Hi Paul, this is a little info for the surrounding Five Ways area.
Little Sisters of the Assumption.
The house in Greenfield Crescent, Edgbaston, was established by 1937. The nuns nurse the poor in their homes
Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent De Paul.
In 1895 this order established a night-refuge, servants' home and registry office at St. Anthony's Home, Bath Street. In c. 1909 and c. 1911 the girls' home here was replaced by new ones opened in Vicarage Road, Edgbaston, and Gravelly Hill, Erdington. The sisters left in central Birmingham were engaged in general parochial work. They moved to Shadwell Street in c. 1911, though the night shelter in Bath Street remained open for some years. By 1954 the Shadwell Street and Vicarage Road houses were closed, but there were Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul at St. Philip's boys' home, Edgbaston
Sisters of the Holy Child Jesus.
The Convent of the Holy Child Jesus was established at 59, Hagley Road in c. 1881. The sisters replaced the School Sisters of Notre Dame in the teaching of the Oratory girls' school, which they gave up to the Sisters of Mercy in c. 1886. They also had an independent girls' school. (By 1885 the house was at 119, Hagley Road. About 1886 this convent appears to have closed. By 1952 there was a convent of the Holy Child Jesus, with a girls' school attached, in Sir Harry's Road, Edgbaston
From: 'Religious History: Religious Houses', A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 7: The City of Birmingham (1964), pp. 403-405. URL: https://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22978