• Welcome to this forum . We are a worldwide group with a common interest in Birmingham and its history. While here, please follow a few simple rules. We ask that you respect other members, thank those who have helped you and please keep your contributions on-topic with the thread.

    We do hope you enjoy your visit. BHF Admin Team
  • HI folks the server that hosts the site completely died including the Hdd's and backups.
    Luckily i create an offsite backup once a week! this has now been restored so we have lost a few days posts.
    im still fixing things at the moment so bear with me and im still working on all images 90% are fine the others im working on now
    we are now using a backup solution

Fantastic, Its Plastic

In the BBC programme Hidden Killers of the Victorian Home, (by Doctor Susannah Lipscomb and first shown in 2013) Birmingham and MR. A Parkes, inventor of Parkesine and the “father of plastics” gets a mention.

Birmingham is referred to as the "City of a Thousand Inventions."
 
I now live in the Hackney borough of London where Parkes had his factory in Hackney Wick and it's sometimes quoted that it was here where plastic was invented - of course, being a Brummie first and foremost, it makes me quite cross!

Produced yes, invented no :laughing:
 
Hackney Wick the site of the dog and speedway track !

No longer I'm afraid - it all got swept away for the 2012 Olympic complex :(
Hackney Wick is getting to be a hugely redeveloped area now, lots of new flats.
There are still some of the old Victorian factories around, many of them used as artists workspaces.
I loved old Hackney Wick, I think because it reminded me of Brum, with the little factories and the canals :)

This was a great exhibition on plastics I went to last year at Bow Arts.

 
The BHF is a great source of learning, came across this forum and stopped and readit and learnt all about bakelie and other man made materials and then came across the word Xylonite and remembered the number of times at Cannings that I had crossed Gt Hampton Street with a Xylonite gear wheel from a plating tank or similar from the offices to engineering works to get it identified for replacement, often as it happens for another forum set of posts Ionic plating. and suddenly the smell of chemicals was in the air as I thought about it, strange what memory can do. Cannings were great users of man made materials for cogs, gear wheels and etc.

Bob
 
Back
Top