Lady Penelope
master brummie
I asked at the Sutton history group yesterday but nobody had heard of Dog Lane. Do you think it could have just been just a name that the older locals used? May get back to you if anyone thinks of anything.
Thanks everyone. I think this one will remain a mystery. The 'Dog in the Hole' which once stood at lower Parade was some way away from Wyndley Lane.
The Secretary of the History Group has spent some time on this this afternoon but has come to the conclusion that it is referring to Wyndley Lane and may have been referred to by locals as such. People had a habit of attaching nicknames to places didn't they?
It is indeedIs Powells Pool part of Sutton Park?
Roughly where the Leisure Centre stands today over a 150 years ago there was a magnificent entertainment called The Royal Promenade Gardens. It covered 10 acres and had a fernery, large rhododendron area, Rose beds, an Italian garden, lawns, ornamental plantations, a bowling green, cricket, archery and croquet areas. It also had an ornamental lake and a conservatory. The conservatory was modelled on the Crystal Palace built for the Great Exhibition of1851 and called after it. There was a hotel next to it with shelter for 1500 people and stabling for 50 horses, 30 acres of meadow. Facilities for boating fishing, cycling and children’s swings completed the offerings. It was also noted there were shady avenues and arbours for “spooning”.
All of this was the creation of a market gardener called Job Cole who converted his land there to create it. He was an experienced horticulturist and business man having previously owned market gardens in the Birmingham area.
It is unclear how he would finance such a massive undertaking but it was one of the results of the expansion of the railways coupled with very cheap fares. Sutton was to be blessed with three stations, two lines and a third planned. Speculation in all fields followed the railway and various important figures in the Sutton area saw profits to be made so he would have had access to such monies. Sutton was already very well regarded for its air and pleasant climate. Excursions from Birmingham were popular and frequent. The coming of the railway was to raise this to a completely different level
110,000 visitors came each year with railway excursion ticket sales of 77,500. Everybody seemed to be making money and Sutton saw a housing and development boom. Cole went public but initial euphoria died and the site did not turn out to be profitable in the long term. It must be speculation without access to the companies books but it seems likely that with an Rail Excursion costing only a shilling including admittance to the Gardens was a bargain for the visitor and the Railway Company but not for Mr Cole. The entry price to visitors arriving in other ways was also one shilling. Profit therefore relied on sales inside. Cole died in 1893 leaving £20.5s. A Mr Earle became the owner but as a businessman he was a good drunk, spending most of his time in The Museum Public House. He was in court for non payment of rates but later, when he got so drunk he fired a shotgun towards the hotel guests and a police officer, business seemed inextricably to decline. There was also the minor matter of a floor collapse which pitched dancers into the cellar to be glossed over.
A cabal of “The Captain”, “The Colonel” and “the Major” financed by other local figures, then took it on and organised an Oriental Art and Industrial Exhibition to relaunch the venue. The crowds stayed away in their thousands and it was a financial disaster. People had loaned items for display some of which were eventually returned but others were sold at auction which, judging from the prices realised, was fixed from start to finish. The creditors moved in and another period of decline set in.
The buildings however were sacrosanct. As none of these owners in fact owned the land they were unable at law from actually selling non movables which enabled the buildings to survive the various financial misfortunes and brave souls to again hazard their money in the hope that they could succeed where others had failed.
Eventually more finance was found and the 15”gauge railway was laid down in 1907 linking the Palace site with Wyndley pool for boating ,skating and fishing. The connection between The Crystal Palace grounds and Wyndley Pool proved popular with a changing audience less interested in evening entertainment but enjoying boating, fishing and the railway whilst using the Palace grounds for refreshment. The railway engines and rolling stock were built by a firm of model makers and was regarded as the acme of such engineering being perfect in every detail. In the ongoing years the stock was modernised and increased but still retained its superb engineering quality.
In 1910 with another decline in income fortunately along came Pat Collins a showman and owner of 3 other fairgrounds . Collins, the son of fairground entertainers was known as “The King Of Showmen”. Here was a man steeped in entertainment. He knew what to provide at a time when tastes were rapidly changing and working people were looking for days out.
He introduced new large rides, ballroom dancing in the Palace, better catering and and his concept of noise, music and excitement. He travelled the world to find the latest entertainments seizing on every new invention to power his fairground. Collins always had his finger on the pulse of popular taste, he was therefore able to turn the whole site into a profitable enterprise. The Miniature Railway was a particular success linking as it did Wyndley and the Fair and two rival businesses enjoyed increased joint success.
Between the wars the ballrooms, cafes and fair rides were very popular and on holidays the crowds were immense. After Pats death in the 40s and the effect of the war years the Palace dances faded in popularity , the fair visitors also declined although the numbers had a late surge in the lean 40’s .The railway hover was always popular and to a large extent kept the site afloat by its pulling power. Inexplicably the council who owned the land the railway ran on refused to renew the lease and in 1962 it closed.
However the railway was to outlast everything else and most of the rolling stock and engines are after a gap of 40 years , once again in use and can be seen at Cleethorpes, almost the last survivor of a wonderland started in 1868.
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Interesting commentary; 120 years ago we had dry summers, so this is no a new thing! My grandfather (mothers) would always blame the steam trains. Sorry for the shift off topic but we can learn a lot from history!The Birmingham and Warwickshire Archaeological Society in 1906 were describing ancient roads from Gibbet Hill…
“Another picked up branches from Salford and B‘romford and then struck straight as
an arrow over this site to cross the Jockey Lane by the corner shop, and plunge into
Powell’s pool below Booth’s farm. It may be seen in dry summers—a great dam of
water pebbles extending from bank to bank near the reed bed, which is indeed the
long ago silted up basin of a pool which this great highway once upbore.”
And no one could be in touch until you got home!So very true Richard, even as a lad, in the 1950's, our summers were long and hot, with very sparse rain, we would leave home at about 8am, with a bottle of water and some jam sandwiches, and not be home till around 6 pm, no one worried, and we were all as brown as walnuts, by summers end.!!!
Wonderful days!I remember it well lived five Banners Gate entrance fishing every day at Longmore pool fell in one day got out no problem dried before went home
Hi Richard l lived in Coppice View Rd we must know each other l went to Boldmere High School.lm 78yrs old nowWonderful days!