Fatal hit and run in Brownhills – appeal for help

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Floral tributes left at the scene this afternoon. Image supplied by reader Phil.

There is currently a report online from the Express & Star.

Posted by Gavin Guest on Facebook and shared by Warren Parry:

Gavin Guest:

OK folks well brother in law was involved in a hit and run last night. And we sadly lost him this morning. I would like everyone to share this message and hopefully find the scum that left him there. So if your partner, son, daughter, friend, friend of friend has a smashed front end of their car please contact your local police so justice can be served.

Please keep this share going thank you.

The incident appears to have occurred at 3:20am on Sunday, 30th March 2014, at the junction of the A5 Watling Street and The Parade, Brownhills.

Police are requesting that anyone with the victim at the time to contact them, as it’s important they get as much information as possible.

If you have any information, or saw anything, please do contact Walsall Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

My condolences to the family and all the people affected by this terrible incident. An awful, awful thing to happen. I’d also that folk respect the privacy of the family where appropriate, including on social media. They must be going through hell, please remember that.

I have asked West Midlands Police for a statement, if one is forthcoming I shall post it up.

I’ll let you have any further info as and when.

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The accident apparently happened at 3:20am. Image kindly supplied by reader Phil.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Express & Star, Interesting photos, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Car accident last night in Brownhills?

Hi folks.

I’m hearing about a bad accident up on the A5 near the White Horse Pub last night.

I’ve asked West Midlands Police for information.

Anyone got details? Please email me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. I’ll put all comments on moderation for now for obvious reasons.

Cheers
Bob

Posted in News | 1 Comment

When the dam burst

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Chasewater this evening – a view unchanged for pretty much two centuries.

Chasewater has been, as any long-term reader here knows, a continual and recurring obsession of mine. I love the place; I grew up with it, visiting regularly. I came to love its air of faded, end-of-the-pier decay and beautiful, often unexpected wildlife.

At the end of the 1990s and with the arrival of the M6 Toll, it all changed in a renovation, and a more environmentally aware persona developed for the place; no longer was it some kind of failed amusement park, but it was a country park, and with the reclamation of the north heath, the place once known as Norton Pool became a very important focus for wildlife in the area.

Throughout the draining and dam works that occurred there in the last few years, I winced and worried for the reservoir I loved, only to see it recover spectacularly and in double-quick time as we endured the terribly wet, awful season of 2012-2013.

Chasewater was originally constructed as a feeder supply for the canal network, and I thought it appropriate that as the park finally switches control from Lichfield District Council to Staffordshire County Council, we give some thought to the history. To this end, I thought it probably best to revisit Gerald Reece’s wonderful book ‘Brownhills a walk into history’. Gerald tells the story of the creation of the facility, and its catastrophic failure not long after completion.

Gerald’s work is excellent, and remember, it dates from 20 years ago now, and was carried out wholly before the internet. It’s a remarkable thing. If you get chance, do buy the book; copies occasionally crop up on eBay or Amazon. Keep looking.

Thanks to Gerald for allowing me to share this. As ever, your input is welcomed. Comment here, or BrwonhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

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Chasewater as it is today. Map from Chasewater Wildlife Group. Click for a larger version.

Gerald wrote:

XX

Chasewater

More beer has been wagered on the origins of Chasewater than it could ever hold, well almost An article in the Express & Star of 22nd March 1990 put that figure at 1,000 million gallons. Chasewater, ex Norton Pool, ex Cannock Chase Reservoir or Great Reservoir is man made. In 1796 work had begun on the Wyrley and Essington Canal extension through Brownhills to join the Wolverhampton Canal with the Coventry Canal at Huddlesford. It was obvious from the start that a large amount of water would be needed to top-up the system to compensate for the loss incurred at Ogley Locks. The problem was made more difficult by the restrictions included in the Act of Parliament of 1794 that sanctioned the extension. It stipulated that under no circumstances were waters to be taken from any stream, spring, brook or rivulet in Brownhills, Clayhanger or Catshill, nor from any in the Parishes of Walsall and Norton. The first suggestion was to create reservoir by flooding the valley between Sandhills and Muckley Corner. This was ruled out because a turnpiked road ran through it and part of the designated land was under the plough. An area on the south side of Cannock Chase was finally chosen. This was a tract of land that lay between Five-Ways at Heath Hayes and Knaves Castle on the Old Watling Street Road. An ancient road ran through the middle of this area also, this was the Coventry Road, or locally, Blakes Road. The road had been one of the main arterial routes for centuries but traffic had almost deserted it in favour of town to town travelling. Running through the area was Crane Brook, a combination of the Little and Great Crane Brooks that joined here on their way to the Tame at Tamworth. The line of the Crane also formed the ancient boundary between the Manors of Hammerwich and Norton Canes.

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Plan showing part of Cannock Chase before it was flooded in 1797 to create the reservoir. Original drawing by Gerald Reece, and featured in his book ‘Brownhills a walk into history’.

 

Approaches were made to the Lords of the appropriate Manors for permission to use the lands. To Henry William, Earl of Uxbridge, Baron Paget for the Hammerwich section and to Phineas Hussey and Richard Gildart for the Norton Canes section. Agreements were quickly reached, the Lords of the manors accepting 3/6 per acre per annum, for their areas of barren, boggy wasteland. The area taken measured 156 acres. In 1796 work began on the construction of the Reservoir. The Crane Brook was diverted away from the area. Teams of ‘navigators’ dug out the valley floor, they used the excavated spoils to build earthwork dams along the eastern and western perimeters. The deepest part of the reservoir was 35 feet at a point near to the Eastern Dam. A feeder channel was also dug leading to the main canal at Ogley Locks.

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Guide to Chasewater land ownership in below map. Original table drafted by Gerald Reece, and featured in his book ‘Brownhills a walk into history’.

It was a rushed job. The Company were under pressure to get the canal open and navigable as soon as possible. The main canal was opened on the 8th May 1797 but it had to close shortly after. The water level in the main canal was low and the locks at Ogley had run dry. In haste the Board ordered that ‘the plug be drawn at the reservoir on 10th September 1797’. Crane Brook was rediverted and the Reservoir filled. The accumulated water was fed into the main canal system. All went well for a time, then disaster struck.

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Remarkable plan of the original ‘Chasewater’ reservoir and feeder, as copied from Gerald Reece from an original document. Click for a larger version – sadly, the original book print rendered some text illegible.

In June 1799 the Eastern Dam burst sending millions of gallons of water rushing down the valley towards Shenstone. Roads and bridges were washed away, fields were flooded and sheep and cattle were drowned. The Canal Company moved quickly to repair the damage caused. Compensation for loss was paid on a most generous scale. Mr Craddock of Muckley Comer was paid six guineas for the damage caused to his field of wheat. The bridge at Blackbrook was rebuilt at the company’s expense. Priority was given to rebuilding the damaged dam. Not only had the Reservoir become the main topping-up point for the company’s network of canals but it also provided a source of additional revenue. The surplus waters were being sold off to neighbouring canal companies. It was decided that the new dam would be higher and thicker than the old dam and that the inner walls would be faced with limestone. On 27th January 1800 the Canal Company gave permission for the recruitment of ‘as many man as are needed be employed to complete the rebuilding of the dam as soon as is possible’. By March 1800 the Reservoir had been rebuilt and was again in service.

As a safeguard against any such further accidents the company had a Watch-house built and employed William Wall as a full time watchman. His duties included patrolling the dams and reporting any defects and wear. He paid the company £2 per year for the use of the Watch-house and an adjoining garden plot.

The Lords of the Manors of Hammerwich and Norton Canes, The Earl of Uxbridge, Phineas Hussey and Richard Gildart became engrossed in a series of lengthy legal battles that dragged on until 1812 when they were finally settled by arbitration. The ancient boundary dividing the two manors was redrawn. The Canal Company paid out the twelve years of back rental. The new terms of agreement drawn up between the Canal Company and the Lords of the Manors included an increase of rental to 5/6d per acre, per annum and Rights of water. The Earl of Uxbridge secured his fishing rights which included a clause stating that, every third year during the months of October or November, His Lordship or his appointed agents could request that the waters of the Reservoir be drained to such a low level as to enable them to remove the stock offish.

In January 1956 Brownhills Urban District Council purchased Norton Pool and adjacent lands including two cottages, in all 272 acres, for £5,600 from the British Transport Commission. The complex was renamed Chasewater in 1956.

Standing like a warped inverted Staffordshire Knot upon a green grassy hummock is one of Brownhills’ very few works of art. Commissioned in 1962 from Birmingham sculptor Brian Bloomer the 3 ton ‘climbing frame’ was paid for out of local rates.

Chasewater Light Railway is a registered charity. In 1965 the Railway Preservation Society leased part of the remains of the former Cannock Chase and Wolverhampton Railway and the former Midlands exchange sidings from the National Coal Board. It was later realised that the exchange sidings were the property of British Rail and for a time a ban was placed on the use of the line. A splendid display of steam engines and rolling stock has been collected from many sources, alas none of them are really local. The ‘Museum’ does contain several small treasures, Handbills, Tickets, etc, etc, that have been collected by its curator and enthusiast Barry Bull.

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The arch over the canal overflow at the bottom of the spillway, as drawn by Gerald Reece.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Cannock Chase, Chasewater, Environment, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Panoramio updates, Shared media, Shared memories, Wildlife | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

A rarity for The Woodmen

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Alvechurch are a great club… Image from Pitchhero.

Walsall Wood FC travelled to Alvechurch yesterday afternoon, and returned with a no score draw in an unusually entertaining, but sadly goalless match.

Bill Shaw was there to record the action:

Hiya Bob,

The game didn’t approach the standard of Thursday night but nevertheless we had the rarity – an entertaining goal-less draw.

Alvechurch 0 V 0 Walsall Wood

Ninety minutes of neat approach play failed to produce a goal, wayward finishing by both sides, last gasp defending and some good goalkeeping kept the scores level.

Max Black was unlucky on 25 minutes when his goalbound effort was finger-tipped onto the inside of his right hand post by keeper Brady and the ball bounced straight back to him on the floor. Joey Butlin fired in a 30 yard free kick on 77 minutes, Brady this time touching the ball around his right hand post.

Shawn Boothe and Rikki Bains played for the first time at the centre of the Wood defence and Matty Coton had a rare game in goal, as Wood rang the changes after Thursday’s extra time marathon against Tividale.

The draw dropped Wood back to 10th place but a win at home to Stourport Swifts on Tuesday night could see them move up to 8th if results go their way, their highest ever placing in the Football league pyramid.

Bill Shaw.

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 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Going Back

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A remarkable architectural survivor: The old County Primary School, now Walsall Wood Youth Centre. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

I’ve noticed over the five years that this blog has been running that it brings out often hidden sides to readers, and uncovers talents folk didn’t know they had. The young David Evans of late has been discovering a new talent for a genteel, polite form of Urban Exploration.

Not content with buttering up demolition men for vicarious photos of historic rubble, David also infiltrated a remarkable local old barn to great effect. Last week, the man surpassed himself to get images of a building few of us will have been in since childhood, but so many will remember.

The oldsters will remember it as a school, but to me, it was a Youth Club, run by Doug Birch amongst others, back in the day. So sit back, grab a cuppa, and delve into the past…

Cheers to David, as ever, for another great article…

Walsall Wood’s old County Primary School, by Streets Corner

Walsall Wood Junior and Infants’ School, Brownhills Road, Walsall Wood, was opened in 1903 as the mixed and infants’ Walsall Wood Board School. A new infants’ school was erected in 1906, and the original building was enlarged in 1912. (fn. 80) In 1932 the school was reorganized to form a senior school and a mixed and infants’ school. The former became a secondary modern school in 1945, moved to new buildings in Lichfield Road, Walsall Wood, in 1966, and merged with Shire Oak Grammar School to form Shire Oak School in 1970

This is the brief reference given in British History on-line to my own childhood primary school in Walsall Wood. The recent demolition of the derelict St. Johns Junior School a little way away, in Lichfield Road Walsall Wood brought back memories of my own childhood, and particularly my school.

Whereas the St. Johns school had been derelict for many years, the Mixed junior and Infants School , which stood proud and stark by the playing fields with their swings, roundabouts, giants stride, leapfrog and all, had fared better.

The building presently serves as the local Youth Centre. What would I find inside? Had everything been changed beyond recognition, were the classrooms altered, the doors replaced, the headmaster’s office so different as to be unrecognisable?

These are the photos I took of my journey back in time to a land I thought I had forgotten.

Then, as if by magic, long forgotten clouded images and distant, thin sounds came back into  my mind with each step I took inside.

The school bell, lining up in the blue brick playground, the brass door handles, the wood partitions, the blackboard and ‘weasel’, the beanbags in the yard, hoops, the girls skipping and chanting, the boys fighting and kicking a ball about, the schools BBC radio broadcasts over that strange and frequently unreliable radio set as we sat on the floor in the hall. The iron desks with their lift-up lids. Ink, leaky inkwells, ink pellets, lead pencils, rulers, blotting paper, cross-legged pen nibs,  snappy crayons, that pencil sharpener that did not work, Those primeval painting lessons and rough grey paper to paint on and the bucket for the accident sponge…

Yusuf Islam sings the blues. Still love Cat Stevens…

School friends  being away from class with  measles/chickenpox/mumps. Reading books, writing practice in those tracing paper books, sums , sums and more sums, times tables, reading aloud those long words to the headmaster, school dinners in the top school hall, the cold winters and the cold pre-fab classrooms. The incredible newts and weeds and things in the school pond; taking  young fidgety frogs to school to show Miss,  the championship catapult marksmanship trials, the mournful bleakness of the coalmine hooter calling over the school field, the slides in the playground, the whiffy open air toilet block in the playground.

And so, with my photos safely taken, I left this Other World and gently closed the door behind me.

I would like to thank the kind staff of Brownhills Community Centre for so readily allowing me to  visit my old junior school in Walsall Wood and take these photos.

David Evans, March 2014

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Walsall community, Walsall Council, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 34 Comments

Close, but not close enough: Tividale beat Walsall Wood

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Oak Park – scene of both magic and loss. Better luck next year, lads!

Walsall Wood FC fought bravely on Thursday night, but just couldn’t quite get the better of  visitors Tividale FC in a great match that saw the local lads knocked out of the Walsall Senior Cup for this season.

Sorry, this report was delayed as Is it came in while I was at work earlier.

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

sorry it’s late but I didn’t get to bed until 3.00am!

Another night of high drama at Oak Park, a fantastic advert for for the Midland Alliance and football in general. Football was the real winner at the end of a night of heartbreak for the Wood.

Walsall Senior Cup Quarter final:

Walsall Wood 2 v 3 Tividale – After extra time.

On a pitch made very heavy by a torrential downpour a couple hours before kick off , two of the best footballing sides ever to grace the Midland Alliance served up an absolute cracking evening of football.

Somehow the first half ended goalless, mainly due to man of the match Tividale keeper Jack Hayfield who was equal to anything Wood fired at him. The second half was again played at a relentless pace but just as entertaining, the deadlock broken on 68 minutes, Luke Male firing home from close range after a run and cross from wide right by Sam Williams.

Wood’s goal 7 minutes later was similarly crafted, Lewis Taylor Boyce tricked his way along the byeline from wide on the right before calmly laying the ball back to Joey Butlin to score the equaliser with a crisp low drive. Parity only lasted 2 minutes, the ever alert Ashley Jackson threaded a ball through the Wood rearguard to put Garfield Robinson racing clear into the centre of the box, as Wood keeper Raajan Gill raced to meet him he hit a precision low drive past his right hand side.

It took Wood just 2 minutes to get back on terms, Corey Currithers was fouled 25 yards out,on the right edge of the box, Butlin hitting a thunderous rising drive that took a deflection off the defensive wall and rocketted past a stranded Hayfield.

Tividale had a chance on 86 minutes to win the game but Gill raced from his area to kick clear from Matt Jukes – just, then 2 minutes later a lucky bounce took Jackson clear to race for goal, Gill making an absolutely superb full length save.

Wood had the better of the early exchanges in the first half of extra time with Taylor Boyce creating panic in the visitors defence every time he had the ball and Butlin a constant threat, but somehow it was still all square at half time. The winner came on 109 minutes, Jackson again collecting the ball in the centre circle before an inch perfect ball through the Wood defence gave Matt Morgan a chance to power into the right of the box. As Gill came out to meet him he cleverly laid the ball to his left for Matt Martin to calmly slot home.

Wood were a coat of paint away from the a 3rd equaliser when 2 minutes later Butlin fired a free kick into the top right hand corner, Hayfield just making fingertip contact to push the shot onto the underside of the bar, only for the ball to bounce to safety It was a case of what we have we hold as Champions elect Tividale ran down the clock and held out to frustrate Wood until the final whistle.

For both teams this was their 3rd game in 6 days but they served up a feast of football on a heavy pitch – so please note Mr. Wenger and the rest of the pampered, overpaid prima donnas playing on their bowling green pitches of the Premier League most of these lads work full time as well!

Congratulations to everyone involved in last night’s game you were a credit to football everywhere, just a pity there had to be a loser on the night, Walsall Wood suffering extra time heartbreak for the second time this season.

It’s Alvechurch away today as the Woodmen look to consolidate their ninth spot in the table, then on Tuesday night Stourport Swifts are the visitors to Oak Park, another club in their sights as they look to finish as high as possible in the first ever season at this elevated level five.

Bill Shaw.

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 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Ploughing a different furrow

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The vertical ridges in the area circled, just off the Pelsall Road in Brownhills, show evidence of a farming history. A great spot by Warren Parry. Click for a larger version. Imagery from Google Maps.

This is a quick heads up to a post on a blog I love by a chap I have a great deal of regard for. Warren Parry – ‘The Ogley Dirt Farmer’ – is a longstanding friend of the blog, a keen metal detectorist, photographer and investigator of local history.

Warren keeps a fine local blog, and a couple of days ago he posted up an interesting piece about the existence of landscape evidence of ridge and furrow agriculture just off the Pelsall Road near Clayhanger Marsh – just where Stevie Ansell used to keep her horses.

Initially, I was sceptical, but after some ferreting around with the Historical Environment Record, I found that the feature was spotted by the DeBois survey in the late 1980s, and is clearly genuine.

Since then, Barry Carpenter has pointed out there is also evidence of the same at Leighswood, on the Aldridge-Walsall Wood border, just off Northgate.

What I find astounding about this is that the landscape around Clayhanger Marsh was absolutely ravaged by mining for a couple of centuries, and to my knowledge has been fallow ever since. That such evidence of agricultural use remains is nothing short of astounding.

There is documentary evidence on the blog, discovered and recorded by Gerald Reece, that the land was in use semi-industrially in 1848, so these features have survived a lot of change.

Reader comment is invited, as always – comment or mail me at BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Please do pop over to Warren’s blog and check this out. It’s a fascinating piece. My thanks and best wishes to Warren for an interesting and engaging observation.

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I love Warren’s approach and passion. Click on the screenshot to visit his blog.

Posted in News | 3 Comments

Urgent: Walsall pensioner missing from home

Update 8:30am, Friday 28th March 2014:

Jaan has been found safe and well. West Midlands Police issued the following statement:

Missing Walsall pensioner found

A Walsall pensioner who went missing from Birmingham yesterday morning has been found in Walsall.

Jaan Pedajas, aged 89, was found on Thursday evening and taken to hospital as a precaution.

Media are thanked for their assistance with this appeal.

Thanks to everyone who shared this.

Please – take a look at the photo below – 89 year old dementia sufferer Jaan Pedajas went missing from his home near Barr Beacon sometime after 11:30am today, Thursday 27th March 2014. Have you seen this elderly gentleman? If so, please contact the police who are very concerned for his welfare.

It’s a cold night out there. Let’s see if we can find this elderly fellow.

West Midlands Police issued the following request:

Jaan Pedajas

Jaan Pedajas – image supplied by West Midlands Police.

Police are appealing for help to find a missing Walsall pensioner who went missing earlier today (Thursday 27 March).

Jaan Pedajas, 89 of Pinfold Lane in Beacon Heights, was last seen at 11.30am this morning.

He is described as white, 5ft 10ins tall, medium build with short white hair. He was last seen wearing dark brown trousers, a brown/khaki jumper, tan shoes and a black hat. He wears glasses and uses a walking stick.

PC Michelle Arnold, from Birmingham North Police, said: ‘We are becoming increasingly concerned for Jaan’s whereabouts; he is 89 and suffers from dementia. We will continue to search for him through the night but would appeal to anyone who has seen him to contact us.’

Anyone with information about his whereabouts is asked to call local police on 101.

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

Dead ground?

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Barnetts Lane cemetery isn’t as old as many folk might think. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

I’ve had an interesting enquiry from Laura Watkins, about the cemetery in Barnetts Lane, Brownhills, and it’s a little unusual in nature. I think it’s best if I let her explain in her own words.

Hi Bob

My husband and I are looking to buy a house on second avenue, Brownhills.

I came across your very detailed blog as i was trying to research the area of Brownhills and Barnett’s Lane cemetry, as the house we are looking to buy, backs on to this cemetery. I noticed you are very passionate about the history of Brownhills and have lots of information, so I was just wondering if you could help us.

Do have any infomation on the cemetry? as the house is no 12 on the avenue and it is at the very end of the cemetry, where very old graves are, there is a grave stone very close to the garden fence, I just need to be assured that that house is not built on any graves or indeed in the garden! Or failing that do you have any information as to where i can find this out?

Any information you have would be a great help.

Kind Regards
Laura Watkins

Well, Laura, for starters, building on a cemetery has been illegal in this country for a very, very long time, and the procedure for disturbing graves for any reason is legally very complex for obvious reasons. Such grounds – even very, very old ones have a huge amount of legal protection and it’s unlikely you’d find a house built on one, or with bodies interred in the grounds (unless it was a converted church – there are a few locally).

If this is the case, the graves and their position have to be notified by law.

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Postcard showing the Avenues Estate just after construction.

Second Avenue was built by Brownhills Urban District Council in the 1930s, and was in the process of being built, or was very new when the 1938 1:10,560 scale mapping of Brownhills was drafted in 1938 (the fact that the houses there are outlined means the Ordnance Survey knew of them, but they hadn’t yet been surveyed accurately).

Note the lack of a burial ground behind:

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Ordnace Survey 1:10,560 map fragment of The Avenues Estate and Daisy’s Field (centre right) from 1938. Note the lack of burial ground to the West of Second Avenue. Click for a larger version. Map from the National Library of Scotland archive site.

There’s an interesting meditation on ‘The Avenues’ – once described as ‘Garden City, Brownhills’ in this post from last year.

Barnetts Lane cemetery – created from land that used to be called Daisy’s Meadow or Field by my generation, was constructed in the early 1950s and opened in 1954.

The history of St. James Parish Church states the following:

[1952] The new Barnetts Lane burial ground was purchased and laid out at about this same time. Although ready, it was not consecrated and could not be used until the new Bishop of Lichfield had arrived in the Diocese. With burial space at a premium some graves in the Great Charles Street Cemetery had to be dug in every available space in the already full graveyard. Visitors will notice that graves were placed wherever room could be found, many in pathways and some not facing in the traditional easterly direction This situation was to last until July 1954.

At last and with great relief to the Parish, Barnetts Lane cemetery was consecrated for burials on the 1st July [1954].

So the cemetery didn’t come into existence for 20 years after the adjacent houses were built.

I hope this puts Laura’s mind at rest, and should your purchase come to fruition, welcome to Brownhills!

Posted in Bad Science, Brownhills stuff, Churches, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, News, planning, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Walsall community, Walsall Council | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 22 Comments

Brownhills mugging: further information now available

Further to yesterday’s post about a rather unpleasant knifepoint mugging of a school pupil on the Black Path in Brownhills last Monday, the ever on-the-ball Walsall Advertiser now has a great report available with loads of additional information.

Click here for the report at the Walsall Advertiser.

Thanks to Lee Kettle at the Advertiser for taking an interest. It really is appreciated.

If you have any information, or saw anything, please do contact Walsall Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Posted in Brownhills 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 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

The Wood storm Dunkirk

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The Woodmen back to form at Nottingham’s Dunkirk FC last night. Image from Accidental Groundhopper.

Walsall Wood FC returned to form in blistering style yesterday evening as they beat Dunkirk FC 4-0 away.

This takes the Woodmen up to 9th position..

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

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

Dunkirk 0 v 4 Walsall Wood.

Back to winning ways, a clinical, hard-working performance with a flattering scoreline. 10 days ago we made more chances but only won 1-0, but as they say ‘That’s football.’

Harry Harris returned from injury and suspension making his presence felt with 2 clinically taken goals in the 18th and 80th minutes. Sandwiched in between was a superbly finished goal by Max Black and Wood wrapped it up in the last minute when returning Michael Murray climbed highest to glance a header home off a defender, from a right wing corner.

It sets us up perfectly for Thursday 27th and the visit of Champions elect Tividale to the Wood in the quarter final of the Walsall Senior Cup, with the plum semi-final tie for the winners, a home draw with Rushall Olympic.

A Bescot Stadium final against Chasetown awaits the winners of that.

Bill Shaw.

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 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

School’s out… or is it?

Due to industrial action by teaching staff, some schools in the area will be closed today, Wednesday 26th March 2014.

To find out the latest information about the status of your school, visit the Walsall Council School Closures webpage here.

It might also be worth keeping an eye on Walsall Council’s Twatter and Facebook.

The Express & Star also have a closure list page up.

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Clcik the screenshot to visit the Walsall School CLosures webpage.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Events, Express & Star, It makes me mad!, Just plain daft, Local Blogs, Local media, Local politics, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Council, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Brownhills School pupil mugged at knifepoint yesterday

It seems a pupil was mugged at knifepoint yesterday (Monday, 24th March 2014) at 3:15pm on the Black Path, near the High Street end. This is the footpath that runs from the Parkview Centre up the side of Holland Park to Brownhills School.

Extra police are out and the school is asking pupils not to use the path alone.

If you have any information, or saw anything, please do contact Walsall Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

I have asked West Midlands Police for a statement, if one is forthcoming I shall post it up.

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Screenshot of text message apparently sent by Brownhills School as circulating on Facebook and other local social media.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Events, It makes me mad!, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Barnstorming

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Image kindly supplied by David Evans.

David Evans has been busy – not content with turning up the astounding swimming pool photo, he also found time yesterday to nip back to the remarkable barn at Dairy Farm, in Bullings Heath, Walsall Wood, to take some more photographs following the remarkable comment received from Joe Headley in response to the original article.

David wrote:

Hi Bob

I was delighted to read Joe Headley’s comments on your blog recently  and am pleased to add these photos of that wonderful structure.

It really is a jewel of a building.

Cheers
David

There’s no question: this really is a rather special building. I’m so glad David has been able to get access and reveal its secrets to blog readers, who otherwise wouldn’t get a closer look.

My gratitude and best wishes to both David and Mrs. Toms, the owner, for a great glimpse into another bit of local history.

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Image kindly supplied by David Evans.

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Image kindly supplied by David Evans.

Posted in Environment, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, News, Shared media, Shared memories, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

In the swim

Here’s one I suspect may trigger a few memories. Unearthed by the young David Evans, it’s an image of Walsall Wood Primary School’s swimming pool, which I think is long demolished. I’m not familiar with it myself, but it seems a lot like one Millfield had – and may still do.

I expect a few readers will have memories of this pool or others like it. A common design, they were built on the surface from four lined, waterproofed walls. I believe they feel out of favour due to health and safety concerns.

David wrote:

Hi Bob

In the course of a conversation, cup of tea and a chat this afternoon, I was delighted to learn of the existence of the swimming pool at Waslall Wood School, which I hadn’t known about previously.

I understand that it was built inside one of the pre-fab classrooms at Walsall Wood Primary School and opened in 1968, snd that the money to build this was raised by the local Primary Schools’ Parents Associations. A real community effort, in fact.

I wonder if there are blog readers who may remember learning to swim in this trainer pool, and perhaps may have been involved in the fund-raising activities to provide this much-used and valued facility.

I would like to thank Mrs Pat Lynk for allowing me to scan this photopraph in her family photo album.

kind regards

David

So, what do you know? Comment here, or BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers!

Walsall Wood Primary School swimming pool opening 1968 – are you one of these children, or do you know who they are? Do you remember the pool or building? Image generously supplied by Pat Lynk and sent in by David Evans.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 60 Comments

Thanks for an ingratitude

From time to time, I like to feature articles out of old gazetteers here on the blog – they are a great love of mine, and they help shine a new light on old, familiar places, as well as giving a neat insight into the times they were written in.

My favourite gazetteer writer has to be Arthur Mee, who wrote the immense ‘King’s England’ series, covering every county in England, one book at a time. Each book, published progressively in the mid-1930s contains potted, neat reviews of places the author thought noteworthy, and a little history thrown in for good measure. It’s not impartial, has some very odd takes on society and history, and is often just plain incorrect. But I do love it so.

The curiously English work of Arthur Mee has haunted me since I discovered it as a teenager. Arthur was a writer and journalist of the late Victorian and interwar period, who was known for writing The Children’s Encyclopaedia, Children’s Newspaper and for his  a series of English county Gazetteers. Arthur was very much a man of Victorian values, and it shows in his writing and judgement.

I’ve featured the writer’s work here before, when he covered Wall and the Roman remains there, and also his take on Walsall, which is surprisingly favourable.

Today, I feature Wednesbury, Shenstone and Burntwood. I picked these three specifically, as today, they’re totally different places as they would be in Mee’s day, but they all have hidden, notable histories. I was reminded of this a couple of days ago, when looking for something relaxing to read before bed, I pulled the Staffordshire book off the shelf, and dipped into it.

Kate Cardigan of Lichfield Lore recently did a fantastic article on Burntwood. Do read it if you have time.

If you have anything to add, please feel free: comment here or BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

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Whenever I visit Wednesbury, I always think of Paul Simon ‘I heard cathedral bells,, dripping down the alleyways.’

WEDNESBURY. A large town playing its part in the age of iron and steel, yet with a memory older than Christianity in England still lingering in its name. It is believed that on this hilltop where St Bartholomew’s church now stands was once a heathen temple to Woden, the great Norse god, the god who received heroes into Valhalla and had two ravens to keep him posted with the news of the day. It is thought, too, that Wednesbury is the place referred to in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the scene of a fierce battle between Saxons and Britons in 592.

The modern Christian temple on the hill is a fine place. Its interior is enriched with a wealth of beautiful decoration, carved screens, alabaster panelling, and lovely stained glass. And there are ancient treasures too. The lectern is older than the Reformation and is believed to be unique in England. It is a gilded fighting cock made of plaster on an oak pedestal. The great picture shielded by curtains is a Descent from the Cross by Jean Jouvenet, a French artist of the 17th century. Several of his big canvases are in the Louvre, among them another Descent from the Cross. The carved oak pulpit of 1611 is one of the finest in Staffordshire.

On the sanctuary wall are the kneeling figures of Thomas and Eleanor Parkes of 300 years ago, with six children below them. Someone has written here of Thomas that he was

His countrys lover.
His church’s beautifier,
His poor’s benefactor.

On an altar tomb lie the figures of Richard Parkes (who died a few years later) and his wife Dorothy who gave the church a beautiful chalice. Carved here with a huge head, Richard was ‘much wanted, and lamented when he died.’

On the wall is a memorial to Isaac Clarkson, a 19th-century vicar who served for 35 years. We see his portrait again in the Art Gallery in Holyhead Road, where, as well as pictures, there are collections of ironwork, pottery, tapestry, and woolwork. Among the treasures of this museum we found the side of an embroidered silk waistcoat of the 18th century, a Buddhist prayer-wheel, a uniform, sword, and spurs worn at the charge of the Light Brigade, and a piece of the earhest gas-piping known, from the floor of William Murdock’s house at Handsworth

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Fundamentally, this view won’t have changed much since Arthur’s day. Only the houses in the foreground would have been absent. I like to think he came by train, and appreciated this view from the top of the station steps, as I do.

SHENSTONE. On a windy hilltop, below two towers, sleeps the last of Nelson’s captains, Admiral Parker. He was a middy at 12, commanded his own ship when he was 21 and took part in the famous chase of Villeneuve, the man who lost Trafalgar. By 1812 he was rich enough to buy Shenstone Lodge, where he lived for 15 years as a country gentleman, but he answered his country’s call in 1827, and 14 years later sailed to China, where he captured many towns and won a knighthood. In the 30 years which followed he did much to establish a high standard of discipline in the navy.

The old church he knew was pulled down in 1852, but the 13th-century doorway and the old tower are here. In the churchyard, a magnificent view-point, is an old font. The new church has in its own tall tower an oak reredos with a panel of St George and the Dragon, and a wheel window in memory of the Admiral.

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Burntwood is a lovely place, and as a surprising history underneath it all.

BURNTWOOD. It has illustrious names in its story, names such as Darwin, Johnson, and Peel. It may be that Literature owes it thanks for an ingratitude, for it permitted one of the greatest of Englishmen to languish in neglect where he might have prospered in inglorious obscurity; it let him fail and wander in poverty to build for himself a temple of immortal fame.

The church was built soon after Waterloo, on ground given by the father of Sir Robert Peel. Two miles away, behind a belt of lofty trees, stands Maple Hayes, a fine house with the famous Botanic Garden laid out by Erasmus Darwin, and celebrated by him in verses famous for their prediction of steam locomotion and mechanical flight.

It is a more enduring place in literature that Burntwood owes to its neighbour Edial, where still stands the 18th-century hall regarding which the Gentleman’s Magazine published the famous advertisement in 1736:

At Edial, near Lichfield, in Staffordshire, young gentlemen are boarded and taught the Latin and Greek Languages by Samuel Johnson.

Here he came, a bridegroom of 27, with Tetty as his bride, a widow of 47. He was ‘lean and lank, so that his immense structure of bones was hideously striking to the eye,’ deeply scarred, his hair ‘straight and stiff and separated behind,’ and given to convulsive starts and gesticulations that excited surprise and ridicule; she was stout, florid, and painted, flaring and fantastic in dress, and affected in speech and in behaviour.

Only three pupils answered the advertisement, David Garrick, his brother George, and a boy named Offley, but for 18 months Johnson kept the school going for them, little dreaming that his Davy would one day tell the story of his ‘tumultuous and awkward fondness’ for the wonderful Tetty, and mimic the gait and gestures of the weird genius who was to make him a great master of elocution and enable him to restore Shakespeare unmutilated to the stage.

Convinced that schoolmastering was his great chance, Johnson formulated a system of teaching the classics which he thought must eclipse all its predecessors, yet he found time to write here nearly the whole of his tragedy Irene. It was with this as his sole literary asset that in March 1737 he closed the door of the house behind him, and, with Garrick for his companion, set out for London, ‘when I came with twopence-halfpenny in my pocket, and thou, Davy, with three-halfpence in thine,’ as he used fondly to recall.

Who shall say that if Staffordshire had sent her sons here to be educated by him Dr Johnson might not have missed his immortality? She neglected him and drove him to the pitiless capital to live on eightpence a day when he had it and to starve for 48 hours at a time when he had not, but in spite of all to write and talk his way to fame.

Posted in Churches, Environment, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local History, Local media, News, Panoramio photo discussions, Shared media, Shared memories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Lose yourself in the mapping

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High quality, 1:10,560 scale Ordnance Survey historical mapping for free, you say? Lead me to it… Click for a larger version. Image from National Library of Scotland Site.

If you’re engaged in the local online community, you’ll have no doubt caught up with this already, but for those who haven’t, there’s a new historical mapping resource available online right now, free of charge, and it’s really rather special.

I believe the site was first widely publicised locally by friend of the blog, kite photographer and Aldridge historian Barry Carpenter. I think the local press have since picked up on it from Barry, and gone quite mad over it. However, it is a stunning thing and worthy of all the fuss.

In a nutshell, the National Library of Scotland have put the entire collection of historic British Ordnance Survey 1:10,560 large scale mapping online, browsable for free. They’re even happy to let you take screenhots. The digitisation of the mapping is far, far better than any I’ve seen before, and the site is speedy and comprehensive.

Dont take my word for it, go look here.

Not only is the mapping online, but there is great information also available.

To save the faffing around, I’ve made some links up at the bottom of this post to popular and useful local maps. Off you go – fill your boots!

What an excellent thing. My compliments to the technicians involved.

The links below are not complete lists – just the ones I think are very useful. Go browse for the full selection.

Brownhills Central and North (inc. Chasewater)

Shire Oak, Walsall Wood, Clayhanger & Pelsall

Stonnall & Lynn

Lichfield & Whittington

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It was all going on in Brownhills Central in 1938…

Posted in Bad Science, Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Suspected arson attack in Brownhills last night

The Express & Star is this morning carrying a story about a suspected arson attack at a ground floor flat in Lindon Road, Brownhills that took place in the small hours of Sunday  23rd March 2014. Not sure exactly where, as the only maisonettes I can think of up there are on Brownhills Road, up by Streets Corner.

Added Sunday evening, 23rd March: The fire was in the flats on the corner of Clayhanger Lane and Lindon Road – I’d forgotten about those! Cheers to reader John for reminding me of them.

Depressing to see the Express & Star label us as ‘Walsall’ again. Local knowledge, eh?

Glad to see nobody was hurt, but my sympathies are extended to the residents – what a horrid thing to happen.

If I get any more links or info, I’ll add them here.

If you have any information, or saw anything, please do contact Walsall Police by dialling 101 or speak to Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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Click on the screenshot to read the story at the Express & Star.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Express & Star, Local media, News, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Woodmen lose to Coleshill Town

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Oak Park – scene of both magic and loss. Better luck next year, lads!

Walsall Wood FC disappointed Bill Shaw and all the home crowd yesterday afternoon, as they conceded defeat to Coleshill Town FC in a match where the Wood lads couldn’t quite drive it home. Lets hope this is just a blip after such a fantastic recent run.

Now the weather has improved, do get out and support the Woodmen – with footy this great on your doorstep for such a small ticket price, you’d be mad not to go see them and experience the fantastic atmosphere at this historic club.

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

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

Walsall Wood 0 v 1 Coleshill Town

Another game without our leading goalscorers and another defeat.

An entertaining 90 minutes, marred by a nasty injury to young Wood full back Steven Hayles, taken to Hospital (eventually) by ambulance with what appeared to be serious ankle ligament damage.

Coleshill went home with the points courtesy of a 26th minute goal from Matt Brown. Man of the match Dean Rathbone crossed from wide left, Oliver Casey’s crisp low drive brought a superb one handed save low to his left from Raj Gill, Brown first to react to fire the ball home. Wood had the better of the chances with Lewis Taylor Boyce, Max Black and Craig Hancox all going close but they couldn’t make that all important breakthrough.

Wood have leading scorer Harry Harris back from injury and suspension for the visit to Dunkirk, (no not that one – this one’s in Nottingham) on Tuesday and for Thursday night’s Walsall Senior Cup game at home to Champions elect Tividale, Joey Butlin is available again after suspension. It’s an extra time and penalties scenario, so be ready for a possible late night.

Keep Gwarnin? Search me, but Andy Roper says it, so it must be true…

Bill Shaw.

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

Aldridge Transport Museum running day today!

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Aston Manor Road Transport Museum – for all your vintage transport requirements, and just up the road in Aldridge. Image from their Facebook page.

Aston Manor Road Transport Museum are currently gearing up for the coming season, and cordially invite you to their first event of 2014 – a ‘Running Day’, today (Sunday, 23rd March). Here the general public can pop in, take a ride on vintage busses, browse stalls of transport ephemera and have have a shufty around.

Entry prices of £5 adult (including free programme), £2 children and £13 family – bus rides are free.

The organisers had the following to say on their Facebook page:

Remember, it’s our first Running Day of the season on Sunday. Plenty of buses running free services all day, plus sales stands in the museum, so do come along. More details on the Events Page, but remember, free buses from Walsall start at 10:20 and then every half hour, if you’re coming by car, please head for our Park and Ride site at Middlemore Lane, Aldridge, and use our continuous free service, as there’s effectively no public parking (except disabled) at Shenstone Drive. Help us have a fun and successful day!

The Running Day has entry prices of £5 adult (including free programme), £2 children and £13 family. All bus rides are free – services to Walsall (half hourly), Chasewater, Sutton and Barr Beacon/Streetly. About 12 different buses to ride on. Anyone coming by car, please head for our free Park and Ride site in Middlemore Lane, to avoid congestion in Northgate and Shenstone Drive.

It may be primarily a Running Day but there will also be lots of sales stands including a late extra from Bus & Coach Preservation. Although we will be running the Park and Ride service we also have more local parking available as he landlord at the Lime Kiln (formerly Struggling Monkey) opposite Jack Allen’s is happy for you to park there and I can confirm the Pedigree is very drinkable if you have time!

This is sure to be a great event – please do pop along. The collection needs the support of the public to survive, and it really is a wonderful thing.

Why not check out the museum website or their Facebook group?

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A great local attraction – please pay it a visit.

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

Milking it

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Dairy Farm in Walsall Wood – no longer farming, but still there. Is this remarkable barn the oldest local building? Imagery from Bing! Maps. Click for a larger version.

I’ve long held the suspicion that the barn at the aptly-named Dairy Farm in Hall Lane, Walsall Wood is one of the oldest, if not the oldest surviving building in Walsall Wood and Brownhills. I think parts of the recently converted barn at Warrenhouse are probably older, but that’s not really Brownhills (but I invite debate on that – we’ve never had a good discussion about the bounds of our territory…)

Recently, top local history wonk the young David Evans has been thinking a bit about Dairy Farm, too. In his own inimitable way he’s been out, got talking to the current owners and taken a whole bunch of pictures giving blog readers access to the building few of us ever have had. What a star.

I’d quite like this to be a starting point. I’d like readers to consider farming in the local area, and Dairy Farm is part of that. It did, after all, provide a clue in my ruminations upon the Black Cock landscape, but there are other lost farms, too, like Sunnyside, Swingbridge, Shire Oak Farm, the two Highfields Farms – and those still extant like Home Farm and Big House Farm.

Come on then, what have you got? These farms once fed us, gave us flour for our bread and milk for our tea. Comments invited, as ever, or BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

My gratitude and best wishes to both David and Mrs. Toms for a great glimpse into another bit of local history.

David Evans wrote:

Hall Lane Farm, Walsall Wood and a jewel of a barn!

I wanted to see what remains of the farm in Hall Lane, Walsall Wood, in 2014. Thanks to the kindness of Mrs. Toms the present owner, I have been able to photograph the beautiful barn and the old farmhouse that lie at this southern edge of Walsall Wood, and whose fields overlook the Coppy Woods, the former Goblins Pit, The farm bordered on the part of the village once called Pepper Alley and Bullings Heath.

British History on Line has this to say in an article from 1974:

’The lord of Shelfield manor was holding two courts a year by 1317, (fn. 14) and in 1632 he was said to possess view of frankpledge. (fn. 15) Otherwise the evidence shows Walsall Wood and Shelfield as part of Walsall manor. (fn. 16) In the earlier 19th century pinners for Walsall Wood and Shelfield were appointed at Walsall manor court. (fn. 17) There was a pound at Bullings Heath, Walsall Wood, at the east end of Green Lane, in the earlier 1840s. (fn. 18)

Shelfield formed part of Cannock forest by the later 12th century, and the wood of Walsall was mentioned in 1199-1200. (fn. 72) The woodland was still extensive in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. (fn. 73) By 1843, however, 21 a. at Paul’s Coppice and 6 a. at Goblins Pit were all that remained. (fn. 74)

Early clearance was presumably around the settlement at Shelfield. In 1086 a hide of arable there was waste. (fn. 75) By 1317 there were three common fields. Town field lay on either side of the present Field Lane and was bounded by Mill Lane, Ford Brook Lane, Coronation Road, Spring Lane, and Birch Lane. Another field, called Wadgreve or Wadgrene in 1317, Watgreave or Thorneyfield in 1766, and Thorn field by 1784, lay north of High Heath. A third, Rodbardesfeld, is probably identifiable with the 18th-century Pool field, which lay west of the heath and north of Coronation Road. All three fields were apparently still open in 1766 but had been inclosed by 1819. (fn. 76) The common fields, however, were small, and by the later Middle Ages most farm-land was probably held in severalty. In the late 16th and early 17th centuries farming was mainly pastoral, with stock consisting of cattle, sheep, and some pigs. Rye, oats, and barley were grown. (fn. 77)

By 1576 much of the waste round Shelfield had evidently been inclosed; it then consisted of three commons, Shelfield Green (later Birches Green), Colliers Ford Heath (probably the later Coalheath), and High Heath. At Clayhanger 160 a. of ‘sterile ground’ was held in severalty; the rest of the Walsall Wood area was one large common. Squatting on the waste, however, had already begun. A house and 4 a. at Walsall Wood and a cottage on High Heath were recent encroachments. (fn. 78) In 1617 a shop and 8 cottages stood on the waste; 6 cottages had been built recently. (fn. 79) By 1763 there were 124 encroachments at Walsall Wood, 11 at Coalheath, 10 at Green Lane, Shelfield, and Irondish, and one at High Heath. The waste, however, was still extensive. The southern commons, High Heath, Shelfield Green, Coalheath, and Moss Pit Green to the west of Shelfield, covered 37 a.; Walsall Wood and Clayhanger Commons formed a single stretch of waste of 504 a. (fn. 80) The part of Walsall Wood Common south of Lichfield Road was known by 1805 as Holly Bank Common. There were then some 218 encroachments; 25 were at or near Shelfield and the rest in the north, 99 being on Walsall Wood Common. (fn. 81) By 1843 the northern waste, though still continuous, had been further reduced; Clayhanger, Walsall Wood, and Holly Bank Commons covered c. 365 a. (fn. 82) In 1876 the surviving commons, altogether 350 a., were inclosed under an Act of 1865, partly for agriculture and partly for new roads and houses. (fn. 83)

The area of farm-land was greatly reduced to make way for housing after the Second World War. By 1974 four farms remained. Grange farm west of Green Lane consisted of 177 a. used for dairying and corn-growing. Dairy farm in Hall Lane, c. 70 a., produced beef, barley, and potatoes. Shelfield House farm consisted of 63 a.; 8 a. was under barley and the rest was used for dairy cattle, pigs, and poultry. Vigo farm was a 12-acre small holding. (fn. 84)’

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From the Lichfield Mercury, Friday 13th November 1914. Spotted by the wonderful Peter ‘Pedro’ Cutler.

The 1891 census shows that a Mr. Thomas Butler, aged 54 and born in Darlaston was the only farmer in Hall Lane. In the 1861 census a Mr. John Eadon was the only farmer listed in Hall Lane.

I think we can go back in time to the 1750 Tithe Map:

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Section of 1850 Tithe Map. Image supplied previously by reader [Howmuch?].

Here we see Hall Lane where it joins Green Lane at Bullings Heath. The straight vertical line is only the join of two pages of the plan. The thick black line seems to indicate the limit of the tithe area and the boundary with Walsall Grammar School land, and has no plots or buildings showing.

The small enclosure ‘11’ shows a’ Mr. Davison’and ‘Rickyard’ – a farmyard where ricks of hay where stored. Is this the site of the barn was built? Did a certain Mr. Henry Rowe keep his hay there, or Mr. Davison?

I would like to thank Mrs.Toms for allowing me to take the photographs of her farm, and Mr. Peter Cutler, researcher extraordinaire, for his invaluable help, too

David Evans, march 2014

Posted in News | 21 Comments

Walsall Wood FC v Coleshill Town at home 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 22nd March 2014

Walsall Wood v. Coleshill Town 

Can the Woodmen get back to their winning ways?

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

3:00pm kickoff

Please come and get behind your local club

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

Brownhills Community Association – from strength to strength

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Page 1… Click for a larger version.

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Page 2… Click for a larger version.

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Bonita Clayton from Brownhills Community Association has been in touch to let me have a copy of their March-April 2014 newsletter, asking me if I’d share it on the blog for readers to peruse – of course, that’s no problem at all.

It’s nice to see that while Brownhills School finds supporting the local community way too much of a burden to bear, that the Community Association are still going strong.

The Community Association are based at Brownhills Activities Centre, just by the Miner Island in central Brownhills.

The Activity Centre is what my generation would know as ‘The Annexe’ – the old Central Boy’s School, now a bustling community resource. To find out more about the events and activities listed, you can pop in or call them on 01543 452119.

Bonita and her fellow community organisers have lots of stuff going on, and loads of great facilities, right in the heart of Brownhills. I love what they’re about and all the great things they’re doing.

My best wishes to Bonita and the gang, and please do pop along and check them out. Alternatively, print out a few of these flyers and put them up on your nearest noticeboard.

If you have anything you want publicising, please send me details and I’ll get the word out. BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers!

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Page 4… Click for a larger version.

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Page 3… Click for a larger version.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Chasewater, Clayhanger stuff, Environment, 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

Chips with that?

From time to time here I run appeals to help find missing pets. Some end in joy, some not. One thing that will help bring a successful resolution to losing a beloved pet is to get them microchipped. The process is safe, only causes momentary discomfort, and could help identify your best pal should they go astray.

Walsall and District RSPCA are this Saturday offering the chance to get your pet chipped for a pocket pleasing £5 at Catshill Community Centre, Brownhills, from 10:30am to 2:30pm.

This is a great initiative, and should the worst happen, could well help your mate find their way back home safely.

While we’re on, I know nothing of Catshill Community Centre – if the organisers would like to drop me a line, please do. I’d love to advertise your events and find out what you’re up to. Mail me please: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

Thanks to Phil for putting me onto this.

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Thanks to reader Phil for the tipoff.

Is your pet microchipped?

Get your dog, cat or rabbit microchipped for just£5

Dogs must be on a lead, cats and rabbits must be in a secure pet carrier.

Why not treat your pet?

Low cost foods and pet treats also on sale.

Saturday 22nd March 2014 10:30am to 2:30pm

Catshill Community Centre,
Catshill Road, Brownhills, WS8 6BN.

Enquiries: Walsall RSPCA, PO BOX 3552, Walsall, W53 AXR

Posted in News | Leave a comment

A Castle for a Knave

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The mystery of Knave’s Castle is enduring.

Over the years, one subject in Brownhills history that keeps recurring is Knaves Castle, the lost geographic feature that existed on the south side of Watling Street at about the spot where the west end of Deakin Avenue exists today. It’s not really known if Kanves Castle was natural, or a man made or modified earthwork, and as no trace remains.

Having been destroyed in the early part of the last century, the nature of this feature remains mysterious.

Reader Andy Dennis (and also Kate Cardigan, of Lichfield Lore) have both drawn my attention to a PDF download available online, from the website of the Staffordshire Archeological & Historical Society, which contains  an exhaustive analysis  of the supporting evidence for Knaves Castle, and what this reveals. The author, David Horowitz, also ruminates on the origins of the name Ogley Hay at some length, too.

I’ve featured the work of this excellent organisation before – in the case of the Lost Stonnall Hoard – and they still exist, turning out great work like this.

I commend the work of these excellent historians highly to readers of the blog. Also available in this volume are extensive articles on Early Medieval Lichfield and the 1655 Petition Against the Inclosure of the Needwood Forest – also excellent works.

You can download Staffordshire Archaeological & Historical Society Transactions Volume XLVI by clicking here, or on the image below; I include the introduction as a taster of this wonderful work.

Please feel free to comment about this below, or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

Volume XLVI

Staffordshire Archeological & Historical Society, Transactions Volume XLVI. Click on the image to download it in PDF format.

KNAVES CASTLE: A LOST MONUMENT ON OGLEY HAY NEAR THE SITE OF THE STAFFORDSHIRE HOARD

With Some Thoughts On The Name Ogley Hay

by David Horovitz

In July 2009 the great Anglo-Saxon treasure known as the Staffordshire Hoard was brought to light, with other associated artefacts found nearby in November 2012. The finds were made some 41⁄2 miles south-west of Lichfield in a field at Ogley Hay and close to Watling Street, which bisects the county horizontally. A little over 3⁄4 of a mile to the west of the site, on the south side of Watling Street, lay an enigmatic earthwork, sometimes described as a tumulus, long known as ‘Knaves Castle’. Valuable overviews of the historic landscape of the Ogley Hay area published in 2010 and 2011 (including a paper in these Transactions) record that when road-widening was carried out in 1971 no sign of any barrow or ditch was found at Knaves Castle, and it had then been concluded that the feature was probably natural. In addition, in a paper presented to a symposium on the Staffordshire Hoard at the British Museum in March 2010 it was claimed: ‘that Knaves Castle really existed is likely, but what it actually was remains unknown’.

In fact, much has been recorded about the feature, even if some of the evidence is equivocal, and its enigmatic but distinctive characteristics are deserving of close investigation in their own right. The feature has special significance, however, in the light of its proximity to the Hoard find-spot, self-evidently a site of the greatest archaeological importance. This paper collates such information as is presently available on the now-destroyed feature known as Knaves Castle and its vicinity, including nearby Watling Street; considers and suggests what type(s) of monument could have been represented by the feature in the light of that evidence; and examines the rôle that may have been played by the feature in the Anglo-Saxon period. The paper concludes with a consideration of some local place-names which seem to point towards the existence of a prominent personality in this area during the Anglo-Saxon period.

KNAVES CASTLE AND THE DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE

Almost 31⁄2 miles west of the Roman settlement at Wall (Letocetum), the site of Knaves Castle is on high ground, formerly a great heath, noted for its commanding views: in 1823 it was included in a list of only ten eminences and views in the whole of Staffordshire published by The Gentleman’s Magazine, and in 1752 it was even said of the site that ‘[t]he prospect from it is perhaps as beautiful as from any part of England. Here we view great part of Warwickshire, Leicestershire, Derbyshire, Staffordshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire, and several counties in Wales. In short, there is an open and delightful prospect to every point of the compass’. Even allowing for hyperbole (it remains unclear how the different counties could possibly have been identified by the author), it is evident that the site enjoyed noteworthy views.

Continued in the Staffordshire Archaeological & Historical Society Transactions Volume XLVI.

Posted in News | 15 Comments

Boldmere end Wood’s winning streak

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Boldmere bring down the wood. Image of their ground from Wikimedia Commons.

Well, all good things come to an end, and this was never truer than last night when Boldmere St. Michaels beat Walsall Wood FC 3-0 in a hard fought match to end The Wood’s remarkable winning streak.

Bill Shaw was there,as ever, and sent this report:

Hiya Bob,

The Wood’s 17 game unbeaten run came to a shuddering halt at Boldmere. They arrived without their 3 leading scorers and they matched the Mikes all over the park, apart from where it mattered – in the box.

BOLDMERE ST. MICHAELS 3 v 0 WALSALL WOOD.

The start couldn’t have been worse for Wood, they went behind after just 21 seconds, Ryan Edmunds raced clear wide on the right, his low cross took out 2 Wood defenders and Jermaine Clarke rifled the ball home. Edmunds almost made it 2 on 3 minutes, racing in from the right his low drive pushed away by Rajaan Gill.

Wood almost equalised on 7 minutes, Craig Hancox curling in a corner from the right, the ball bounced off the foot of the near post, fell to Jamie Hawkins but his first time shot was too high. Good goalkeeping from Liam Maher, some wayward finishing and a terrible bobble on 35 minutes that denied Max Black a goal kept the scoreline close at the interval.

The second half continued in the same vein but on 50 minutes a long ball forward was collected at pace by Clarke, who drew keeper Gill and then calmly passed the ball left for Edmunds to score into an empty net. When on 72 minutes Clarke won the ball in the centre and fed Edmunds who raced for goal, he found Clarke on the right of the box, he did everything wrong hitting the ball into the ground, but it bounced high in the air over Gill and nestled in the back of the net. Wood realised it just wasn’t their night.

On November 26th Mikes came to Oak Park boasting a 12 match unbeaten run – Wood trounced them 3-0. They got their revenge tonight but whereas Wood were the better side that night Mikes couldn’t say the same for their victory – clinical perhaps – fortuitous certainly.

So it’s Coleshill Town at Oak Park on Saturday, no easy game, but let’s keep the faith, see you there, don’t be late.

Bill Shaw.

Thanks to Bill for that – and my commiserations to the team.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, 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 final lot

The demolition is by now nearly complete – after  155 years extant, and about 40 of those derelict, the former St. John’s School in Walsall Wood has now largely reduced to pallets of bricks and oddments of scrap. David Evans, local historian and blog contributor extraordinaire was there yesterday – Monday, 18th March 2014 – to record the death throes in preparation for a new housing development to be commenced. 

No doubt made up the road in Aldridge, these bullnoses are spiffing bricks. Image courtesy of David Evans.

We caught the beginning of the operation a couple of weeks ago, and then revisited when the task was well underway. A third visit covered some of the interior fabric exposed, and this final set of photos records some of the careful, but surprisingly speedy work of the team from Cawarden Brick and Tile in Rugeley who are undertaking the job.

At this point, both David and I would like to express our immense respect, admiration and thanks to James Marshall the site manager, and to his colleagues James Morris, Steve Lester, Steve Marsden, Ian Theobold, Rob Collins, Chad Walker and Carl White. They are a fine team who were patient and understanding, and their generosity in allowing David to record the passing of this landmark will not be forgotten. They did not have to allow access – it was an act of pure felicity that they did so.

They are fine chaps and a credit to Cawarden.

For those interested, I wrote an article recently about the planning history of the site, and David transcribed the log books of the school over several wonderful articles

Posted in Churches, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, Local politics, News, Panoramio updates, planning, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Have you seen Bow?

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Have you seen this fellow around? Image from K9 Search UK.

Please help if you can with the sad case of lost Staffy dog called Bow who went missing from his home in Brownhills West on March 1st. His owners are missing the chap dreadfully, please keep an eye out.

The alert comes from Facebook user Donna Purchas via K9SearchUK’s Facebook page. That really is a cracking service and great use of social media. They also have a website where you can register dogs lost in the West Midlands.

MISSING from Brownhills West (WS8) on 1st March 2014
BOW a Staffy male, 3yrs old, tan and white wearing brown leather collar, NO ID.

CONTACT K9 Search UK on 07988 433187 or email admin@k9searchuk.com.

If you see Bow, or know where he is, please give K9search or me a shout. BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot Com. Cheers.

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

Making a splash!

You readers really are a remarkable bunch – last Friday, I featured a couple of images  posted on social media by Chris Leggett of the Express & Star, as part of their bid to gain funding to digitise and open to the public their photo archive – a huge treasury of newspaper images that current exist in print form only.

The first image was of a remarkable parachuting accident in 1973, and the second was of a Brownhills chap – Malcolm Wright – riding his bike off a ramp into Stow Pool in Lichfied as part of a regatta event.

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Sorry, this is the largest version I have. The image is described as ‘Brownhills stunt man Malcolm Wright enters Stowe Pool,Lichfield 1977 in regatta’ – photo courtesy of the Express & Star archive.

The information Chris gave stated:

This is ‘Brownhills Stuntman’ Malcolm Wright riding a bike off a ramp into Stowe Pool, in Lichfield, in 1977 as part of an event referred to as a ‘Regatta’. He was billed as ‘Brownhills answer to Evil Knievel’.

Well, you didn’t disappoint – this afternoon, I had a most excellent email from Brian ‘Clayhanger Kid’ Stringer. Here’s what he had to say:

Hi Bob,

The cyclist diving headfirst into Stowe Pool was indeed Malcom Wright, and yes he is still alive and kicking. At least he was a couple of hours ago when I was talking to him.

Malc lives in Bridge St Clayhanger and was a neighbour of mine when I lived there in the 70s.

He is a great bloke and always been community spirited, and it was Malc, John Sadler and myself who fought the moving of the refuse tip entrance to the Bridge St High St junction.

We eventually got a dozen households a rate reduction.

Malcolm along with a helper also regularly litter picks all along Clayhanger common and the spot path.

He tells me the bike stunt was part of a fund raising effort for the sailing club of which he was a member, and his son Kevin told me it was the bike he always used for to work . The divers were probably told by Malc to save the bike before him.

Another blog success.
Cheers mate.
Brian

About 90 minutes later, I received this comment from reader Karen:

Hi,

I think the brownhills stuntman is from Clayhanger. Malcolm Wright lived (still does I believe!) in Bridge St and his kids were about the same age as my brothers so they would be late 40′s now. Malcolm about 70 maybe? Malcolm was renowned for his madcap tricks so I reckon it’s the same man. Brian Stringer might be able to verify it as he lived in Bridge Street for a number of years and would have known Malcolm. Last I heard he still lived in the same house.

Thanks to both of you – this really is wonderful stuff, and exactly the kind of offbeat local history that gets lost. If Malcolm is reading this, please do say hello – and tell us about your exploits. I bet you’ve a story or two to tell!

If you would like to support the Express & Star photo bid, please send a letter of support to: Chris Leggett, Brand and communications manager, Express & Star, 51-53 Queen Street, Wolverhampton WV1 1ES. Or email: chris.leggett@expressandstar.co.uk

You could always Like the Express & Star photo bid on Facebook while you’re about it.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, cycling, Environment, Events, Express & Star, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Please help: New Road, what do we know?

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New Road in Brownhills has an interesting diversity of dwellings from different periods. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

I know well that you readers love a good challenge, and whilst I’ve been too busy to get much done on the blog this weekend, I wonder if you could all take a look at this query from Verity Lane who’s just moved in to New Road, Brownhills and was wanting to know a bit more about the street.

Verity wrote:

Hi Bob,

I have stumbled across your blog and found it very interesting, you’re doing a great job.

My other half and I have just brought a house on New Road, Brownhills, and I would love to know a bit of history of this road if you were aware of anything, especially if you know anything about the head of the road or about the house opposite the nursing home? I have searched all over the internet and on the planning website to see if anything is stated on there but to no avail.

Thanks for reading this email & we would much appreciate your response.

Kind Regards
Verity

First of all, thanks Verity for your kind words.

I realised after reading the email that I don’t actually know a fat lot about New Road, either. We discovered the existence of New Street last year, which was in the same area, but that was lost when Warren Place was built.

As to the house opposite the old Vicarage, it’s a handsome building. For some reason there have been rumours about planning applications on that property for years, but none are outstanding.

When researching New Road, it’s worth bearing in mind there were several similar names locally over the years – there was not only a New Street in Brownhills, but Pauls Coppice in Walsall Wood was also called New Street.

Longstanding friend of the blog Julie Le Moine of course, asked the same question some time ago of adjacent Church Road, and some of the material in that post may be interesting to Verity.

If you know anything, please comment here, or send me a mail to BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

Posted in News | 24 Comments

The best of what’s around

Hi folks – I’m a wee bit busy at the moment, so postings aren’t quite the usual weekend fare, but I thought this was a good opportunity to draw readers attention to some great blogs that have excellent articles at the moment. I do love to read other folks work, and recommend it here when I can.

First up is Mike Stackhouse – a long time reader and commenter here, Mike is a good friend of the blog, and has contributed to lots of different historical threads – not least unlocking the history of the Middleton House Club, and his recollections of being a pupil at Watling Street School.

Mike started his own blog, which is well worth a read. He’s casting his net quite widely, and there’s some lovely photographs there, as well as his careful research and heartfelt memories.

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Mike Stackhouse has created a fine blog. Click on the screenshot to pop over and take a look..

While I’m at it, Susan Marie Ward, longstanding friend, reader and writer of some of the most intimate, gorgeous local family memories around has a new post up, and it’s rather good. Do check it out – Susan is just about the best writer in that vein I know, and her posts are always devoured with joy here.

I know many of the readers are fans and I’d really like to get Susan the exposure she deserves.

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Lambs – appropriate for spring! Click on the screenshot to visit the post.

Thirdly, Walsall Council Wildlife whizz Morgan Bowers has created a fine account of the wildlife she discovered on a recent survey of Brownhills Common in the area where recent heathland restoration has been undertaken. Already, only a few weeks since the clearance of two conifer plantations, the discovery of Clark’s Mining Bees in the freshly turned earth is a wonderful thing indeed. Please do read this post; with the Friends of Brownhills Common meeting taking place tomorrow, this really does show the passion and reasoning behind the work.

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Check out other posts by Morgan while you’re there. She really is a wildlife wonder! Click on the screenshot to read her post about Brownhills Common.

Finally, the ubiquitous plug for Lichfield Lore and my hero Kate ‘Cardigan’ Gomez – this is how interactive local history should be done. Kate continues to post at a fearsome rate, and has recently posted some great material about Walsall and Wolverhampton. With her excellent, renowned blog and also the collaborative, publicly engaged project that is Lichfield Discovered, both Kate and her co-conspirator Dave Moore are doing brilliant things, and I admire them and their work a great deal.

Now, if only someone could coax Lorenzor out of hibernation to restart the genius and seminal Tamworth Time Hikes, everything would be just perfect…

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Lichfield Lore is taking history to the people, and remains an inspiration to me. Click here to read Kate’s latest post.

Posted in News | 2 Comments

The Wood winning streak continues

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Oak Park – scene of both magic and loss. Better luck next year, lads!

Walsall Wood FC kept Bill Shaw and all the home crowd on tenterhooks at Oak Park yesterday afternoon, as they beat Nottingham’s Dunkirk FC in a nailbiting match with surprisingly few goals.

This extend’s the Wood boys run to a remarkable 17 unbeaten matches.

Now the weather has improved, do get out and support the Woodmen – with footy this great on your doorstep for such a small ticket price, you’d be mad not to go see them and experience the fantastic atmosphere at this historic club.

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

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

Another win but it was a nailbiting effort before the result was sealed.

Walsall Wood 1 V 0 Dunkirk.

Wood were in almost complete control from the off, it was no surprise when on 18 minutes a lovely move between Joey Butlin and Lewis Taylor Boyce ended with Joey scoring with a superb chip over the advancing keeper. We sat back to wait for the avalanche, but it never came. On 26 minutes Taylor Boyce waltzed round the visiting keeper and passed the ball to a defender who had raced back to the goal line. Wood continued the pressure but couldn’t score the all important second goal.

The second half followed the same pattern with Wood unable to convert a host of half chances. They were nearly made to pay for their benevolence when on 56 minutes Phill Granville fired in a free kick just outside the box and keeper Raj Gill made a superb fingertip save at full stretch to touch the ball onto the bar.

Keeper Gill had to be alert on a couple of occasions, racing from his line to kick clear from the ever dangerous Granville. Two minutes from time he had to race to save a ball bravely at the feet of Kevin Lusamba. Wood had chances once more to increase their lead, but in the end had to settle for the one goal win.

It’s Boldmere St. Michaels away on Tuesday night, kick off 7.30pm (note 15 minutes earlier than usual), and then on Saturday Coleshill Town are the Oak Park visitors.

Bill Shaw.

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

Breaking down the walls…

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Demolition man hard at work, as captured by David Evans.

The tenacity and charm of the young David Evans continues to be rewarded, and he has again created great pictorial documentation of the demolition process being undertaken on the former St. John’s School in Walsall Wood. The kindness and goodwill of the demolition engineers has been truly wonderful; they allowed David access once more last Friday (14th March 2014) to further record the passing of this notable landmark, in preparation for a new housing development

We caught the start of the operation a couple of weeks ago, and then revisited when the task was well underway last Monday.

There was a request last week to also get some shots of the bungalow next door, which is also being razed; as luck would have it, reader Stuart popped past this morning and took a few shots,  so I’ve included them in the gallery. I love the old-style light fitting just visible in the lounge…

Also, just look at those roof trusses on the school. Aren’t they splendid?

It’s worth noting that the materials recovered from the demolition are being recycled – and like those from the former Royal Oak in Bullings Heath, Walsall Wood, will end up being sold for re-use at Cawarden Brick in Rugeley. They’re a fine company and their yard – just to the east of Colton – is well worth a visit. There’s even an old ROC post on the access road to the place!

For those interested, I wrote an article recently about the planning history of the site, and David transcribed the log books of the school over several wonderful articles

Posted in Churches, Environment, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, Local politics, News, Panoramio updates, planning, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The life of Brian

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Image posted on Facebook by Dave Moore: ‘Collaborative history at it best; Brian Stringer author of the clayhanger Kid books working with public historian Dave Moore to produce an audio version of the two books for people with visual impediments.’. Dave Moore left, Brian Stringer right.

Last week, I posted a great video made by Public Historian Dave Moore with local author and activist Brian Stringer, about Brian’s experiences as The Clayhanger Kid. The video had a very positive response, so Dave has kindly posted a full version for all of Brians fans to enjoy.

I’m hoping this will lead Dave to create some more video interviews; they’re wonderful and very, very professional.

Dave Moore is of course a leading figure in Kate Cardigan’s Lichfield Discovered and also a tireless campaigner for Sandfields Pumping Station. It’s so refreshing to see people like Dave, Kate and Brian working hard to produce unique and interesting material about local history and  other matters arising.

Dave had this to say about the film:

Published on 14 Mar 2014

This film is the full interview with Brian Stringer.

Brian is the author of a self published book the Clayhanger Kid. This film is the complete unabridged version of oral interview conducted by the Public Historian David Moore.

Broadly speaking public history it is a term that describes a broad range of disciplines undertaken by people who have an understanding of history, but wish to work outside of the restraints of academic history.

The historian Ludmilla Jordanova give us a definition of public history, ‘all the means deliberate and otherwise, through which those who are not professional historians acquire their sense of the past’.

People like Brian can tell remarkable stories about their past, and give us an insight into how our ancestors lived. Understanding our past gives us a sense of identity and an understanding and deeper insight of self.

My thanks and best wishes to Dave and Brian. This really is very special stuff indeed.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Clayhanger stuff, Events, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Local Blogs, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 11 Comments

Walsall Wood FC v Dunkirk FC at home 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 15th March 2014

Walsall Wood v. Dunkirk

Can the Woodmen maintain their incredible unbeaten run against the Nottingham boys?

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

3:00pm kickoff

Please come and get behind your local club

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 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

The parachutist, the helicopter and the Brownhills daredevil

Last year, I asked readers to show support for the Express & Star in their bid to gain funding to digitise and open to the public their photo archive – a huge treasury of newspaper images that current exist in print form only.

Chris Leggett, who’s worked hard on the bid, continues to tweet and post to Facebook exactly the kind of fascinating and evocative images that would become available to us all and make the whole project worthwhile.

This week, Chris released an image that shocked many people.

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A parachutist comes to earth with an unpleasant bump, as did a helicopter attempting to winch him free, during an early 70s Aldridge Show. We’d like to know more about this: what do you remember? Image courtesy of the Express & Star photo archive.

Chris had this to say about this remarkable photo:

Possibly the best photo we’ve published yet. Award nominated picture from July 7th 1973 – Bulmers skydiver Kenneth Cornwell caught by his parachute on overhead cables at Aldridge summer show. A helicopter tried to winch him free. The rope snapped, sending the skydiver to ground missing the safety net pictured. The helicopter crashed, bursting into flames. Crew escaped. Express & Star photographer Geoff Wright highly commended in national competition.

There must be someone out there who recalls this remarkable and horrifying incident. Chris, who has connections in Aldridge, would particularly like to know where it happened; we both agree that in the fields near Mill Green, Little Aston seems likely.

The story even made The Kentucky Daily News, of July 9th, 1973, which gives more detail:

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Found via Google, this gives more information. Click to see the article on Google.

Please, if you have any recollections or memories of this shocking accident, please do comment here or mail me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com.

On a lighter note, Chris also turned up this image, also causing a bit of a stir:

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Sorry, this is the largest version I have. The image is described as ‘Brownhills stunt man Malcolm Wright enters Stowe Pool,Lichfield 1977 in regatta’ – photo courtesy of the Express & Star archive.

This is ‘Brownhills Stuntman’ Malcolm Wright riding a bike off a ramp into Stowe Pool, in Lichfield, in 1977 as part of an event referred to as a ‘Regatta’. He was billed as ‘Brownhills answer to Evil Knievel’.

You know what I’m going to ask: who is this chap, what happened to him and is he still around? More to the point, who’s the diver? That’s a great photograph. Please, please, please – anything you know about this chap, please comment or mail me. He looks like fun.

If you would like to support the Express & Star photo bid, please send a letter of support to: Chris Leggett, Brand and communications manager, Express & Star, 51-53 Queen Street, Wolverhampton WV1 1ES. Or email: chris.leggett@expressandstar.co.uk

You could always Like the Express & Star photo bid on Facebook while you’re about it.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, cycling, Environment, Events, Express & Star, Followups, Fun stuff to see and do, Interesting photos, Just plain daft, Local History, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Shared memories, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Nasty robbery in Aldridge on Wednesday – police appeal for help

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Aldridge Post Office. Imagery from Bing! Maps.

This is a nasty one – if anyone has any information, please do come forward and contact Walsall Police or Crimestoppers. It seems that just after 4pm on Wednesday (12th March 2014), a pair of thugs robbed two chaps who were sat in their car near Aldridge Post Office in Northgate, near the town centre.

West Midlands Police issued the following press release:

Issue Date: 14/03/2014

Appeal following Aldridge robbery

Detectives have launched an investigation after two men were attacked in their car on a busy Aldridge street Wednesday (12 March).

The men had visited Nat West Bank in the town centre and were ambushed by robbers as they parked near to the post office on Northgate just after 4pm.

One man was hit over the head with what is believed to be a hammer before the thieves – who escaped in a light blue Mondeo – stole a quantity of cash.

Detective Sergeant Paul Reeves, from Walsall’s Acquisitive Crime team, said: ‘This was a particularly nasty attack that happened on a busy street close to the post office and we are appealing for witnesses to come forward.

‘One of the victims was assaulted and fortunately his injuries are not serious but this could have so easily been a different story.

‘We believe the robbers made off in an X reg light blue Mondeo and are appealing for anyone who has seen this vehicle to call us.’

Anyone with information should call 101 or the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Issued by Gina Lycett on 14/03/2014 09:05:25

This is a despicable attack. Please, please, if you know anything about the people who did this – maybe someone seems to have come into a lot of money when they really have no good reason to – please call the police on 0345 113 5000, or Contact them online. You can also call Crimestoppers in confidence.

Posted in Environment, Events, It makes me mad!, Local media, News, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community, Walsall Wood stuff | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

House fire in Brownhills yesterday

As you may have heard on social media and the local grapevine, there was a house fire in New Road, Brownhills at lunchtime yesterday (13th March 2014). The Express & Star has details, as does the Advertiser.

My sympathies to the family involved.

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Click on the screenshot to read the story at the Express & Star website.

Posted in Brownhills stuff, Environment, Events, Express & Star, Local media, News, Reader enquiries, Shared media, Social Media, Spotted whilst browsing the web, Walsall community | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

We have things in common – we should talk

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We all love the common, but its management has proven controversial. Why not pop along to the meeting and discuss the issues with the experts and other users?

Here’s one for people interested in the issues surrounding Brownhills Common – theres a meeting at 7:00pm on Monday evening, 17th March 2014 of the Freinds of Brownhills Common group at the Environmental Depot, 200 Pelsall Road, Brownhills – WS8 7EN – please meet in the reception.

If you can make time, do pop along. Brownhills Common will benefit hugely from an active friends group, and considering the manufactured outrage last year, I’d have thought plenty would be ready to join and add their voice. It’s important that we recognise what a valuable, fragile and important habitat Brownhills Common is, and why it requires careful and measured stewardship.

If you’ve only heard the alarmists, it’s a good opportunity to go out and meet, talk and listen to people who understand the issues and love the wildlife, and to help shape the future of something we all love.

Please go if you can.

The proceedings of the last (fourth) meeting are available by clicking this link, so you can get an idea of what kind of stuff is going on.

Yet again, this material has come to me third hand, and the poor communications issue with anything greenspaces in Walsall seems to persist. If you actually search for ‘Friends of Brownhills Common’ in Google, apart from a November press release, most of the top hits are for mentions on this blog, which has only ever had such information passed on externally. This is pretty rubbish.

Thanks are due greatly to the person who’s keeping me, and by extension you readers, informed.

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Two conifer plantations were remover earlier this year, and this has opened out the common wonderfully – and as Morgan Bower’s video at the foot of this post shows, the deer haven’t been deterred.

Helen Sanger, Head Ranger, has sent out the following material:

The next Friends of Brownhills Common group meeting will be held at 7.00pm on Monday 17th March 2014 at the Environmental Depot. 200, Pelsall Road, Brownhills, Walsall. WS8 7EN.

If you are able to attend the meeting please sign in at the main reception at the front of the building on your arrival; you will be collected and taken to the meeting room by a member of staff shortly before the meeting starts.

Gareth Perrins-Seedhouse has provided an update regarding the queries made at the last meeting, please see the information bellow that I have passed on his behalf.

A vehicle drove across the corner of the footpath pitch and caused some rutting to the path. Reinstatement was duly undertaken within days of the damage. A site visit undertaken by Gareth on the 19.2.14 to confirms this.

Users /residents can expect on average to see the bins emptied daily between Monday and Friday (excluding Bank Holidays)

All bins within the fenced park and the extension will be emptied on the same frequency; there won’t be primary and secondary bins.

Not all areas of the park and the extension will be litter picked on the same frequency, there will be primary and secondary areas of the park and the extension for litter picking collection purposes.

On average users/residents should expect to see the park play area to be litter picked daily Monday to Friday excluding Bank Holidays whereas the extension will be litter picked once per fortnight.

Users / residents should expect to see the grass cut approximately once per fortnight from mid-March to late September. All areas of the park and the extension will be cut on the same frequency.

As for the recent improvement works, they are all now complete with the exception of

  • Seeding (which the contractor will return to in March / once the weather has improved). Gareth noted during his site visit of 19.2.14 that affected areas require further attention (i.e. removal of stones above 5mm and raking over, to create an adequate seed bed) before seeding can take place
  • Resurfacing of the drive and first part of the car park off the Parade (pot holes filled with chippings)
  • Regrading of the mound along the barriers to the car park adjoining the extension – aim is to make it more tidy and easier from a maintenance perspective
  • The shelter in the extension has been removed. A flail mower will be taken across this area to bring the edge of the mown grassed areas as close to the hedge line / fence (diving the fenced park and the extension). This will be done late February/early March 2014 to make the area look tidy. 

Please find attached minutes from the fourth meeting of Friends of Brownhills Common (13.02.2014) and the agenda for the next meeting. 

Yours faithfully, 

Helen Sanger

Senior Countryside Ranger
Countryside Services

Morgan Bowers posted the following wonderful deer film on YouTube yesterday (12th March 2014):

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The Wood crush Causeway for a sweet 16

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Oak Park – scene of both magic and loss. Better luck next year, lads!

Walsall Wood FC continued their remarkable domineering run last night, beating Causeway United 3-1, extending their unbeaten streak to a remarkable 16 matches.

Now the weather seems to be clearing, do get out and support the Woodmen – their gate take has been non existent so far this year, and with footy this great on your doorstep for such a small ticket price, you’d be mad not to go see them and experience the fantastic atmosphere at this historic club.

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

Bill Shaw submitted the following match report:

Hiya Bob,

The run goes on, 16 games unbeaten and we are now up to 10th.

WALSALL WOOD 3 v 1 CAUSEWAY UNITED.

Confident Causeway had moved up to 5th place, courtesy of some good results, they raced out of the blocks and put Wood under almost constant pressure, but all they had to show for it was a rising drive from Ben Evans that keeper Matty Coton saved comfortably on 6 minutes. Wood’s reply saw Steven Hayles and Lewis Taylor Boyce combine wide left before setting up Harry Harris to fire just over. Coton then saved bravely at the feet of Rion Francis-Mills before Taylor Boyce made space cleverly on the right of the box before firing into the side netting.

The breakthrough came on 27 minutes, a scramble developed from a left wing corner and Francis-Mills forced the ball home for the visitors. The lead lasted just 3 minutes, from a left wing free kick the ball flew around the box before Taylor Boyce took charge to fire home to level the score.

Both sides had chances to go ahead, but it was Wood who did, when on 83 minutes a left wing corner from Harris flew over everyone and nestled into the far corner of the net. Joey Butlin was brought down in the box in stoppage time, he took the spot kick himself giving the keeper no chance to wrap up the win.

It’s Dunkirk at the Wood on Saturday, see you there, K.O. 3:00pm.

Bill Shaw.

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

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Support in mind…

I’ve been contacted by friend of the blog Vicki Phipps, who’s involved in something that’s very close to my heart, and I’m sure close to that of many of the readers, too; she’s setting up a  local support group for folk diagnosed with early onset dementia and their carers.

The group is a Community Interest Company, which means it enjoys the same status as the Lichfield Scrap Barn, in that it’s an operation run purely for the benefit of those it seeks to help.

I know many people have experience of this debilitating condition, and any support is a godsend – particularly in these days of shrinking council care budgets and withering state daycare and support.

I’m happy to support such a community-minded venture. Best of luck to Vicki and all involved.

Vicki wrote:

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Click on the screenshot to visit the Mindful gifts site.

A very much needed group is being set up for people with early onset dementia in the Walsall area. The group will welcome carers, friends, family as well as people with dementia. The group will enable people to discuss issues they face with their peers, receive vital information and provide a platform for people to socialise.

The greatest benefit of the peer support group is making friends and sharing experiences with people who are in the same position. The twice-monthly meetings will aim to be a social experience where people not only chat but also take part in activities. People can be honest and say how they’re feeling without fear or embarrassment.

For more information please contact Vicki Phipps, Mindful Gifts, on 07828 935451 or 01922 495994 or email mindful.gifts@yahoo.com

Mindful Gifts is a community interest company which means we operate for the benefit of the community and not for personal gain. Our aim is to enable more people with dementia to take part in meaningful activities that have a positive impact on their wellbeing.

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Walsall Wood face Causeway United tonight!

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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.

Tuesday 11th March 2014

Walsall Wood FC at home to Causeway United

Can The Wood extend their 15 match unbeaten run?

7:45pm kick off

Please come and get behind your local club

For The Good Of The Wood!

Hopefully, match report to follow…

 

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Demolition, man

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The former St. John’s School and adjacent bungalow have stood as a grim gateway to Walsall Wood for nigh on 40 years now.

Thanks to the keen eye and subsequent alert by reader, fellow local blogger and freind of the blog @thestymaster, plus the outrageous cheek, charm and loquaciousness of the young David Evans, I can present internal and external shots of the former St. John’s School in Walsall Wood, currently undergoing demolition.

Last week we managed to catch the start of the removal of a once proud local landmark.

David, who’s never reticent when it comes to matters of local history, got talking to the dismantling engineers who are currently engaged in the highly skilled process of demolishing the old school, and he has been allowed access to the site to record the structure and progress of the work. This is quite a coup.

It’s worth noting that this is a very delicate operation due to the poor structural condition of the building, and the fact that the materials are being recycled – and like those from the former Royal Oak in Bullings Heath, Walsall Wood, will end up being sold for re-use at Cawarden Brick in Rugeley. They’re a fine company and their yard – just to the east of Colton – is well worth a visit. There’s even an old ROC post on the access road to the place!

That means it’s theoretically possible that bricks and tiles from both the school and old pub may end up together forming another building somewhere. I love that idea.

For those interested, I wrote an article recently about the planning history of the site, and David transcribed the log books of the school over several wonderful articles. British History Online has this to say about the history of the building:

St Johns school building,Walsall Wood from 1859 to 2014

In 1859 a larger school with a teacher’s house was opened in Lichfield Road on a site given by Lord Bradford. The old school and teacher’s house were sold and the money applied to the new buildings. (fn. 61) An infants’ school was added in 1882. (fn. 62) In 1885 men from the village who attended Sunday morning classes in reading and writing at the schools built a new classroom for the 1859 schoolhouse and altered and added to the infants’ school. (fn. 63) The mixed school was again enlarged in 1898. (fn. 64) The schools were reorganized into junior and infants’ schools in 1932 and were merged into a single school in 1974.

Thanks to everyone, particularly the demolition folk who have been so understanding and generous in their time and spirit – and of course to David. It’s rumoured he could sell contraceptives in a geriatric ward…

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Leaving hibernation

We’re a third of the way through March, and daffodils are out, the sun is high in the sky and spring is in full effect. I left in the afternoon for a quiet, fast spin – I ended up on a 45-miler around Lichfield, Croxall, Edingale, Harlaston, Whittington, Weeford and Shenstone.

The weather was beautiful – a lovely hazy sun was physically warm, and I was out in teeshirt and shorts. There was little wind, and the lanes and byways were teeming with other cyclists, and people out walking.

The day ended in a decent sunset, too. After so much rain, the joy of speeding down dusty, dry lanes is immeasurable. Today I felt like I’d left a period of hibernation.

This time last year we were in the interregnum between two heavy snowfalls, and spring didn’t seem to come until well into April.

As ever, for more of this stuff, check out my 365daysofbiking journal.

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Dazed

It’s not often I do this, but these are special circumstances that I think merit it. I’ve had a request from the young David Evans to re-run some photos from a post I created in 2011. David has requested this as new reader and commenter Roger Mosedale has joined us in the last few days, and David feels that he may be able to help with the school photos here.

It’s a pleasure to re-run them and also to welcome Roger who’s already shed some wonderful light on the Friezland Lane Working Men’s Club history. Hello Roger, and thanks. Feel free to join in!

Please note I won’t make a habit of recycling like this, but these are wonderful photos and I don’t think they received enough scrutiny at the time so please, if you can contribute to the background, or name faces, please do.

Either comment here, or BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

Walsall Wood Cycling Proficiency awards 1953 – photo courtesy of David Evans.

Hi Bob

A rare photo of pupils from Walsall Wood Primary School being presented with their certificates… in 1953! It is reassuring and encouraging to see that this scheme, or its modern equivalent, is being used locally

[That’s correct, it’s called Bikeability and is a fantastic thing indeed. Note the kids are clutching pennants which you attached to your bike to show your skill. – Bob]

Some readers may be able to identify their grandparents in the photo.

Best wishes

David Evans

Walsall Wood Primary School violinists of 1953 – photo courtesy of David Evans.

Hi Bob,

Readers may be interested to see this group of musicians in the making and may be able to name some of the group… perhaps their grandparents!

Note that the building in the background, the original primary school building, has a brick buttress..a sign of the area’s susceptibility to subsidence.

It was a good school and pupils from here went on to enter most of the professions and most of the trades , locally, nationally and internationally, taking their skills and interests in the arts and sports with them.

best wishes

David Evans

Walsall Wood Ebenezer Churh Choir 1932 – photo courtesy of David Evans.

Hi Bob

Please excuse the quality of this photo which is from a photocopy of a photo which appeared in a newspaper some years ago.

Caz mentioned a Mr Bampton, organist at the time, and his “full-blast” rendition of Handel’s Hallelujah which gave the poor old organ “bellows operative” an interesting time!

This is the choir, with Mr Bill Bampton sitting in the middle of the front row.

I hope some readers will recognise members of this joyful group. The building in the background is still there and is used as the Church.

best wishes

David Evans

Walsall Wood footballers of 1955 – photo courtesy of David Evans.

Hi Bob

I was pleased to see Trevor’s photo of the aspiring footballers and would like to add this photo which dates back to the squad of 1955 and hope that the team members and/or their children and grandchildren may find this interesting. The pre-fabs in the background have long-since gone and the building , adjacent to Oak Park is now a Youth Centre, I believe. Was the teacher a Mr Shingler?

best wishes

David Evans

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Django unchanged

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Way back when… Paul Degville plays with his dad, Fred, many years ago. Rest in peace, Paul, you bought so many music fans such great pleasure. Image supplied by Ian Bourne.

It’s been over a year now since I noted the sad news of the passing of Paul Degville, jazz musician extraordinaire and leading light in the formerly little recorded jazz scene that existed around the Crown Pub in Brownhills in the 1970s.

I still get email and social media messages asking me about Paul’s passing, such was the respect and fondness for a fine man and musical talent. So many people loved Paul’s work, he is clearly held in warm esteem by his fans. I’m so pleased and grateful that Peter Barker shared his tapes with us, and the magic that was achieved in the efforts undertaken to recover the lost one.

I was contacted a couple of weeks ago by reader Phil Jones, who was saddened to find out about Paul’s death whilst searching for him online. Phil sent me a lovely email which I include below:

Hello Bob

Seeing the colour photo of Jazz Night at the Crown brought back some memories. Back in the early 70’s, I was living at Cannock, and we were always on the look-out for new wateringholes. A colleague suggested the Crown on the A5, as they hosted a regular jazz night night. The main attraction being a guitarist who could play like ‘Django’. I was a little sceptical; there were no Django tribute performers around.

We went but on the first occasion, it was the wrong night. There was a small combo with a vibes player (similar style to Dave Shepherd) performing to a small but appreciative audience.

Another night was Django night, so we went a second time. Having missed the first set, we noted the busy bar and got drinks. It was definitely standing room only! As the second set started, we were all ‘blown away’ as the band worked through the usual repertoire (‘Nuages’, Swing ’48, ‘Manoir de mes reves’ etc etc).

The following Django night, we went early enough to get a seat. Talking to the regulars, we found the guitarist was Paul Degville, with his Dad on rhythm guitar. Mr. Degville snr was also the landlord. Playing the ‘Grapelli’ solos was Joe Jones, who also happened to be a member of Cannock Light Orchestra (His day job was as Cashier at the MEB in Cannock.) There was a regular fan club who were Django fans, some travelling from the far side of Walsall!

For any Django fans out there I can recommend the clips from the Django Centenary festival held near the Franco-Belge border.

Meantime I can watch the clip of Paul Degville. Some of the above detail may require confirmation, but seeing Paul at the Crown were nights to remember.

Thanks for posting that colour photo.

Best wishes
Phil Jones

I’d like to thank Phil for his warm memories, which are shared by so many local music fans of the period. I still welcome contributions on this topic, and if you have anything to add, please feel free. As I’ve noted, this is an unusual and little-recorded but of our collective history and I’d like to record as much of it as possible.

Comment on this post or email me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemai dot com. Cheers.</p

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Walsall Wood trounce AFC Wulfrunians

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Castlecroft Stadium, home of AFC Wulfrunians, from their website.

The Woodmen yesterday faced AFC Wulfrunians at Castlecroft, and took yet another wonderful win, bringing their unbeaten run at 15 matches. Bill Shaw was at Wolverhampton to witness the great mach, and submitted the following report:

Hi Bob,

AFC Wulfrunians 1 v 4 Walsall Wood.

Another 5 star away-day for the Woodmen.

Wood had the better of an interesting first half, going in at the break a goal ahead, courtesy of a neat piece of interplay with Joey Butlin cleverly setting up Harry Harris to score with a classic low drive on 6 minutes.

An acrobatic overhead kick by Harris from the right of the box 6 minutes into the second half put Wood in the driving seat and when Butlin scored from a 20 yard free kick 5 minutes later it was all over at 3-0.

The home side put the Wood under pressure for the last 10 minutes, debutant keeper Matty Coton making a couple of great saves, before on 90 minutes he was beaten by Jake Webb from close range.

Wood had the last word, Butlin raced away wide right, his ball inside collected at pace by Harris to finish clinically, for his first ever Wood Hat-trick.

It’s high flying Causeway United at Wood on Tuesday night, K.O. 7.45 pm, don’t be late.

Bill Shaw.

Walsall Wood are a good team and an excellent, community-spirited club. They need our support – please do attend the coming games (at home on Tuesday to Causeway United FC) if you can. The lads are doing 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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Duck soup

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Photo kindly supplied by Rose Maria Burnell, taken on 16th February 2014.

Hi folks – this is a plea for a bit of common sense, and it would be really nice if folks could perhaps think about it a little bit. It’s a nice weekend, and with that, we all like to go for walks and visit our local parks and greenspaces.

At places like Chasewater (pictured) and Walsall Arboretum – as well as anywhere there is open water – a really popular activity is feeding the ducks and waterfowl. It’s no wonder, it’s a great way to have fun with kids and teach them about wildlife.

However, it would be really nice to consider when it’s appropriate to stop. These images were taken by friend of the blog and Brownhills reader Rose Maria Burnell at the Chasewater boating lake during the last period of decent weather in mid-February. Quite clearly, the feathered friends had taken their fill, and the discarded bread was beginning to form a pollution hazard.

If you want to feed the ducks, geese and swans, please go ahead, but seed is best; it’s far more nutritious than bread, and safer (bread can choke small birds like ducklings). Ordinary wild bird seed will do, but the innovation centre at Chasewater do sell it by the cup.

It’s hard enough for the rangers to keep on top of the bird poo problem there, let alone the bread, so please do think about it before adding to the issue.

Cheers – wherever you go this weekend, have fun – and thanks to Rose for raising the issue.

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Photo kindly supplied by Rose Maria Burnell, taken on 16th February 2014.

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Photo kindly supplied by Rose Maria Burnell, taken on 16th February 2014.

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Good luck to Walsall Wood against AFC Wulfrunians this afternoon!

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Castlecroft Stadium, home of AFC Wulfrunians, from their website.

Today, Walsall Wood FC face AFC Wulfrunians away at Castlecroft. Kickoff 3:00pm – best of luck to the lads!

Hopefully, a match report will follow, as usual… For the good of The Wood…

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Both sides, now

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Published in 1980, this 30 page booklet was unknown to me untilI found a copy by chance. To download and read a copy in PDF form, just click on the screen shot.

Here’s a thing I’ve been trying to get round to for a while now, but scanning booklets is a time consuming and laborious job – but in this case, very much a worthwhile one. Over recent weeks I’ve featured poetry here from Reg Fullelove, and I said at the time that I had a book of his to scan and present for readers.

You can read Reg’s poem about Brownhills High Street here, and a similar one recalling Lichfield Road here.

Well, in PDF form, here is a downloadable version of  ‘Two Sides of Aer Reg’, a book of poetry by local poet, churchman and raconteur Reg Fullelove, published in 1980.

The book appears to tie in with broadcast radio work that Reg was doing at the time. The foreword says the following:

TWO SIDES OF AER REG

Reg Fullelove. Born in Brownhills. Son of a miner. Member of Bourne Methodist Church, Heath Hayes. Was a Sunday School teacher, now takes an interest in church affairs as a steward. Gives devotional talks to fellowships in the district.

Aer Reg. Created through a phone-in programme on BBC Radio Birmingham in 1977 when ‘The Bonkies’ was broadcast in local dialect. Other broadcasts followed on Wulfrun Echo.

Aer Reg continued to ‘praych the werd uz e imagined they wood er dun yeers ago – tryin ter mek fokes loff but orlso mekin um think.’

So yow cun loff un pray by the touch of a pen.

I find it’s best if you read the work – which is often written phonetically, in heavy dialect – in the voice of Reg himself. Reg can be heard narrating the 1934 Brownhills Carnival film I posted here last year. Reg is an irrepressible character with a great local accent, and also a devout and religious man with a keen eye and memory for detail.

All these things can be observed in his wonderful poems.

Some questions arise; primarily what of the radio show ‘The Bonkies’ – who, what, where and when of course, but also do any recordings exist? Secondly, what was Wulfrun Echo? Community radio perhaps?

I’d like to thank reg for his work. He really is a local hero, and I salute his spirit and tenacity.

I’m sure there will be comment; please feel free to have your say or email me: BrownhillsBob at Googlemail dot com. Cheers.

BLACK LEAD GRATE – DOLLY TUB

Black lead grate and dolly tub memories of the past
But they were part of a heritage that forever may it last,
A roasting fire on washing day to keep the flat iron hot,
Posh white sherts, all stiff with starch, me grannie washed the lot,
Remember the smoky boiler fire, brewhouse full of smoke
Bubbling boiling clean flannelette sheets, with boiler stick to poke
Doble event un dicky bow, shiny bowler hats,
Tweed plusfours, working boots, and evening shoes with spats
Bustle and shawl, big posh hat, nice white pinafore
This was the dress of bygone days, when house work was a chore
No gentle hum of washing machine no suction cleaner sound
But the thump thump of a dolly tub as the weekly wash it pound.
Friday was the black lead day, brasses to be cleaned
But with elbow grease and polish they soon had quite a sheen
No one had a freezer, just a pantry sill
The snap was good and simple, and yer empty belly fill
Ther wor no posh Axminsters, central heating all sublime
But a good bodged rug by a coal fire, that made brass fender shine
Every house had an iron foot, for dad to cobble shoes
Every Mom a seamstress as she sat and mended clews
Nobody had a Tele to watch till eyes went square
Yow was posh if yow ad a piano, but yow all ad time to spare
Ter say hello and hows yer health, enjoy a little lof
Ar yes terday we’ve got it all, but are we better off.

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