, his curling drive just wide of the left hand post with keeper Adam Whitehouse beaten. On 70 minutes a nasty incident on the left of the Wood box was missed by the official, or he would have sent the player off, but it seemed to unsettle the Wood defence. Two minutes later Rangers were back in the game, from a right wing corner the ball flew around the box and in a mad scramble was forced over the line. Three minutes later it was all square, Smith hit a long ball forward, Dance climbed highest to glance the ball down into the path of Dacres who ran on and calmly slotted the ball past the advancing Kisiel.

A lovely move by Wood on 81 minutes nearly put them back in front, Ben Evans coming inside from wide left, holding the ball up well before crossing to beyond the far post to Anthony Juxon, he returned the ball into the centre and Black skimmed the bar with an acrobatic overhead kick.

Kisiel raced from his area on 85 minutes to kick clear from Dance and right on time Harris had a shot charged down – so we went to extra time.

As so often happens within two minutes we had a goal, Ryan Edmunds racing clear wide right, cutting in along the byeline before crossing to the far post for Dance to put Rangers ahead for the first time. From a left wing corner on11 minutes Juxon put a header just wide, then two minutes later Deakin raced into the right of the box, made the bye line, crossed low into the box the ball agonisingly just behind Butlin and Taylor Boyce

On 20 minutes Gonzales played a neat one-two wide left with Steven Hayles and released Taylor-Boyce into the left of the box, he went outside his marker and fired into the side netting. From the goal kick the ball found it’s way upfield into the right of the box and a penalty was given, Levi Reid the first player to beat Kisiel from the spot this season.

With 3 minutes to go Lee Stretton found Harris 30 yards out, he took one touch and fired in a dipping 30 yard effort that beat Whitehouse but came back off the bar.

So heartbreak in the end for Wood, but an entertaining 2 hours of very different style football, with the rustic coming out on top in the Swanny versus Kitch saga. It wasn’t all bad news for Wood however, as they moved back up to seventh in the league on goal difference after Westfields were hammered 6-1 at Loughborough University.

Bill Shaw.

Walsall Wood are a good team and an excellent, community-spirited club. They need our support.

As ever, thanks to Bill for the report – always appreciated – for The Good of the Wood!

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Stalls needed for the 2015 Brownhills Canalside Festival!

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The 2014 Canalised festival was a real success, and I’m sure 2015’s will be even better!

I have another request here and a bit of a plug from The Clayhanger Kid himself – Brian Stringer – who is again organising the Brownhills Canalside Festival for 2015, this year taking place on Sunday 28th June.

Brian is now sorted for musical entertainment, following a tremendous response to a request for acts here on the blog – you guys really did us proud, there.

Brian is currently looking for fresh stalls and attractions for the popular festival to compliment the regulars. You could be a crafter,  selling bric-a-brac, or exhibiting your artwork or other collection. Maybe you’re a charity, or local business who’d like to reach out to a lot of people quickly and easily?

Brian wrote:

Hi Bob,

I’m on the earhole again!

We need some fresh stalls at the canal festival this year as well as the regulars, so I wondered if an appeal on the blog would bring a few extra in?

For anyone selling stuff to raise funds it’s only £15 per pitch, or to stage an exhibition of your work or collection it’s free.

Anyone interested need only fill in a form which can be obtained by calling 01543 361144 or contact me and I’ll sort it.

It may be a bit early to plug the canal festival but I thought I’d put you in the picture so you can give it a go when you feel ready.

Thanks to the blog all the stage acts are now confirmed and the programme looks like this:

10 am.                       Official opening.
10-10 am.                 Brownhills spotlight group.
11 am.                       Wildfire Folk from Lichfield.
12 noon.                   Dr Brian Dakin with his Black country songs
and monologues.
12-30 pm.                Ukulele band from Aldridge.
2-00pm -2.45pm.  Anker Valley Boys from Tamworth.
3- 15 — 4pm           Anker Valley Boys.

Entertainment – Magic, Ballon art, and facepainting from Will. E Droppit who will be accompanied by Minnie and Mickey Mouse.

Ring 01543 361144 or me direct at 01543 821539.

Thanks,
Brian

Call Brian on either of the numbers above, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Thanks.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, cycling, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local media, Local music, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Get a woggle on!

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St, Thomas Church in Lazy Hill: a modern facility with a great community spirit. Image from Aldridgeparishchurch.org.

Reader Peter has been in touch with an important appeal – the Scout group at St. Tomas’s Church in Lazy Hill, between Aldridge and Walsall Wood, needs volunteer leaders.

I know a few old hands here were boy scouts, and this is a great organisation that does so much, not just for the kids, but also the coal community.

Peter wrote:

Hi Bob

I’m looking for some help and wondered if you could help?

Along with a number of other adults I run a Scout Group at St. Thomas’s Church in LazyHill, Aldridge. As ever we are looking for adult volunteers to help run the various sections. We are losing 2 or 3 leaders at the end of the Summer Term (July) this year and are actively advertising/recruiting for new Leaders. I wondered if you could run the appeal on your blog please Bob, we are advertising elsewhere and appealing of course for parental help, I’ve approached some of the local Schools and Churches also, if anyone thinks they might be interested and find out more or come forward as a potential new leader then could they leave a message on the blog or contact your good self please? There is a checking procedure to go through and of course any involvement would be after these checks had been performed, but that doesn’t stop people volunteering now though!

We meet on a Friday at St. Thomas’s Church and we are looking for a Scout Leader, Scouts meet between 8 and 9.30pm, the role is a relaxed but structured one with benefits for both the lads and adult volunteers, it is of course unpaid but can be fun. The Scout Group at Lazy Hill has been around since the late 1970’s and is thriving, we have 3 sections Beavers 6-8 years, Cubs 8-11 years and Scouts 11 years up, we have around 40 lads in total and a good core Leadership team, please help if you can.

Bob, if you would consider running the appeal We’d be very grateful, I can’t think of a better way of reaching thousands of people so quickly and easily…

Why not give me a call on 07798.634722 to find out more>

Cheers
Peter

Cheers Peter for the kind words. Always a pleasure. If you’d rather email in the first instance, drop me a line on BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com and I’ll pass it on.

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The Scouts are ace. Please lend a hand if you can!

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Police issue statement on Clayhanger burglary incident

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A burglary took place yesterday in Wych Elm Road, Clayhanger. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

Following the police incident in CLayhanger on Friday afternoon (13th March 2015) West Midlands Police have issued the following statement:

A man has been arrested following a burglary on Rose Drive in Clayhanger on Friday (13 March).

Police were called at around 2.35pm by the householder reporting a burglary in progress.

Officers raced to the scene with the National Police Air Service providing aerial support.

A man was arrested on nearby Bridge Street on suspicion of burglary.

The 33-year-old from the Cavendish Road in the Beechdale area was questioned and later released on conditional police bail while the investigation continues.

Items believed to have been stolen in the crime have also been seized by police. A forensic search of the house has been completed.

Anyone with information which may help officers should call police on 101.

For home security advice visit: www.west-midlands.police.uk

There has been a spate of burglaries and shed break-ins lately. If you’re offered cheap tools, car stereo equipment or gardening kit, think hard about where it might have come from, and by all means grub the people flogging them into the rozzers – the stuff is probably nicked. Next time, it could be your stuff they take.

Anyone with information is urged to contact West Midlands Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, It makes me mad!, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Because it seemed right at the time…

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Great Charles Street, Birmingham. Beneath this urban jungle landscape still cries to be noticed – from the hillside Victorian terraces to the fall to the west. One of the biggest architectural drivers here was not the car, or modernism, but the cold war – a bunker from which sprawls under these highways.

Just lately, I’ve found myself in lots of intense discussions – several on social media – about architecture, old buildings, history and the way we view the past; these discussions often sadden me and I need to get something off my chest.

I’m a person who, as many people will have spotted from my 365days journal and through my work here, has a great deal of passion about lots of things. Nature, engineering, history, society, ingenuity, shared memory. I’ve often been compared by people who know me to the character ‘Brilliant!’ from the Fast Show, because when something energises me, I become animated, and want to know all about it.

More than a passing similarity.

I’m like that with architecture, urban design and buildings. Although I guess I’m an amateur historian, I’m not in love with the past. Part of the reason I put the work in to the blog is to try and get a discussed, open view of our common history free of too much nostalgia, rose-tint and mawk. The past had plenty of nice things to commend it, but I don’t believe in the ‘good old days’, as I believe time, and human memory, to be a filter.

Many of the discussions I’ve been involved in of late have involved discussing how modern architecture is rubbish, or how foolish faceless ‘Councils’ or ‘Planners’ were in allowing some building to be lost.

On Saturday, I wrote a sentimental and probably ambiguous piece on  my 365days journal  about a lost shopping mall in Birmingham called Fletchers Walk, which is a sort of subway, soon to be razed, between the Town Hall and Broad Street in Birmingham. From mail and messages I received, it seems my views caused some surprise. You can read the piece here.

I’m going to explain my views. I don’t expect people to necessarily agree, but I hope they kind of indicate how I see the built environment, and history, in general.

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As urban spaces go, Fletchers Walk is pretty terrible. But I still love it, because of the memories it contains for me.

I believe a fair bit of architecture in any given period is rubbish, a further portion merely adequate, and a tiny amount to be outstanding.

The only reason we have this impression today that the Victorians were great architects who built consistently brilliant buildings is because, after a century or more, all the stuff with no merit has long been forgotten, demolished or fallen down.

There, I said it.

Much great architecture has indeed been lost, though – a huge amount in the 1920s and 30s, to buildings we now also consider great. The long-lamented George Hotel in Walsall that many people hanker after replaced an older George Hotel in this period. Enemy bombs, slum clearance and road systems – then the housing shortages and boom years up until the 1980s put paid to many, many more. Thrown up with what seems like indecent, hubristic haste, sweeping all before them. But is that really the case?

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This George Hotel – the one recalled fondly by most living Walsallians – is an imposter, built in the 1930s. Image from The Story Of Walsall.

I think we have to judge decisions in the context of the time at which they were made. In the interwar, it was a brave new world, and the local history awareness we have today was an alien concept, and so it remained, until relatively recently. The tower blocks and modernist designs – many that failed, just as badly as Victorian slums and wartime prefabs – were erected in a brave spirit and genuine faith that this was the modern world. There was no nostalgic defence of old buildings like those swept away in the 60s in Birmingham. There couldn’t have been: we needed the houses, the economic expansion. Society was doing what it always has and will: moving on.

I value old buildings and their history. I think everything needs recording. I have a huge regard for Victorian and latterly Art Deco architecture but also, perhaps surprisingly, for much Modernist and Brutalist stuff from the 1960s and 70s, even though most of it failed. It was brave: new engineers, new techniques, new materials. The envelope was being pushed.

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Trellick Tower in London, now gentrified, is one of Brutalism’s icons and greatest hits. I do love it. But I doubt you could describe it as beautiful. Image from ‘London from the Rooftops’.

The science of urban planning failed hard in subsequent decades. We had to learn the lessons we learned so harshly. A lot of the buildings were rubbish. Just like the Victorian back to backs, cleared in the 30s.

We have learned. And continue to do so.

I recorded the passing of Fletchers Walk because it was remarkable, and I like the brave design principles it tried – and failed – to encompass. I like John Madin, and his brutalist Birmingham Central Library, which pales compared to his (far superior in my opinion) 103 Colmore Row – the former Natwest Tower, a tour de force of concrete, glass and brick.

I think many examples of Brutalism as John Madin espoused should be saved. I know that they won’t be. I’d like to see 103 Colmore Row saved. It’s death warrant was signed in 2008 – and I accept that it will be another lost building in the urban chess game that ebbs and flows over the city.

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Marin’s finest hour: Harsh, geometric, solid. A priapic monument to the financial sector. 103 Colmore Row will soon be demolished.

To us all, everything was better years ago. I recently saw a 1910 image of Brownhills posted on Facebook. One comment said how beautiful it was, and how they’d love the town to be like that now. I wanted to point out that yes, it looked postcard-lovely, but the poverty, the illness, the living conditions. People were dirt-poor, living with inadequate sanitation, high infant mortality and malnutrition. I wanted to point out the jolly lads on the corner would soon be in the trenches of Northern France, and those that survived would come back to a murderous Spanish flu outbreak. And on.

I might as well have been talking to the taxman about poetry.

I cannot, and will not accept a rose-tinted view of the past. Yes, some things may well have been better, but an equal number were worse. It’s a natural part of the human condition that the golden age of everything is when were young. Endless summers, great community, no crime. Yet my forays back into the archives have always left a distinctly different impression.

Human society, like individuals, does things because they seem like a good idea at the time. We lose historic buildings not usually out of malice or carelessness, but out of the desire to push things forward, to move on. If we did not, we’d end up living in a mausoleum. It’s easy to point and say we were fools, or misguided, but hindsight is a fantastic mistress.

Unless we can repurpose old buildings, keeping them empty is madness. People who insist architecture should be kept at any price: how do you live in a place full of empty, un-repurposable structures? At some point, there has to be compromise, or we stagnate.

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Urban compromise is the way we’ve always moved on.

There are recent buildings I loathe (I so dislike the new Brum Library). There are old, historic buildings I similarly loathe (Shenstone Church). There are old buildings I adore (just search 365days for ‘Darlaston’) and similarly, new ones (The Wesleyan in Brum, the Shard in London, Selfridges, in Brum). I can take stuff from any period you name I both love, and hate. Because it’s personal. But it’s also about everything we build, make and technologically achieve.

I don’t regard say, John Wyatt or Oldrid Scott, the noted Victorian Ecclesiastical architects as being any better, or worse than John Madin, Basil Spence or Norman Foster. All designers of their day, working within the aesthetic mores and technical horizons they have. If Wyatt was alive today, he’d be working in steel, and glass, just like his modern counterparts.

I’ve found myself in Birmingham with time on my hands more than a little lately, and started to enjoy the place again. On Friday, I specifically looked at Brum’s architecture; it’s relationship with people, and the nature of change. Birmingham has never been slow to change. Change is what the city does best; and some stuff has changed for better, some worse, but it wears the remnants like a crown, and I know no other place that does.

That’s why I love it.

Go on: tell me I’m wrong. Comment here, or mail: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com

Posted in Environment, Events, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, News, Panoramio photo discussions, Panoramio updates, planning, Shared media, Shared memories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 26 Comments

Walsall Wood bested by Basford, but slay Shepshed

Photos and captions from Tuesday’s Basford match kindly supplied by David Evans

It’s a double bubble treat for Wood followers today as Bill Shaw is close to up and running again following his computer problems over the last week or so – so I can now post the match reports from the home loss to Basford on Tuesday and yesterday’s away victory over Shepshed.

First of all, Bill had this to say, and I’m not very happy, either. I’ll let the gentleman explain:

Hiya Bob,

Sorry about the lateness of the Basford United report, but better late than never.

I have heard a few whispers that the reason I hadn’t submitted a report was because we had been well beaten. That has never been my style and I’m not about to start now.

The defeat killed off our title chances, but let’s be honest how can we compete with a club who can afford a budget of £3000 per week, that’s right, three thousand pounds per week?  I think that on Tuesday night we saw the league champions, but they can still throw it away. Amazingly they were a better side after superstar Lee Hendrie received his marching orders, here’s on interesting statistic for you, striker Ruben Wiggins-Thomas took his seasons goal tally in the league to 41, we as a team had scored 45 on Tuesday night (now 47 after Saturday).  Need I make any other comment?

Back to winning ways on Saturday at Shepshed, another 2 goals from Joey Butlin giving us the points.   Stafford Rangers in the Staffs Senior Cup semi-final on Tuesday night, the final at Port Vale on Monday 20th April.

Still computerless but hopefully we’ll be back to normal by Wednesday, so keep your fingers crossed we are OK to report the semi-final.

Bill Shaw.

Right, well said Bill. Let me say here and now that Bill works bloody hard to get the reports through to various outlets – including me – and last week his computer problems were so grim he was reduced to faxing the Advertiser his report.

In my experience, Bill has never shied away from telling a few home truths and facing bad games, so cut it out. We had last week’s report by a wing and a prayer, so please, lay off one of the most dedicated and plain speaking supporters Walsall Wood could have.

We both put the effort in to keep you fans informed. Sometimes, stuff doesn’t go to plan – the technology fails, the blog falls over or whatever. We hate it when it happens, but that’s how life runs. I remain happy to refund the blog subscription of anyone who feels they’re getting poor value for money.

Nuff  said.

 A  clearance kick by Walsall Wood’s goalkeeper being closely monitored

Tuesday action at Oak Park as captured by David Evans.

Walsall Wood 1 v 3 Basford United
Tuesday 10th March 2015

Wood came back from a horror start to equalise in the first minute of the second half, seven minutes later Lee Hendrie was red carded and against all the odds the 10 men of champions elect Basford United calmly regrouped and took control of the game.

After only three minutes a ball through the centre of the Wood defence looked to be running through to Wood keeper Mario Kisiel who had come racing off his line, he inexplicably hesitated and man of the match Ruben Wiggins-Thomas pushed the ball past him and ran on to score into an empty net.

Wood’s first effort came three minutes later, Steven Hayles flying down the left and crossing to beyond the far post, Leon Taylor powering a header just too high.

On 14 minutes a Stuart and Lee Hendrie interchange wide right, a near post cross for Stuart to hit first time inches wide.

An intricate move three minutes later on the Wood right involving Craig Deakin, Joey Butlin and Ben Evans saw Deakin race into the right of the box, his low cross put behind by Rob Durkin.

On 23 minutes a lovely one touch move across the face of the Wood box with the Hendries prominent ended with Lee fouled in the D, he took the kick himself, Kisiel saving at full stretch.  Back came Wood Corey Currithers winning the ball on halfway and putting Hayles clear wide left his far post cross inches in front of the onrushing Taylor, Currithers won a left wing corner on 38 minutes, Harry Harris delivered  the flag kick to the near post and Anthony Juxon’s header bounced to safety off the post. Two minutes later Butlin held the ball up cleverly before playing a slide rule ball inside to Harris to hit a first time effort whistling wide.

Referee Malcolm Steward retired injured at half time and after a search for a replacement assistant Jason Main took over in the middle and the game restarted nearly 15 minutes late.

The extra rest seemed to revitalise Wood who were immediately on the attack and within a minute they were back on terms.  Harris whipped in a free kick from wide left, Lee Stretton timing his run to perfection and glancing a header beyond keeper Saul Deeney.  On 51 minutes the Hendries combined through the centre, Lee released  Stuart into the centre of the box; Shawn Boothe making a superb last ditch challenge, the ball broke for Lee who fired a first time effort well wide.  Then on 53 minutes came the incident that ultimately changed the course of the game.  Lee was booked wide right, carried things too far and collected a second booking and went for an early shower.  From a free kick wide right Tyrell Shannon lost his marker and powered in a header from eight yards that was somehow kept out by an amazing save from the flying Kisiel.  He was beaten on 60 minutes however when a left wing corner was hit beyond the far post and skipper Dean Meikle scored with a powerful header.  With Wood pressing for the equaliser they were open to a quick counter attack which duly came on 72 minutes, a ball was played out of defence to Hendrie who hit a lovely ball into the right of the box that found Jamie McNicholas who’d run 80 yards, his low ball across the 6 yard box was bundled home at the far post by the tireless Wiggins-Thomas.

Wood with nothing to lose threw caution to the winds but couldn’t get back in the match, then with just four minutes to go Wiggins-Thomas trying to stop another ball being bombed forward was a split second late with challenge and was unlucky to pick up a red card.

The title favourites, (certainly the best side to visit Oak Park this season) had shaded the first 53 minutes, but from when Lee Hendrie was sent off they totally dominated proceedings.  Ruben Wiggins Thomas on his own up front from then on was superb, but then what do you expect  from a player whose personal tally in the league is only five short of Wood’s team total.

A thoroughly deserved victory that puts them three points clear in the title race. I won’t be betting against them.

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

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Shepshed Dynamo’s ground really, really is in Butthole Lane, Shepshed. Coo, gosh. Image by Duncan Harris and posted on Geograph.

Shepshed Dynamo 1 v 2 Walsall Wood
Saturday 14th March 2015

Wood completed the double over Dynamo thanks to another Saturday brace from Joey Butlin. The win keeping Wood in contention for a top three finish.

Wood created the first chance when after just two minutes Joey Butlin latched onto a ball on the left edge of the box, his low drive saved at full stretch by home keeper Ryan Thacker.

On seven minutes Liam Prescott raced clear down the home right, he cut inside the box, his near post drive pushed away at full stretch by Wood keeper Mario Kisiel. It was Prescott again on 18 minutes,from a right wing free kick Jake Duffy calmly laid the ball back into his path and his first time rising drive bounced off the top of the bar.                                                                                                                       

Four minutes later Max Black was fouled just outside the right of the D, Butlin’s free kick bouncing off the outside of the right hand post. A minute later an Andre Gonzales right wing run and cross was hammered goalwards by Butlin at the near post, Thacker with a superb point blank save. It was Thacker to Dynamo’s rescue two minutes later, keeping out a low drive from Joe Pickering. Wood finally made the breakthrough on 38 minutes, a lovely 60 yard crossfield ball from Black found Corey Currithers wide right, he made the byeline, powered through two tackles before firing the ball across the face of the 6 yard box for Butlin to hammer the ball home giving Thacker no chance.

The last goalmouth action of the half came right on half time, Jay Smedley winning the ball on halfway before chipping the ball forward, Shawn Boothe glancing a header back to Kisiel to deny the hard working Brett Darby.

Dynamo put Wood under pressure at the start of the second half and equalised on 49 minutes, Darby holding the ball up cleverly  and then releasing Joe French into the right of the box, his low cross to the far post swept home by Danny Chapman.

Footage of Walsall Wood v. Basford posted by Basford United

The goal stung Wood into action and three minutes later Craig Deakin charged down the left, he lost the ball, won it back before crossing to Butlin, foiled again by Thacker with a full length save to keep out his low drive. Harry Harris won a free kick on the left edge of the box on 56 minutes, Butlin’s effort landing on the roof of the net. Two minutes later Lee Stretton broke up a home attack, played the ball up to Harris on halfway, his inch perfect , first time through ball releasing Pickering into the right of the box, his first time rising drive skimming the cross bar.

Just to remind Wood not to  go attack crazy Prescott was released into the left of the box by Steve Towers on 72 minutes , Gonzales racing back to make an important challenge and come away with the ball. It was Gonzales again on 74 minutes breaking up an attack and coming forward before releasing Currithers wide right, he cut inside, shrugging off 3 tackles to hit a powerful rising drive that took the slightest deflection off a defender for a corner. Harris delivered the right wing flag kick beyond the far post, Butlin timing his run and jump to perfection to power in a downward header that a defender on the line could only deflect into the roof of the net.

Dynamo’s reply two minutes later saw a free kick on the left of centre touched sideways to skipper Towers to fire a first time rising drive high over. Even the late introduction of Julian Joachim couldn’t help the home side break down a resolute Wood defence and it was Wood who almost had the last word when substitute Lewis Taylor Boyce scythed inside from wide left, laid the ball back perfectly into the path of Butlin  to hit a rising drive that was bravely blocked by a defender, to deny the big man his hat trick.

This was another case of winning ugly, but on an uneven surface with the ball bobbling all over the place it was never going to be a football classic. Wood thoroughly deserved to come away with the three points, keeping alive their hopes of a top three finish

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

Thanks due to Battling Bill Shaw for his reports and all he does – for the good of The Wood!

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local Blogs, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

June1993 – All in a good cause

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Brownhills Gazette June 1993 issue 45 – Myatt’s diamond anniversary, Walsall Wood youth club raise money for charity, vintage fire appliances on show at Chasewater, local crime escalates, concerns over Clayhanger development, closure of the Railway Tavern, and some great archive material. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 45 of the long lost freesheet, from June 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

Sadly, issue 44 is missing from the archive. If anyone has a copy we could scan please, do shout up!

This is a large 20 page issue, with the Myatt’s diamond anniversary, Walsall Wood youth club raise money for charity, vintage fire appliances on show at Chasewater, local crime escalates, concerns over Clayhanger development, closure of the Railway Tavern, and some great archive material.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 45 June 1993 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Looking for William John Baker please

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Walsall Wood: a fine place.

Hi folks –  this is one of those enquiries we get from time to time from readers.

I’m interested in contact details for William John Baker it is thought was born in 1943, and was either a son of Walsall Wood, or lived there for a while, and certainly around 1965.

There’s nothing wrong, and no need for concern, but if anyone knows William and would be so good as to pass on my email address, I’d appreciate it. I will explain to them who’s looking and won’t share information without express permission.

BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Thanks
Bob

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Walsall Wood away at Shepshed Dynamo this afternoon

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Sheepshead’s notorious shed. From Wrens Reach the Sky.

Saturday 14th March 2015

Walsall Wood FC away at Shepshed Dynamo

Kick off is 3:00pm

Hopefully, a match report will follow…

(Bill is having some technical difficulties with his computer at the moment so sadly we missed the midweek match report. Hopefully he’s back up and running now – best of luck, Bill, and thanks for all you do!)

For the Good of the Wood!

Check out Walsall Wood FC’s website here.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Police helicopter responds to burglary in Clayhanger

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A burglary took place yesterday in Wych Elm Road, Clayhanger. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

Many people have contacted me about the Police helicopter being up over Brownhills yesterday afternoon (Friday, 13th March 2015) – it seems that local police were responding to a burglary in Clayhanger.

Clay hanger Neighbourhood Watch posted the following update last night:

Hi all. There has been a burglary this afternoon in the village. Three young lads in a red car drove into Wych Elm Road and two of them squeezed through gap in fence into fields behind  the park.

The driver was caught by plain clothes police officer. Helicopter was trying to find the other two who came out of main entrance to park and walked by butchers.

They are described as young, scruffy, dirty and were wearing hoodies and gloves.

The property was recovered after being dumped very close by. If you saw anything at all please contact the police immediately.

There has been a spate of burglaries and shed break-ins lately. If you’re offered cheap tools, car stereo equipment or gardening kit, think hard about where it might have come from, and by all means grub the people flogging them into the rozzers – the stuff is probably nicked. Next time, it could be your stuff they take.

Anyone with information is urged to contact West Midlands Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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April 1993 – Community Student wins place at university

Brownhills Gazette April 1993 issue 43_000001

Brownhills Gazette April 1993 issue 43 – A popular caretaker retires, Suzan Hassan gets to Uni, plant pot thieves were plying their vile trade, an absolutely astounding archive image, a special feature on United Carriers and much more. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 43 of the long lost freesheet, from April 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

This is another 12 page issue, packed with interesting stuff – A popular caretaker retires, Suzan Hassan gets to Uni, plant pot thieves were plying their vile trade, an absolutely astounding archive image, a special feature on United Carriers and much more.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 43 April 1993 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

God damn you, Auditors…

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Death got me through some very, very bad times. Thanks, pTerry.

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Restoring a canal – and looking after the environment

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That’s a lot of saplings. Image courtesy of Paul Marshall/L&HCRT.

I’ve had a terrific response to featuring the post last week by Christine Howles of Lichfield and Hatherton Canal Restoration Trust here on the blog, which sought to put right my previous dearth of coverage on this great local canal restoration project.

At the moment, the volunteers are currently beavering away on the route of the lost line between Barracks Lane, Ogley Hay and The Boat restaurant, on the Lichfield Road at Summerhill, opening the route for walkers.

The Trust have already put in years of work restoring the lost line and its features like Borrowcop Locks, and it has been no small undertaking. In this post written specially for the Brownhills Blog by Christine, she discusses dealing with the environmental impact and conservation measures being employed to look after the route as it is restored.

I’m looking forward to featuring more articles from Christine and the Lichfield and Hatherton Canal Restoration Trust in the future, and I look forward to walking the reopened route soon – I bet there will be some cracking views from there.

In the meantime, I commend you to read the following great post, and consider if you can helping the L&HCRT in their huge project to restore a lost piece of local history.

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Broowcop Locks on the A51 at Lichfield are a peaceful oasis. Image courtesy of Paul Marshall/L&HCRT.

What do you do when you’re clearing the route of an old canal? It’s overgrown with flora which has become a haven for wildlife but it can’t stay there. You make sure that you replace more plants than you dig up. That’s what the Lichfield and Hatherton Canals Restoration Trust are doing. 

Over the last couple of months the Trust has cleared a kilometre of overgrown derelict canal land over by the well-known M6 Toll aqueduct, but over 800 trees have been planted in new hedgerows by the Trust’s “Green Team”, which far outnumbers the number of trees removed.

The species being planted are a mix of Hawthorn and Hazel which were recommended by environmental advisers and will have a direct impact on improving the biodiversity of the area. 

Over at the Borrowcop Locks Canal Park by Tamworth Road in Lichfield, you can already see the results of previous work by the Green Team. Back in 2006, Trust members and volunteers planted bulbs along the towpath-side banks at the back of Lock 26. If you visit today, you can see the results of their labours with a lovely display of Snowdrops and the Daffodils just starting to show themselves. As they die down, there will be miniature woodland Tulips, with Aconites and Primulas to replace the view.

It’s wonderful to think that the Trust are not only bringing back the canal but also improving the environment as they go.

They are always in need of ne volunteers to help with the planting, usually on a Sunday, if you can help get in touch with the Trust on Twitter @LHCRT1, on Facebook or on their website.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, cycling, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, planning, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Wildlife | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

I’m after all the tanners!

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Park View Wesleyan Methodist Church Sunday School Anniversary 1941. Image generously donated by Barbara Cassidy.

I was a bit at a loss as to how to illustrate the post, and dug into the archives for possibly relevant material, and featured a cracking image donated last year by local Councillor Barbara Cassidy of a Park View Sunday School anniversary in 1941.

Ann and Mavis have together lit the whole thing up, and simultaneously also shed light on a great project by Burntwood Family History Group which deserves much more exposure – those people are doing great work.

Thanks to Ann and Mavis for this, and for the kind words. This is why we all do this, and it wouldn’t be possible without you. I am hugely grateful.

Hi Bob,

As the proxy for Mavis (I am her second cousin and the ‘editor’ of her personal family memories – she is computer-less) Mavis has been able to name for us many of the people shown in the Sunday School Anniversary photograph provided by Barbara Cassidy. It’s quite along list! Starting at the bottom row, working left to right, and to the best of her recollection (better than mine will ever be!) the names are:

Bottom Row, left to right,

Greville Clift; Alan Humphreys; possibly one of the Shingler girls; Molly Saunders; Margaret Allport; Janet Bladon; Mavis herself (sulking, as per David Evans post) because being very tiny, she was placed amongst the much younger children (!); Kathy Norton; Audrey Brown; Sylvia Mason; Betty Deakin; Audrey Humphrey 9sisster to Alan, and a bridesmaid at Mavis’s wedding); Reg Shingler; Tony Freeman.

Second Row from the bottom, again left to right:

1 AND 2 ??? (but Mavis says a few of the group were evacuees and not that well known) thereafter Chris Burgin; Pam Griffin (her cousin);Janet Hayward; possibly Betty Lloyd; Sylvia Brown; ??; Janet Beard; Maureen Whitehouse; ?? possibly surname Allport?; Frank Norton; John Smith

Third Row from left to right:

1 and 2 ??; Edna Taylor but maybe Betty Hayward; Rhoda Hassal; Betty Highway; Jean Wordley; Hazel James; ??; possibly Betty Hayward; 10-12 ???

4th Row from bottom, left to right:

Maurice Buckley; ?? Rowe?; Myrtle Dawes; ??; Margaret Shingler; ??; Jean Farmer (mother of Barbara Cassidy); 8-10 ???; Beryl James; ??

The Choir – 5th row from bottom, left to right:

Gwynneth Osborn??; An evacuee teacher??; ? Deakin; ?? but played the organ; ??? but was the pump organ person (?); Conductor, Frank Buckley; Edna Brown; Jessie Dennis; Jenny Bladon; Edi Farmer; Daisy Beddows

6th Row, left to right:

1 – ??; David Smith (whose house was the one struck by the thunder bolt referenced in the latest episode!); ?? Rowe?; Flossie Deakin??; Harold Buckley; “Mr” Maddox; Joyce Deakin; Bill Deakin; 9-12 ?????????

Now, one of the lads in this photo, maybe not too far from the left in the first row, was referenced in Mavis’s original text about THAT thunderbolt, but suspect David Evans decided discretion was called for so omitted part of the original text that formed part of that particular tale. I just love it. It read

‘…the scullery was all rubble, and there was xxxxxxxx (name omitted in case his grandchildren were to read this!!!) scrambling about the floor, saying “Come on Mave, it’s blown the meter off the wall, and I’m after all the tanners (sixpences)!! Everyone was in the living room and it was just as if the roof has hanging on its own – it had been lifted off the wall. Today everyone would have been evacuated.”

Hope that a few of your readers will now be able to identify their grans/grandpas, and if the descendants of the entrepreneurial youngster who scrambled for the tanners read this, maybe they can claim their inheritance!!!

On a slightly different tack, but (kind of!) still Mavis related

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The map in question, supplied by Walsall Local History Centre.

The latest Mavis episode starts with a map of Ogley Hay from 1902, and this is coincidentally of particular relevance to Mavis. The original image was kindly made available by the Walsall Local History Centre to Bob Houghton, who was researching the life of Mavis’s uncle – also my grandfather – Thomas Fairfield – as part of the Burntwood Family History Group Memorial Project. Bob annotated it with places relevant to Thomas’s life, and this is the image now shown. Thomas, like Mavis, was born in Foxes Row, and lived all of his short life in Brownhills. He attended the same primary school. We believe he worked at the Cannock Chase No 7 pit (does anyone out there please have a photograph of this mine – I can’t find one) until he enlisted for war. He was killed on The Somme in 1916. Anyway, you will know that the splendid Burntwood Family History Group has researched a fair number of local men killed in WW1 (and is now doing some WW2 lost servicemen), and for those of your readers who find these mini-biographies of special interest, they might like to be aware that the BFHG now has a second, subsidiary website for the Memorial Project mini-biographies –  These mini-biographies not only cover the war years, but give a lot of information about the communities and lives of the soldiers prior to their enlistment. Great and very informative reading about the locality they lived in as well as the sacrifices to the war effort.

Best wishes to you and many thanks for all you do to embrace, remember and celebrate the Brownhills folk and their lives – past and present.

Ann (Grinstead)

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Walsall Wood face Basford United at Oak Park this evening!

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Oak Park – home to the mighty Woodmen!

Tuesday 10th March 2015

Basford United visit Oak Park!

Come watch the lads at Oak Park for a great evening of football

Kick off is 7:45pm

Hopefully, a match report will follow…

For the Good of the Wood!

Check out Walsall Wood FC’s website here.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

A Bill you can’t ignore

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Thought to be Mount Pleasant, Brownhills: but we’re not sure. Can you help? Image kindly supplied by Bill Mayo via David Evans.

Here’s a quick one via David Evans from that highly respected great grandfather of local photographic and oral history Bill Mayo – Bill and his wife, Clarice have been behind some of the greatest and most appreciated local history photo books about our area, including Memories of Old Brownhills, Memories of Old Walsall Wood and Memories of Brownhills Past.

Bill’s contribution to local history has been immense over the years, and I’m very grateful to both he and David for supplying material to use here. Much appreciated, chaps, thank you.

You may remember we helped Bill last year with an image that led to the recovery and rededication of a remarkable piece of local history.

Anyway, on with the images at hand.

David wrote:

HI Bob

The above image has been kindly donated by local historian and noted author Bill Mayo, with a request.

It would seem that the photo was taken outside Mount Pleasant Primitive Methodist Church, Watling Street, Brownhills, but we are not able to decipher the wording on the chapel notice boards

Please can your good readers also help to date the photo… some sort of whitewashing ‘bee’, seems to be a similar event to the one that took place in Clayhanger during the general strike

Could we possibly identify some of the decorators?

I am also delighted to be able to offer the below image the Bill has kindly shared of the legendary steamboat on Norton Pool, courtesy of local historian and author Mr. Bill Mayo.

I believe the boat is shown moored in ‘The Channel’ which was on the south side of the Pool, and would have probably been taken sometime around 1900.

I would like to thank Bill Mayo sincerely for offering this wonderful picture.

Kind regards
David

We have mentioned the steamboat before, in this article, in which I noted Chasetown publican J. Donaldson was the operator of the ill-fated enterprise to run the steamboat for pleasure trips on what was then Norton Pool; this advert was published in the Lichfield Mercury, as found by Peter ‘Pedro’ Cutler.

From the Lichfield Mercury, May 1899.

I believe the other active local historian Clive Roberts has done a lot of research on the Donaldson steamboat service, and has some fascinating material to come in a future book. Stay tuned for news of that.

Thanks to David and Bill – if you have anything to add about either photo, please do comment or mail me: BrownhillsBob at goolgemail dot com. Cheers!

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Those legends of a steamboat on Chasewater? Here it is… `image courtesy of Bill Mayo, via David Evans.

Posted in News | 5 Comments

So many junk blogs from Walsall LibDems, anyone would think it was election time…

Move along, nothing to see here 🙂

Posted in News | 8 Comments

A huge black cauldron

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Ordnance Survey 1:2,500 scale plan with locations of prominent places and buildings. Map supplied by Burntwood Family History Group/Walsall Local History Centre.

Mavis Woodhouse really started something when she kindly donated her family history material to the blog – the Foxes Row article was very popular, the Victor Haines material had us all head scratching, and the film of Newtown that was so newly relevant has had a huge number of views. Since then, we’ve had Mavis’s recollections of the mining history, the curious disappearing cottage, and a whole tranche of material from Gillian Glaiser about Deakin’s Central Stores.

Today, the thread continues with the third article in the series; Mavis recalling her school and Sunday School days.

I’m hugely grateful to Mavis and David for creating and documenting this history; it’s a wonderful thing and I can’t thank either of them enough.

Mavis wrote:

My Schooldays

I started school at Watling Street when I was four years old. Miss Garratt was head Mistress and my favourite teacher was Miss Topliss, who took the six to seven year olds. During the war the schoolchildren had to go to Brownhills Common between the school and Brownhills West and lie in a naturally-formed big hollow if the sirens went and stay there until the all-clear sounded. Eventually shelters were dug underground at the back where the children’s playground is now. At school the toilets were outside, separate for boys and girls. There was a hall for assembly (sitting in rows on the floor) according to each class and then single file to the classrooms. I was there until I was eleven years old.

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The dips and hollows of the common between Watling Street and Brownhills West are known to most local kids, as they have been for a century o more…

I left Watling Street School at 11 and went to the senior girls school in Great Charles Street, Brownhills. I went by bike each day. I had passed my 11 plus exam but for some reason never went to Lichfield. I passed all my exams with ease and enjoyed school. I was a prefect in my final year. I left school in 1948.

Most children went to Sunday School. There were always lots of activities there. For the Sunday School Anniversary – a different day, in Spring, for each Chapel –the girls wore white dresses even during the war, mothers found ways for the white dresses, sometimes handed down to smaller children. Chapels visited each other on these special days.

One day we were having a practice for the Sunday School Anniversary and there was a violent thunder storm, and one of the ladies in the choir fainted after this huge clap of thunder. When the practice was over I ran home to find an empty house- you did not lock your door in those days- and a neighbour popped her head out of the door and said..They are both down at May Smiths. She has had a thunder bolt hit her house. So off I ran down Howdles Lane to find that the house scullery was all rubble. The roof was hanging down and the electricity meter had been blown off the wall.

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Park View Wesleyan Methodist Church Sunday School Anniversary 1941. Image generously donated by Barbara Cassidy.

During the war we entertained the wounded soldiers, also the Americans based in Lichfield, with children’s concerts at Mount Pleasant Chapel. Most summers the Park View chapel hired a coach to take us on a trip to Sutton Park or Trentham Gardens, near Stoke on Trent.

Every year the Methodist chapels had a Christmas Bazaar with home-made cake, tea cosies, knitted dolls, aprons, cushion covers etc. Mom spent weeks working on goods for the bazaar. At the back of the Sunday School room was an enormous grate with a fire burning brightly. Hanging from a hook over the fire was a huge black cauldron with peas bubbling away inside. It was sixpence a saucer of mushy peas. You put your own vinegar to taste. This was at Mount Pleasant Chapel.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Woodmen deny Star’s wish

Images and captions kindly supplied by roving reporter the young David Evans.

Yesterday afternoon (Saturday 7th March 2014), Walsall Wood FC faced Continental Star at home, and beat the lads from Dales Lane with two penalties – but Bill Shaw can’t hide his disquiet.

Sorry for the delay to this report, technical gremlins have been running amok today…

Bill submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

Back to winning ways, albeit two goals from the penalty spot by Joey Butlin. Walsall Wood thoroughly deserved the win but still the achilles heel was well to the fore, Wood have by far the best defensive record in the league but only Alvechurch, Heath Hayes and Tipton Town have scored fewer goals.

You don’t have to be a genius to work out what the problem is, but regrettably goal scoring strikers looking to move in March are as rare as hen’s teeth. If you know of one, let us know!

Don’t forget it’s the Hendrie brothers at Oak Park on Tuesday night, don’t be late, should be yet another interesting 90 minutes.

Walsall Wood 2 v 1 Continental Star

Another 90 minutes of almost total Wood domination, but once again they struggled to put their chances away. Joey Butlin with two converted penalties in a five minute second half spell sparing their blushes.

Wood were first to threaten after just seven minutes, a sloppy pass across the face of the Star box was intercepted by Ben Evans who went through 3 tackles before being stopped by a no nonsense challenge from Matt Hunt.

Three minutes later Ricardo Reid was released wide left for Star, he cut inside through one tackle only to fire over the bar.

Wood’s reply was immediate, Anthony Juxon winning the ball on halfway and feeding Joe Pickering wide left, he made the box, cut inside and then outside his marker before rolling his low cross shot agonisingly wide. It was Pickering again on 23 minutes, collecting a ball through the middle of the defence from Harry Harris, after a slick one touch move through the centre, his rising drive just too high. Two minutes later Joey Butlin released Corey Currithers wide right, his low cross put behind by the alert Hunt. The corner kick was slapped away by keeper Ryan Cheshire for a left wing one which was half cleared to Evans to fire first time over from 20 yards. Next it was Pickering on 32 minutes racing onto a ball in the centre of the box, only to be engulfed by keeper Cheshire and a posse of defenders before he could get his shot away. The last goal mouth action of the half came five minutes later, Currithers played a ball in from wide on the right to Harris whose low drive from 35 yards was saved at full stretch by Cheshire.

Wood thought they’d finally broken the deadlock on 53 minutes, Harris played the ball inside from wide right, Pickering threaded the ball through the centre of the box for Butlin to fire home, only for the goal to be disallowed by an offside flag, much to the strikers disgust. The first goal came on 60 minutes, the tireless Pickering racing into the left of the box, he was fouled as he went past the defender the Referee playing the advantage, but when Pickering went down under a second challenge by the same player a penalty was rightly given. Butlin making no mistake to become Wood’s leading goalscorer. It was almost 2-0 when four minutes later Craig Deakin put Harrris clear wide right, his ball inside found Leon Taylor, keeper Cheshire out quickly and bravely to keep out his first time effort. A minute later it was 2-0, Evans ball into the left of the box was collected at pace by Harris, the ball appearing to stick under his feet only for him to be unceremoniously bundled over by an untidy, mistimed challenge, penalty No. 2, Butlin doubling Wood’s lead.

That appeared to be it as Wood with one eye on Tuesday night’s encounter with leader Basford United attempted to calmly play the ball around, but on 81 minutes Marcel Simpson broke up an attack and powered over halfway and hit a pinpoint ball over the top of a square Wood defence into the right of the box, Reid timed his run to perfection and slotted the ball past the advancing Mario Kisiel as he raced from his line to meet him.

It should have been a nervous last 10 minutes for Wood but they went close to increasing their advantage with ex-Star Daniel Holgate racing 30 yards into the box before being caught by Hunt and then right on time he cut in along the left byeline, laid the ball back to Taylor who saw his goalbound effort blocked on the line.

Wood again should have had a hatful of goals but struggled to find the net, there was only ever going to be one winner and the two goals from the penalty spot at least gave us the right result.

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

My thanks to Bill for a great report – and for all those he selflessly writes and send to me after every match. They really are popular, and a credit to Bill and the club. Walsall Wood have a reputation for being a great, community spirited group of people and these reports demonstrate that – it’s an honour and joy to feature them here.

For the good of the Wood!

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The boys on the corner

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An interesting card I’ve not seen before. A very kind donation from Susan Austin.

Here’s a great one that reaches me from Australia, and it’s really, really interesting – I’m hoping some of the genealogy focused regulars might be able to contribute to.

Susan Austin has sent me images of the front and rear of a postcard she’s found, and it’s rather wonderful. If I have this right, this is the Wesleyan Chapel on the right (further up than the more widely know Mount Zion), and we’re looking towards Anchor Bridge. Pier Street would be off to the right just where the group are standing. I believe the Chapel stood on what is now waste ground on the corner here:

I’ll let Susan explain:

Hi Bob

I am going through old family letters, post cards and photos. My great grandmother, Maryann Leake (nee Bampton) who was born in Lilleshall on 26 AUgust 1826 arrived in Australia in November 1887.

Upon arrival she married her ‘sweetheart’ David Leake (born in Staffordshire on 25 December 1824). Amongst the old family papers there was the post card attached, sent to David and Maryann Leake from family in the Walsall area. I thought this photo of High Street in Brownhills might be of interest to you.

The photo would have been taken after 1887 because the correspondent referrs to the Wesley Chapel having been built since my ancestors left the area. Has it changed much in modern times?

Regards from DownUnder

Susan Austin
Moss Vale
NSW Australia

Brownhills has changed massively, some for the better, some for the worst. But hey, you can’t stop progress…

Thanks Susan for a lovely, fascinating contribution – it’s stuff like this that really makes the Brownhills Blog what it is. Best wishes to you from Brownhills all the way to sunny Moss Vale in New South Wales.

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One for the handwriting experts. Click for a larger version. Image courtesy Susan Austin.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Churches, Environment, Interesting photos, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

What’s going on at the old Focus store on Northgate, then?

Images taken last weekend.

Lots of you have contacted me asking about the works currently ongoing at the former Focus DIY store on the corner of Coppice Lane and Northgate, Walsall Wood.

Local gossip had it for a long time that the former Focus store on the corner of Coppice Lane and Northgate on the Walsall Wood/Aldridge border was to be taken over by Asda. This wasn’t true, but in August 2014, B&M Retail applied for a variation in planning conditions to convert the derelict building into another branch – permission which they recently gained, and now work has started on the derelict site, as many have noted and contacted me about.

The application is reference 14/1090/FL ‘Variation of condition 2 of permission BC27983P (as previously varied by permission BC57615P) to vary the range of goods sold from the premises.’

The planning application form detailing this change can be seen here; note that they try to mask who the applicant is under the name ‘Berkeley Leisure’ but fail to notice the B&M reference in item 6. One must assume that that’s who the work is being undertaken for.

B&M are very popular in Brownhills and Lichfield, and this would remove a derelict eyesore from the local environment, so I’m all for it to be honest. They seem to have employed a local construction company, too, which can’t be bad.

Best of luck to them, and I hope they do well.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, Interesting photos, It makes me mad!, Local History, Local media, Local politics, News, planning, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Council, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

March 1993 – Shire Oak goes grant maintained

Brownhills Gazette March 1993 issue 42_000001

Brownhills Gazette March 1993 issue 42 – A 12 page edition in which Shire Oak School became grant maintained, the Lawtons celebrated their 50th, the Clayhanger Bypass was approved (Hmm – whatever happened to that?) a letter full of ideas for Ravens Court, football from the archives and a thoroughly bizarre advert for Claridges. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 42 of the long lost freesheet, from March 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

This is another 12 page issue, but it’s packed with interesting stuff – Shire Oak School became grant maintained, the Lawtons celebrated their 50th, the Clayhanger Bypass was approved (Hmm – whatever happened to that?) a letter full of ideas for Ravens Court, football from the archives and a thoroughly bizarre advert for Claridges.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 42 March 1993 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Walsall Wood FC at home to Continental Star this afternoon!

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Walsall Wood FC have a great reputation for entertaining football, and a keen, loyal and friendly bunch of supporters! Come join in the fun this Saturday and see some cracking football.

Saturday 7th March 2015

The Wood are at home!

Walsall Wood FC versus Continental Star FC

Kick off is 3:00pm

Hopefully, a match report will follow…

For the Good of the Wood!

Check out the club website here.

 

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Get your motor running

An interesting clipping comes to me in passing via Facebook, and I’d really like to know more about it – it’s certainly something of a local legend, and I’d like to investigate it as respectfully as possible.

Ivan Pitt posted the following clipping about his Uncle, Lori Thomas on Facebook, and kindly agreed to let me share it with readers, for which I’m hugely grateful.

Lori Thomas is spoken of very often in hushed tones locally, and I believe he worked either with, or at a Walsall Wood company for some time on his claimed revolutionary water powered (or assisted) engine.

At the outset, I’ll point out I’m sceptical; Lori’s idea appeared to function on the basis of using current from an alternator to perform electrolysis on water, the hydrogen evolved from which was used to bolster the fuel intake. This went through a phase of viral popularity around 2008, and is often termed HHO; there are significant scientific dismantlings all over the net, including this brilliant one from Popular Mechanics in 2009.

Essentially, whilst there is energy in water, it’s very stable, and usually takes the same, or more energy to free it, unlike hydrocarbons which store energy in huge density and are unstable, thus combusting (and freeing the energy) readily.

Wikipedia also has a nice summary on the legends of water-powered cars.

However, I’m sure Lori was genuine and a very clever man who thoroughly believed in what he was doing, and I’d love to know more about it – so what do you know? Please comment here, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

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The tragic 1990 death of a man who clearly worked hard on his vision. Clipping from the Chase Post in, I think, 1991. Image kindly supplied by Ivan Pitt.

WATER ENGINE INVENTOR DIES
Tony Larner pays tribute to local genius on brink of world fame

The Cannock inventor who rocked the world with a revolutionary, pollutant free car engine has died.

Mr. Iori Thomas, 70, suffered a heart attack at his home, followed by two more massive attacks at Walsall Manor Hospital. He died on Tuesday morning. He leaves a wife, Nancy, daughters, Valerie and Lynda, and son Roger.

The death comes as a tragic blow. Iori battled for over 20 years to realise his dream of a car engine that ran, to a large extent, on water. He had intended to fly to America in two weeks to speak to a host of interested companies.

The son of a Welsh miner, Iori had deep convictions in his invention – despite all sceintific doubt. After years of hard work he produced a car engine which harnessed the power of water, instead of petrol, cutting pollutants to a minimum.

Following a Chase Post front page on the inventor’s work, Iori was featured in the national press and on TV. His engine was seen as a massie breakthrough in the battle to beat acid rain.

Mr. Thomas had told the Chase Post: ‘When the world realises what I have done it will open-up like a mushroom. I am now in the position to get a loan for £10m which will be used to build a local factory for the production of these engines. I love the Cannock area and I want to put something back into it.’

His eldest daughter, Lynda Cooper, now owns the rights to the invention. She told the Post: ‘It has come as a tremendous blow and the family are still in shock. My father has always been very healthy. It is a tragedy that he did not get the recognition he deserved when he was alive, but I believe one day he will. He was a truly brilliant man.’

And she added: ‘As for his plans for the engine I would hope that we can continue them as he would have wanted. If not then we will have to start looking for some car company to come in for them.’

Posted in Bad Science, Brownhills stuff, Environment, Interesting photos, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Plea for family of deceased Darlaston man

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Park Street in Darlaston. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

We seem to have had a lot of appeals in the last few months to trace the family of local deceased people – but I make no apology for running another one; these appeals are essential, and I really feel for anyone who passes away alone.

With that in mind, Walsall Environmental Heath Department have issued an appeal to trace the family of Darlaston man Geoffrey Smith of Park Street, who passed away on the 5th February 2015.

The Department issued the following request:

Plea for family of deceased Darlaston man

Residents are asked to help find family members of a deceased man.

Mr Geoffrey Smith of Park Street, Darlaston was found deceased at home on 5 February 2015.

The 66 year old worked at Port Engineering in Willenhall between 1992 and 1994 and then cared for his sick mother Winifred Betsy Smith until 2000.

Neil Harris, principal environmental health officer, said: ‘We extend our sympathies to friends or family of Mr Smith at this sad time.

‘It appears Mr Smith hadn’t worked for a while but he was previously been employed in milling and drilling jobs.

‘He may have had a fiance called Pauline at some point as well.

‘If anyone knows Mr Smith or his family we ask them to get in touch with us.’

Anyone with information is asked to contact Rebecca Evans on 01922 653052.

Thanks in advance. If anyone would prefer no to contact the council directly for whatever reason, email me at BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot come and I’ll pass any messages on. 

Thanks.

Posted in Environment, Local History, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

February 1993 – Dead-end village as bridge is renewed

Brownhills Gazette February 1993 issue 41_000001

A 12 page issue – Clayhanger Bridge is rebuilt causing inconvenience, there’s a canal clean up going on, Walsall Wood Boxing Club is still fighting for its life, George and Daisy Edwards celebrate their 50th, a VE day party from the archives and lots more. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 41 of the long lost freesheet, from February 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

This issue clocks in at 12 pages, and continues the newspaperish style, Clayhanger Bridge is rebuilt causing inconvenience, there’s a canal clean up going on, Walsall Wood Boxing Club is still fighting for its life, George and Daisy Edwards celebrate their 50th, a VE day party from the archives and lots more.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 41 February 1993 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

Walsall Wood draw with The Mikes yet again!

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Photography was a little challenging due to the light, but David Evans scored this brilliant penalty save pic.

Last Tuesday evening (3rd March 2015), Walsall Wood F.C. played Boldmere St. Michaels at Oak Park and the match was yet another goalless draw, much to the frustration of Bill Shaw, who submitted the following match report:

Hi Bob

Another shut out at Oak Park as yet another three points went begging. It’s now just four goals in seven league games for the Wood as another side put up the shutters at Oak Park. Could it be that Wood are paying the price for their elevated high profile position in non-league Midland football and are being seen as a real scalp? Stranger things have happened.

Walsall Wood 0 v 0 Boldmere St. Michaels

Another Oak Park stalemate as both sides conquered the wind and the heavy pitch but neither side could understand some of the crazy decisions, a terrible penalty all, (obviously missed) and a ridiculous red card just two of them but the list was endless.

The game started quietly, with the protagonists appearing to feel each other out, it was the Mikes who were first to threaten when on eight minutes an intricate move through the centre saw Jermain Clark race into the box, keeper Mario Kisiel flicked the ball off his toe but it flew straight to Cameron Jones who fired a first time effort wide. Three minutes later a right wing corner was delivered to the near post, Jason Holmes flicked the ball on for Jack Hulin to power a header just too high.

The first howler game on 13 minutes, Harry Harris won the ball left of centre and delivered a superb 60 yard diagonal ball into the right of the box to find Ben Evans, keeper Adam Jenkins came racing out and as Evans tried to take the ball past him he touched the ball away at full stretch and him and Evans went down in a heap. A penalty was the decision, much to Mikes disgust, justice was done however when Joey Butlin fired wide of the left hand post from the spot. Three minutes later Butlin collected a ball in the centre, powered through two tackles, his low drive pushed away by Jenkins. Then on 25 minutes Anthony Juxon intercepted a pass in midfield and raced for goal, he laid the ball off right to Butlin who cleverly sidestepped one challenge before firing in a 20 yard low drive that brought another full length save from Jenkins. Two minutes later an intricate right to left crossfield move saw Andre Gonzales hitting a shot that was deflected for a corner. The flag kick was half cleared to Corey Currithers 25 yards out, his first time rising drive blocked by a line of charging defenders. On 30 minutes Joe Pickering raced onto a ball into the left of the box, but was stopped by Nick Heath at the expense of a corner. Harris seeing his flag kick sail over everyone and bounce to safety off the inside of the right hand post with Jenkins this time soundly beaten.

A lovely move two minutes later almost broke the deadlock, Currithers soared into the air to direct a right wing header inside to Butlin, his clever incisive flick into the right of the box was collected at pace by Harris, his first touch took him past the fast approaching Jenkins but from an almost impossible angle his shot went off the outside of the post. The last goalmouth action of the half came on 41 minutes, Currithers was fouled wide right and from the resulting free kick Pickering saw his header bring another full length save from Jenkins.

Wood cranked up the pressure at the start of the second half, three minutes in Currithers cut in from the right, Jenkins full length to keep out his low drive. Four minutes later Wood pressured a defender into a mistake wide left, Evans crossed into the centre of the box to pick out Butlin, his lovely flick up took him away from his marker, only for him under pressure to push the ball the wrong side of the right hand post. Three minutes later it was Luke Adams marauding down the right, his low ball inside collected at pace by Butlin who turned inside his marker, Jenkins again full length to keep out his low drive. 60 minutes gone and Pickering got clear wide left, crossed into the box, the ball only cleared out to Adams to hit a first time effort narrowly wide. Two minutes later a strong defensive challenge by Gonzales saw him break up a rare Mikes attack, his long ball forward was collected by Pickering to race into the box, Hulin making a superb last ditch tackle, half hearted penalty appeals rightly ignored.

Having weathered the storm Mikes broke out of defence on 63 minutes, Stephen Palmer collecting a ball played over the top, he ran on and was brought down by an untidy challenge from behind by Adams, who was inexplicably given a straight red card.

Wood quickly regrouped taking off Pickering and bringing on Craig Deakin at right back and they were equal to anything the Mikes could throw at them and dominated the last 10 minutes. Butlin stopped by a great challenge by Hulin on 82 minutes, two minutes later Evans saw a shot charged down. The only scare came a minute later when Bogdan Coderean raced onto a ball left of centre only to fire well wide. Wood had the last word when on 88 minutes Gonzales cut inside from wide left, his cross to beyond the far post was hit first time over the far angle by Currithers.

It didn’t reach the heights of the Boxing Day encounter, due in part to some strange decisions, that undoubtedly frustrated and angered players and management alike, certainly baffling the spectators.

To clear up a query, Mikes did not field four second half substitutes, No. 3 wore the No. 12 shirt after a first half clash had seen his shirt blooded.

Continental Star on Saturday at Oak Park, then Basford United on Tuesday night.

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

Thanks to Bill and David for the report – always appreciated – for The Good of the Wood!

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Rebuild it and they will come – a great post by Christine Howles

The following post was written by Christine Howles and posted on her blog las weekend, and I think it’s really well written, and the message it carries is important – I haven’t done nearly enough about the Lichfield and Hatherton Canal Restoration Trust here on the blog, and I intend to correct that deficiency over the next few weeks.

The group have a large project currently ongoing which will open up some formerly closed local countryside very soon, and I shall cover it in a subsequent post.

In the meantime, I commend you to read the following great post, and consider if you can help the L&HCRT in their huge project to restore a lost piece of local history.

Christine wrote:

Photo of Borrowcop Locks on the Lichfield Canal

Borrowcop Locks Canal Park, near Tamworth RoadA new year’s walk along the Lichfield Canal blew away the Christmas cobwebs but also inspired me to do something more in 2015.

The Lichfield Canal was originally the Ogley Locks Section of the Wyrley and Essington Canal and opened in 1797. It stayed open until 1955 and much of it was filled in. (Brownhills Bob has unearthed some great photos of the canal before it shut and you can see them on his blog.)

This is where Lichfield and Hatherton Canals Restoration Trust (LHCRT) comes in. The Trust was set up in 1988 to campaign for the restoration of the Lichfield Canal, and the Hatherton Canal through Cannock, and to raise funds to bring it back to life. The volunteers work tirelessly, not only at the canal; clearing the path of the canal, digging, rebuilding, planting hedges, but also behind the scenes; buying back the land, appointing contractors as well as fundraising and many other jobs.

An old lock at Borrowcop

I’d known about the canal for a long time and I always look, in awe, at the aqueduct over the M6 Toll as I pass by on the A5. But I hadn’t done anything about my curiosity until my new year’s walk. The stretch of the canal which inspired me is along the Tamworth Road and is known as Borrowcop Locks Canal Park. It’s the only section to have water at the moment and is already a pleasant walk but will be beautiful when it’s complete and goes through Darnford Park.

I really want to see the Lichfield Canal back in use. I want to be able to walk and cycle along it, see the boats and wildlife return to it and see the boost to Lichfield’s tourism as a result.

That’s why I’ve become a volunteer for the trust. You won’t often see me digging but I’ll be behind the scenes and if you follow me on Twitter, I won’t apologise for the retweets I give the trust. Better still follow them yourselves.

You can find out more about the LHCRT, and how you can help them, on their websiteFacebook

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Matters arising…

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The lost cottage is still subject to some debate!

I often get lots of short questions or observations that aren’t, despite my best efforts, big enough to make one post out of; so here are a selection of recent ones which aren’t connected to each other, but I’m thinking readers may be able to help with them, or perhaps they’ll provoke debate.

If you can help with any of these, please feel free to comment or mail me: Brownhillsbob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

First up, Bruce Littley is interested in the pubs in the Watling street area following the Fred Shingler film, Mavis Woodhouse material, etc.

Good morning,

I have just seen the article on the lost cottage near to White Horse Lane. (Dr. Fell article) posted Feb 2015.

Great item, It reminded me that I had heard something, many years ago about this, and enables other items to be seen in the area as well The over-lays are a great method of showing development, progress and of course the history.

However, the reason for the mail.

On the map plan of the area, shown opposite to the wording for St. Thomas church, is the initials P.H, I presume that it is a public house. It is one that i have been trying to find the name for for a very long time, I believe my grandfather lived in the cottage at the rear.

Query, do you know the name of this establishment please.

Regards,
Bruce

Florence Swinton asks:

William Briggs Jr - Middle row third from right

A probable 1940s church photo – with William Briggs highlighted in the centre. Can anyone put names to these people, or identify the church, or indeed the occasion? Image kindly supplied by Tony Briggs.

I have recently come across the above photo on your web site from Tony Briggs.

For years I have been searching for some clues as to what happened to my uncle William Briggs born 1906 in Newcastle under Lyme…

Could there be a connection?

Thanks
Florence

Chris Latimer has made a very interesting observation:

Hi Bob,

I was in Norton Canes churchyard, just looking round, when I saw the flattened gravestone of a man call John Mann, who died in 1810, described as ‘of Brownhills’, definitely all one word.

I think this is an early reference for the name becoming one word, not The Brown Hills, which from memory is on the pit map, the tithe map and I think the first OS.

Chris

Philip asks:

Hi,

I wonder if you can help me?

There was a business in Lichfield in 1856/7 called Bond And Barnes.

I am interested in knowing what sort of business this was.

Do you know where I could get this information from?

Many thanks for any information you can give.

Best Regards
Philip

Dave McNamee writes:

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The former Red, White and Blue pub is now an attractive house.

Hi

I came across your blog after googling the Red, White and Blue, Lichfield. Reason for googling was I came across reference to this pub when doing a bit of family history research. In a nutshell my great grandmother’s brother, John Blower, is shown as the landlord of this pub in the 1911 census.

Don’t know the location personally as I’m not familiar with the area: my great granmother (from Pelsall) and great grandfather (from Wall) moved to Littleborough near Rochdale, Lancs in the mid 1890s for work purposes and stayed their for their rest of their lives.

Only a snippet, but hopefully of some interest!.

Regards
David McNamee

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A message from Andy Penn…

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Andy’s doing a great thing. Click on the image to read more.

Last week, I posted a promotional ad for local lad Andy Penn’s fundraiser, which took place last Friday at the Shoulder of Mutton to raise funds to support his skydive for Birmingham Children’s Hospital.

Andy will undertake the jump on Saturday, 28th March 2015.

By all accounts the fundraiser was a great night – and Andy wrote to me today to thank everyone who attended, donated and helped:

Hey Bob!

I was just wondering if you would be so kind as to just post this statement of thanks to all that came and supported myself, and helped to raise so much money for Birmingham Children’s Hospital?

Hello everyone, I don’t quite know what to say right now I’m still a bit overwhelmed, Friday nights (27th February 2015) fundraiser was absolutely amazing. To see so many people turn up and support my efforts is something I still can’t get my head around. The whole night was a massive success and I just want to say massive thanks to everyone that donated, bought raffle tickets, and got involved in the auction.

Cheers for the help as well, the response has been amazing. There were a lot of people came that said they saw the fundraiser advertised on your page, so for that i am so grateful.

Together we managed to raise £600 on the night, with over £200 taken on the auction alone. I never thought for one minute we would raise that kind of money and I can’t thank everyone enough.

Firstly I would like to say thank you to my amazing wife Cat, for just doing what you do day in day out and being my rock, for being there and telling me that it can be done even when I had my doubts.

Thank you to my family and friends for being there, giving me your support and believing in me.

Thank you to my baby sister and her other half for an amazing night of entertainment, and a massive thank you to Cotty and The Shoulder of Mutton for letting me put the night on there, to Simon and Josie for all their help, hard work and continued support and last but not least to everyone that came and dug deep, you are all truly amazing.

I would also like to add that there are still 4 weeks of fundraising to be done so if people still want to donate there are a few ways to do this, you can donate online by clicking the link:

http://www.Doitforcharity.com/APenn

You can also go into Thomas Cook on Brownhills High street and enter the name the bear competition, or you can just put some money in the charity tins in side the Shoulder of mutton.

I really can’t thank people enough and hope for your continued support

Andy

My thanks to Andy for both the selfless and brave thing he’s doing, and also for sending such a kind, considerate note of thanks!

I shall follow Andy’s progress on the blog in the coming weeks. Well done, mate, and please stay in touch!

You can check out the Andy’s Charity Skydive Facebook page here.

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The estate we’re in

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William Roberts himself. Image from ‘Brownhills: A walk into history’ by Gerald Reece.

Regular readers will know well that I have a very fond regard for entrepreneur, philanthropist and undoubted rogue William Roberts, one of the true fathers of modern Brownhills, who gave the town not only occupation through his brewery and other businesses, but entertainment through his public houses, a fire brigade through his donations of equipment, and countless other things he paid towards or facilitated in his role as councillor.

What happened to this large and valuable empire after William’s death is a bit hazy, and I’m sure there’s more yet to find on the topic; but Andy Dennis spotted the following notices in the Lichfield Mercury archives, which help shed light on the break up of one of the great early economic forces driving Brownhills.

Andy wrote inn his email:

Hello Bob

I came across a couple of news articles about sale of property in Brownhills, part of the estate of Mrs Clara Bagby, adopted daughter of brewing magnate William Roberts. The interesting bit for me is that the notice of auction is followed up by a brief report the values realised – about £191,000 in today’s money, but this was a tiny fraction of her true wealth.

Cheers
Andy

The question of Clara is interesting, and not fully expanded here – I feel sure there’s more to be found on the subject of her life and inheritance.

My thanks, as ever, to Andy for a remarkably diligent bit of research. This is really what local history is about and I thank you profusely.

If anyone has anything to add, comment is welcome, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Thanks, all.

Andy Dennis wrote:

clara bagby auction

Lichfield Mercury, 27th August 1943. Click for a larger version.

Lichfield Mercury 27 August 1943
SALES BY AUCTION
By BELCHER AND SON
Re Mrs. Clara Bagby, deceased.
By order of the Public Trustee and his co-Executrices.
MONDAY 13th SEPTEMBER 1943

BELCHER & SON, in conjunction with MR. GERORGE CRADDOCK, have received instructions to offer for Sale by Public Auction at THE STATION HOTEL, BROWNHILLS, on the above date, at 6 o’clock p.m. precisely, subject to conditions, the following IMPORTANT FREEHOLD INVESTMENT PROPERTIES comprising 37 Dwelling Houses all situate at Brownhills and having a gross annual rent-roll of £758 15s. 4d.

Lot 1. – Six Dwelling Houses and Premises, Nos. 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11, Church Road, Ogley Hay, Brownhills

Lot 2. – Six Dwelling Houses and Premises, Nos. 17, 19,21, 23, 25, and 27, Church Road aforesaid.

Lot 3. – The Dwelling House and Premises, No. 29, Church Road aforesaid.

Lot 4. – Six Dwelling Houses and Premises, Nos. 31, 33, 35, 37, 39, and 41, Church Road aforesaid.

Lot 5. – Eight Dwelling Houses and Premises, Nos. 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, and 18, Great Charles Street, Ogley Hay aforesaid.

Lot 6. – Ten Dwelling Houses and Premises known as “Woodbine Terrace” and numbered 3 – 21 (odd numbers), Chester Road, Norton Canes, Brownhills.

Detailed particulars may be obtained from the Office of the Public Trustee, 7, Crosby Square, Bishopgate, London, E.C. 3, (Tel. Ave. 5282); Messrs. Ernest Browns and Co., Solicitors, Victoria Chambers, Wednesbury (Tel 0581); Messrs. Belcher and Son, Darlaston (Tel. 151); or from Mr. George Craddock, 6, Market Place, Brownhills (Tel 3211).

The Public Trustee is a government officer who assists with various situations in law surrounding the assets of the deceased. I imagine in this case that the executrices, the two daughters, required assistance in executing the will. The estate was valued at more than £59,000, so, going on the next report, this sale was of a small fraction of her assets. Her estate brought together the accumulated wealth of her adoptive father William Roberts’ brewing and pub empire and her late husband John Bagby’s Darlaston Bolt and Nut Company, Tower Works, Darlaston, which stood on Bright Street.

clara bagby auction results

Lichfield Mercury, 17th September 1943. Click for a larger version.

Lichfield Mercury 17 September 1943
SALE AT BROWNHILLS

A successful sale of freehold properties was held at the Station Hotel, Brownhills, on Monday by Messrs. Belcher and Son, Darlaston (in conjunction with Mr George Craddock, of Brownhills). Prices realised were:- Six houses 1 to 11, Church Road, Ogley Hay, £980; six houses 17 to 27, Church Road, £1,285; a house, 29, Church Road, £255; six houses, 31 to 41, Church Road, £935; eight houses, 2 to 18 Great Charles Street, Ogley Hay, £800; ten houses, ‘Woodbine Terrace,’, Chester Road, Norton Canes, £1,300.

The sale was by order of the Public Trustee and his co-executrices, and the solicitors concerned were Messrs. Ernest Brown and Co., of Wednesbury.

The interest here is that the sale values are reported, in contrast to many other sales. But how do these prices compare with today? The total realised was £4,665. The annual rent was £758, or a yield of 16%. I gather these days an average of about 9% would be more likely.

Lot 2 refers to the row of houses still standing next to the Shoulder of Mutton. The average price was about £215. Applying inflation, from for example thisismoney.co.uk, suggests this would be worth £8,825 in today’s money, but that would certanly not buy a house, even at 58 years old (the plaque says 1885). The most recent sale prices for these houses were £29,000 (2002) and £35,000 (1999) (Zoopla), but they were twice as old and there has been firther inflation since then. There is what appears to be a similar property on the market in High Street for £99,000.

So, although £4,665 was a tidy sum in 1943, it was probably worth much more than the figure derived from year-on-year inflation of £191,265 and the whole estate much more than £2.4 million.

station hotel

The dying days of the Station Hotel, probably around 1986. Image supplied by Mike Leonard.

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Not only customers, but friends

1950 Deakin Jonah & Jane founders of Deakins the Grocers

Image from Gillian Gaiser.

 

A lovely bit of ephemera relating to Deakins’ Central Stores and Jonah Deakin has been sent in by the wonderfully generous Gillian Gaiser, who donated her wonderful writing about the Deakin family to the blog, published last weekend.

There’s clearly a lot of love for the Deakins and that area of Brownhills, which to be fair is critically overlooked historically.

Gillian has sent scans of a centenary celebration and Christmas card sent out by the Deakin family to customers at Christmas 1950: the hand produced nature of the artwork is gorgeous and the message speaks of a vastly different retail age. What a wonderful thing – I’m so grateful to Gillan for sharing it.

While I’m on the subject, what is the Howdles Lane/Deakin Avenue/Whitehorse Road/South Chasewater called? I’ve been struggling with this for ages; previously I’ve said ‘Newtown’, which I’ve been chided for, as that only really starts at the Chase Road Junction.Or does it?  So what is this locality called?

Please comment here, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Thanks.

Gillian wrote:

Hi Bob,

Further to the photo of Central Stores which I sent to you I am attaching jpgs of the Christmas card sent out by my parents/grandparents on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of Central Stores which may be of interest.

It says the business started in 1900 however in 1901 at the time of the census Jonah and Jane with son Charles were noted as living on Hednesford Road and Jonah’s occupation is given as Insurance Agent. It could be that The Stores were in the process of being built at the time… who knows?

I doubt there is anyone left now who can give us the full story!

Good wishes from Gill Gaiser

1950 Deakins the Grocers Jubilee brochure

Image from Gillian Gaiser.

1950 Deakins the Grocers Jubilee brochure inside

Image from Gillian Gaiser.

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Woodmen draw to keep Wulf from the door…

Photos kindly supplied by David Evans

The Woodmen yesterday (Saturday 28th February 2015) faced AFC Wulfrunians at Oak Park, and held the visitors to a hard-fought draw.

Bill Shaw was there to witness the match, and submitted the following report:

Hi Bob,

A creditable draw on a glue pot of a pitch, Wulfs fighting back from a goal down and nearly stealing all three points with a spirited finish.

It was a much improved performance from Wood and raises the spirits for the next three games in eight days spell at Oak Park. With Basford and Long Eaton suffering shock home defeats Wood actually closed the gap on them, so it’s  all still to play for…

Walsall Wood 1 v 1 AFC Wulfrunians.

Not surprisingly the game between the divisions form teams ended all square. Wood started brightly, playing some neat enterprising football without finding the net in the first 45 minutes. They went ahead from the penalty spot on 51 minutes, but the introduction of young substitute Demetri Brown on the hour mark changed the whole complexion of the game and he nipped between defender and keeper on 80 minutes to plunder the equaliser.

A bright start from both sides but it was Wood who threatened first, Luke Adams and Ben Evans combining in the centre to feed Joey Butlin, he powered through one tackle but under pressure from Ryan Talbot he fired over the bar. Two minutes later a lovely ball out wide right by Max Black found Corey Currithers who cut back inside, laid the ball square to Harry Harris to hit a first time effort goalwards, keeper Jonathon Brown’s full length save pushing the ball onto the post. On 18 minutes Butlin released Luke Adams wide right, he made the box only to overhit his cross. Five minutes later it was Black collecting the ball from a left wing throw running at the defence, Jordan Perks making a brave block.

On 28 minutes a long ball out of defence by Wulfs was collected at pace by Andrew Thompson, he raced into the right of the box before being stopped by a combination of Jamie Sauntson and keeper Mario Kisiel, half hearted penalty appeals rightly waved away.

Wulfs should have gone ahead five minutes later, a square pass across the back saw Thompson intercept the ball, race into the box only to fire wide of the advancing Kisiel and the right hand post.

A flowing one touch left wing move on 41 minutes ended with Evans racing into the left of the box, his low drive well held by Brown.

The last action of the first half came a minute later, a Wulfs right wing free kick headed back to Thompson, his first time 20 yard rising drive clearing the back fence.

A minute into the second half a left wing cross from Evans was completely missed by Brown, Perks saving the keepers blushes by heading off the line. On 51 minutes Harris raced onto a ball into the left of the box only to go down under a mistimed challenge. Butlin making no mistake from the spot to put Wood ahead. Four minutes later Currithers put Evans into the left of the box, Brown making a brave full length save.

Substitute Demetri Brown made his first foray into the left of the Wood box on 62 minutes, he was strong to go through one challenge before he was stopped by a great tackle from Anthony Juxon. Then on 80 minutes a ball over the top of the Wood defence held up on the wind , Kisiel came to the edge of the box, hesitated, which allowed Brown in to lift the ball calmly over the keeper and even though two defenders chased back they couldn’t stop the ball crossing the line. Three minutes later a right wing free kick to the far post saw Lee Stretton save Wood with a brave, diving header to clear the danger. On 90 minutes a right to left move across the face of the Wood box ended with Nathan Rose-Laing firing in a low drive that brought a superb full length save from Kisiel, the ball flying out to Mitchell McDonald whose first time effort was pushed away by the keeper, but only straight to Liam Bood to fire the loose ball high and wide.

Wood dominated the first hour, but Manager Steve Palmer’s substitution changed the balance of the game and they could have stolen all three points with a strong finish, which would have been hard on the home side.

Boldmere St. Michaels followed by Continental Star at Oak Park on Saturday 7th March & then Basford United on Tuesday 10th.

Bill Shaw
Walsall Wood F.C.

Walsall Wood are a good team and an excellent, community-spirited club. They need our support – please do attend the coming games if you can. The lads do us all proud and deserve as much support as we can give them.

As ever, thanks to Bill for the report – always appreciated – for The Good of the Wood!

 

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January 1993 – Drugs Indifference

Brownhills Gazette January 1993 issue 40_000001

Another solid 16 page issue – there’s concern over drugs education, am-dram, some interesting planning applications, Harold and Mary Dukes celebrate their 60th, a great early 60s photo from Ogley Junior and lots more. Click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 40 of the long lost freesheet, from January 1993 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

Another solid 16 page issue, bearing the hallmarks of a the new journalist editor; there is a noticeably more newspaperish style, and some great short articles – there’s concern over drugs education, some local am-dram, interesting planning applications, Harold and Mary Dukes celebrate their 60th, a great early 60s photo from Ogley Junior and lots more.

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 40 January 1993 – PDF format

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Brace yourself!

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Ogley Junction – where the Anglesey Branch meets the former Wyrley & Essington mainline to Huddlesford.

Here’s a quick one I spotted locally last week: I was going to put it on my 365daysofbiking journal, but I thought it deserved a wider audience and debate – it seems the cast iron bridge at Ogley Junction, near Grasmere Gardens, was once damaged or cracked and repaired.

The damage was repaired a long, long time ago, and the repair is very evident, but I’ve never once noticed it in the hundreds of times I’ve crossed or dawdled on the bridge. From the materials used, the repair is old and must have been hard work.

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The bracers fitted to the rail are highlighted: I’ve never noticed them before. They aren’t present anywhere else on the bridge. What happened? Click for a larger version.

It’s easy to spot; as one walks over the footbridge towards Chasewater from Brownhills, looking at the northwestern guard rail on the slope down, there are bracing plates bored across the webs of the casting. They look to be bolted with maybe ¾ or 1 inch bolts and big, square nuts; drilling the holes for those can’t have been fun.

What I’m asking, I guess, is what happened? Was there some accident after installation, or would Horseley Iron Works (who in all probability cast the bridge like others on the line) have sent a repaired, weak casting?

Is there any record of an accident here?

Just a bit of a curiosity, and I’m amazed I’ve never noticed it before. Please do comment here, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

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Walsall Wood at home to AFC Wulfrunians this afternoon!

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Walsall Wood FC have a great reputation for entertaining football, and a keen, loyal and friendly bunch of supporters! Come join in the fun tonight and see some cracking football.

Saturday 28th February 2015

Walsall Wood FC at home to AFC Wulfrunians

Don’t break your Wood vows be there and be faithful to your local heroes

3:00pm kickoff

Please come and get behind your local club

For The Good Of The Wood!

Oak Park, Lichfield Road, Walsall Wood. WS9 9NP.

Hopefully, a match report will follow

Check out the club website here.

 

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Chasewater Railway Winter Steam Gala this weekend

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Looks like a great weekend! Click for a larger version.

I note Chasewater Railway have a Winter Steam Gala this weekend (Saturday 28th February – Sunday 1st March 2015), with special guest engines and a much busier running timetable than normal.

This event will be well worth a look – the Railway is one of our hidden gems, situated at Chasewater Country Park, and is well worth a visit. There will be stuff there for all the family, so please do wander down if you can.

Chasewater Railway posted the following on their website:

Our first gala of the year will be on Feb 28th/Mar 1st 2015 and preparations are now been finalised. The confirmed visiting loco is the beautiful Peckett ‘Teddy’, small but perfectly formed Teddy weighs in at 11 tons but like ‘Colin McAndrew ‘ has the heart of a lion. We can’t wait to see Teddy at Chasewater. February 28th and March 1st Industrial gala 10am-5pm. Intensive timetable to follow later this week so keep watching. Subject to availability the line up will be :-

Guest Locomotive – Peckitt ‘Teddy’ and long term guest Staffordshire built Bagnall ‘Kent No.2’

Plus home fleet.

Hunslet ‘Holly Bank No.3’, RSH ‘Nechells No.4’, and 104 year old  Barclay ‘Colin McAndrew’

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Teddy – Ivor the engine, anyone? From Chasewater Railway website

This special event offers great value for money featuring 5 engines in steam, brake van rides, demonstration freight/coal trains, accredited museum, model railway and Narrow Gauge train (Sun only and weather permitting/ small extra charge), gift shops, tea room (BHW) and cafe (CWH). Look forward to seeing you there

Day Rover Tickets are priced at Adults £7.00 Children 3-15 £3.50 (under 3yrs travel free), 1 free ticket for a travelling companion required by a fare paying wheelchair user, no other concessions, vouchers or HRA passes available/accepted during special events – members on production of valid membership card is £2 per person named on the card.

All advertised services and locomotives subject to availability.

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Cracking value!

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In memoriam: Dennis Johnson

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Dennis Johnson – rest in peace.

Readers who’ve been following a while will remember the search for Dennis Johnson, a dementia sufferer who went missing from Shire Oak in January, 2014 – Dennis was located a short time later in Chasetown following a huge search driven in no small way by appeals on social media.

Keith Johnson, Dennis’s brother, wrote to me yesterday to inform me that sadly, Dennis passed away recently.

Keith wrote:

Hello Bob

On January 11th, 2014 you reported about my brother, Dennis Johnson, who had gone missing from home. Later that day he had been found about 4 miles away and was safe.

It is with sadness to let you know that he passed away on February 18th, 2015 at Parklands Nursing Home in Bloxwich, who looked after him very well, with Alzheimer’s.

Both I and the family would like to take this opportunity to thank everybody who searched for Dennis last year, but his condition got worse over the following year.

Dennis leaves a widow (Rosemarie) and two stepsons (Paul and David), who would also like to thank everybody for their help.

Keith Johnson

I, and all the readers who I’m certain I speak for would like to express our sincere and heartfelt condolences at this sad time to Rosemarie, Keith and all the Johnson family – we share your sadness. I’m sure most readers have experienced the effect of Alzheimers on relatives or friends, and understand the tragedy of this debilitating condition.

If anyone would like me to pass on messages to Keith, I would be happy to do so. Mail me on BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

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Millie the cat returns safe and well!

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The wanderer returns, Little Millie the cat, formerly lost in Clayhanger. Image from Nicola Kirby.

Good news for regular readers and cat lovers who all looked out for Millie the cat from Clayhanger, who went missing recently: She’s turned up back home, a little thin but otherwise well.

Her owner, Nicola Kirby, posted the following on Facebook yesterday:

Millie has come home this morning, we are all over the moon 😀😀 thanks to everyone that shared my posts and for helping us look for her, it’s very much appreciated!

If you have an appeal of any kind, do get in touch. Rufus and Charlie were both found and returned to their owners, so these appeals do work!

Cheers all,
Bob

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December 1992 – Governors respond

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Brownhills Gazette December 1992 issue 39 – 16 page issue containing controversy over performance at Shire Oak School, the Gazette has a new editor, a Gerald Reece bloke gives a talk to the History Society, Oak Park Pacers make a run for it, a rather bizarre postcard in the archives section plus loads more. Please click for a larger version.

Continuing the scans of the Brownhills Gazette – I present issue 39 of the long lost freesheet, from December 1992 for you to peruse and download. I’ve had an incredible response to featuring these long, lost publications here on the blog.

David Evans, very kindly granted access to the archive held by former editor and contributor Brian Stringer, has been assiduously and conscientiously scanning them all. Every single issue. Every few days, I’m going to feature the next in the series.

This is a 16 page issue containing controversy over performance at Shire Oak School, the Gazette has a new editor, this Gerald Reece bloke gives a talk to the History Society, Oak Park Pacers make a run for it, a rather bizarre postcard in the archives section plus loads more. Please click for a larger version.

Note the advert for the Nishika 3D camera on page 4. Wonder what happened to that technology?

I note from the editorial panel a sister title was published for Pelsall. Does anyone know about that at all, please?

The history of how the Brownhills Gazette came to exist has been detailed in this post thanks to the wonderful John Sylvester.

If other bloggers want to use this material, can you please drop me a line first? I don’t mind, there’s just sone stuff I’d like to clear about the usage, thanks.

Cheers to Brian and David for sharing a wonderful thing, that’s part of our community history.

If you have any memories, questions or observations please do comment or mail me – BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Brownhills Gazette issue 39 December 1992 – PDF format

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Bogus gardeners conning the elderly in Brownhills – be vigilant

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OAPs were conned in Shire Oak, but be vigilant all over the area. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

I was contacted yesterday by a local lady who is very concerned and upset that her mother was conned by bogus ‘gardeners’ who claimed to have done work on her communal garden, and then charged an extortionate fee.

The reader, who wises to remain anonymous, told me:

Hello Bob

Today I visited my mum, who lives in a Senior Citizen’s bungalow and she told me someone had done her garden. She has a communal garden and two men had tidied up her borders and had tidied the edges of the grass around borders and path.

I ask her how much they had charged and she said £80. I was gobsmacked. Funnily enough three other men appeared in the garden, so I went out and asked what they were doing… They were from a company working for Walsall Housing Group legitimately, had ID and were there to complete the work that my mum had paid these other men to do.

They mentioned the men in a white van and I informed them that they had charged my mum £80 for the work. They told their manager who came and spoke to a neighbour of my mum who had been charged £125 for similar work.

It appears these two guys in a white transit are preying on vulnerable OAPs and charging them a fortune for very little work.

I just wanted to warn others to look out for them. I don’t want to name my mum or give her address because I think she feels somewhat embarrassed and a little stupid for being taken advantage of.

I have tried to report to community police but they are not answering the phone.

The incident took place in the Shire Oak area.

Angry reader

Please tell your relatives and neighbours about these ratbags, and impress upon them how important it is not to buy from, or accept services at the door, no matter how plausible the people offering them. Genuine companies will always contact you by other means.

Explain that no official body will turn up unannounced demanding money for services like gardening, drain cleaning, tree pruning etc., and that if they are at all unsure of any caller, to close the door and contact the police.

Scumbags engaged in the robbing of OAPs are lower than a snake’s knees, and I find it shocking and disturbing that the lady concerned was unable to contact the police. I shall draw this unfortunate situation to their attention.

Please,  if you have any further information relating to these incidents, or if you witnessed something  please contact West Midlands Police by dialling 101 (999 in an emergency, obviously) or Crimestoppers on 0800 555111.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Events, Local media, News, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Tick tock

Surely, with a decent renovation and some decent tenants this could be earning money rather than rotting away?

This is just a reminder and a request – it’s been three months to the day since the dynamic duo of UKIPs Brownhills Councillor Steve Craddock and his best mate and Walsall Conservative former Regeneration head-honcho Adrian Andrew were said to have brought home the bacon and hammered out some progress on the redevelopment of Ravens Court.

The triumphant twosome looked like heroes when Steve Craddock went public in December and said the owners – Lightquote, a mayfair-based property company – would be submitting a planning application for the crumbling edifice’s redevelopment ‘in the new year’.

In the interim, precisely bugger all has happened at Ravens Court, except further vandalism, the usual ASB and more of it has crumbled away.

I have been informed by several people in the know that a statement from Lightquote or their agents on the situation had been drafted for the blog and would soon be forthcoming. I’m still waiting.

Curious, that.

Why would the owners be in any way reticent to release good news? I’m quite happy to give them the floor here unchallenged. Just communicate with Brownhills, and explain what your plans are. After all, we are living with your investment property, which is blighting our town and hindering our commercial progress.

The only thing actually happening right now is time is elapsing: Walsall Council held off action against Lightquote in progressing a Section 215 notice to legally force them to tidy up the site, but vowed to pursue legalities if an application was not submitted within six months. This action – the only positive movement so far that hasn’t been vapour and spin – was brought about by Brownhills Labour Councillor Steve Wade.

For Messrs Lightquote, Andrew and Craddock: Tick tock.

Meanwhile, I hear the local Conservatives have put out a leaflet claiming they’ve achieved something with Ravens Court. Surely they wouldn’t be so stupidly bold? If anyone has a copy of this leaflet, I’d love to see a scan or photo, please. In the absence of hoardings, hairy builders backsides or heavy plant, the only thing the Tories seem to have achieved is co-opting UKIP to be useful stooges.

And then, there’s the rub – even if Lightquote submit a planning application, from approval they have a validity period of three years. Submitting a trivial, stalling planning application could well buy them years without any enforcement action, ad will actually be cheaper than fulfilling the 215 action – the Authority may well grant permission, but they can’t force it to be acted upon.

It’s still a big old mess, and is rapidly becoming little more than a political football. With elections upcoming, expect lots of hot air and promises, but if you’re told there’s action on this, remember to ask a few pertinent questions.

By the way, while I’m on the subject, a message for one reader in particular: Tesco don’t own Ravens Court and never have. Do the research, like I have, and you’ll find they aren’t connected with the current owners, however much you assert the contrary. If you have any evidence that says otherwise, don’t be shy, let’s have it… not that you’re reading this, of course.

Meanwhile, from Walsall Council’s last report on the matter:

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It’s common to blame the Council or Tesco for the state of Ravens Court, but as this Walsall Council document shows, neither own it.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Express & Star, Followups, Interesting photos, It makes me mad!, Just plain daft, Local media, Local politics, News, Panoramio photo discussions, planning, Shared media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Have you seen Millie from Clayhanger?

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Little Millie the cat, lost in Clayhanger. Have you seen her? Photo from Nicola Kirby.

Oh dear – another lost puss, this time from Clayhanger, where Millie the very timid black and white cat went missing last week.

Her owner, Nicola Kirby, is vert worried about her, and is concerned that because she’s so nervous, she may have got locked in a shed or garage by accident.

If you live around Clayhanger, please check garages, sheds and other outbuildings. Lately, Rufus and Charlie were both found and returned to their owners, so these appeals do work!

Anyone with information, please comment here or drop me a line to BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers!

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If you’ve seen this wee puss, please get in touch. Image supplied by Nicola Kirby.

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Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Interesting photos, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment