• 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

Recent content by daithelife

  1. daithelife

    Hybrid & electric cars

    Survival is but one aspect, but it is not the only one. This response may take me off topic here in which case no doubt the moderators will rectify the situation. We may have created a safer world, but whether we have created a better on is open to question. So many dangers in our environment...
  2. daithelife

    Hybrid & electric cars

    Just getting back to matters Brummie for a moment! My first car was an Austin A30. New, out of the factory not more than a mile from where I was living. That used to do something approaching 40 miles to the gallon on petrol that was much more crudely refined than today and presumably as it...
  3. daithelife

    Hybrid & electric cars

    Eric Gibson wrote quite wonderfully about how he was able to save money buying old cars and fettling them back to use. Sadly I am totally mechanically incompetent and seem to successfully find every rogue in the motor trade. Every repair or adjustment has ended up cosying me the proverbial arm...
  4. daithelife

    Memories : Trip down Birmingham memory lane

    Further research has led me to the postal museum who indicate that postage of a one ounce missive from London to Edinburgh would have cost four shillings and four pence in 1812. This would be the equivalent today of £20.86p!!!
  5. daithelife

    Memories : Trip down Birmingham memory lane

    Richard, prior to the introduction of the 'penny' post in 1840 the cost of sending a letter depended upon size, weight and distance travelled. Letters sent via the Post Office were generally paid for by the recipient not the sender and were proportionately much more expensive than today...
  6. daithelife

    Definition of “Brummie”, “Astonian” etc

    I left well over 50 years ago as I have written elsewhere. Yet despite the rigours of a King Edwards education and the obligatory remedial pronunciation classes and having worked in an area that required me to speak in standard recieved English I can still be identified as the Brummie I truly...
  7. daithelife

    Memories : Trip down Birmingham memory lane

    I left Birmingham back in the early 1960's and for all sorts of reasons have not returned at all until very recently. What on earth can I say? Talk about a stranger in a strange land. Nothing was recognisable. The city and suburbs I knew as a youngster have not only vanished but have...
  8. daithelife

    Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

    John Everett Millais
  9. daithelife

    Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.

    I too remember 'the Blind Girl' for a very special reason. I must have been no more than six or seven years old when my Mum took me to the gallery. I got bored and ran off and was found seated on the floor in front of that painting sobbing my eyes out because she couldn't see the rainbow...
  10. daithelife

    St Laurence School

    Please note the correct name of the school is St Laurence.
  11. daithelife

    St Laurence School

    Hi, I hope I have worked out how to do this, but no doubt a moderator will sort it out if I have got it wrong. I am looking to see if there is anyone who attended St Laurence's infant or Junior Schools before 1957. I stumbled across their website which seems to indicate that in my dotage I...
  12. daithelife

    Steam Locos

    Just an aside about the "Big Boy". There used to be a 7.5inch scale railway with a very faithful model of a Big Boy much needed due to extreme gradients of track. It was at Dobwall near Liskeard but I think it went bust in the early noughties and the loco's were sold
  13. daithelife

    My Nan's sayings

    Regarding "Arse up the Warwicks" (see Lulubelle above) I believe refers to the battles and sieges at Meteran in Flanders where the Royal Warwickshire regiment defended so stoutly from 1914 to 1918. Incidentally where Bernard Montgomery as a lieutenant in the Royal Warwicks was injured. THe men...
  14. daithelife

    What do you watch on tv nowadays ?

    I will add to the comments about hearing aids, particularly in relation to TV watching. The problem is often not with the hearing aid but with the way broadcasters actually "broad cast the audio component Of their programmes. They will mix speech and sound effects into effectively a single...
  15. daithelife

    Kalamazoo

    Not exactly about Kalamazoo but the recollections here stir memories of that strip of waste ground that ran alongside the River Rea and the railway track from the rear of the Kalamazoo site to the bridge on Tessall Lane (Just about where Longbridge station now is). The River was certainly never...
Back
Top