Lisa_Karim
Brummie Nipper
Does anyone have any information regarding this area of Highgate? Anything would be greatly appreciated.
:angel:
..." Celebrated TV and Film actor Tony Morton's vivid recollection of his early life in Highgate with his Mother and Grandmother are profoundly moving. He has said that both he and his Auntie Ida agree that when you now stand on the steps to the West Door of St. Alban's Church and look out down the green grassy slopes of Conybere Street the view is very different. It would not be easy today to picture what this area of Highgate in Birmingham looked like, but 100 years ago, terraced houses, courts, back-to-back housing were built over a filled-in clay pit known locally as Vaughton's hole.
Housing was cramped, clustered, and claustrophobic, two up, two down for a family of 7.Courts and terraces led into a cul-de-sac of more courts and terraces..‚.. These were serviced by outside water closets or lavatories - approximately three lavatories to six families sited in out-houses built in the centre of each court adjacent to a communal wash house where a family's washing was laundered in public..."
Hello Pedrocut, If you are interested there is an enormous amount of info on the subject on Google. It was a popular bathing place and is also connected to the R. Rea and the moat. There is too much for me to digest because I am already very busy tidying up years of clutter.
I have found an interesting case from 1849, and will post later.
If this sketch is indeed from 1831 it is a great find. I think it must show the floodgates that are mentioned in the case, and also the mill!
Post 5 in “Adverse weather in Birmingham over the years” shows a picture of the floods at Deritend Bridge in November 1852.
https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/for...e-weather-in-birmingham-over-the-years.47367/
This clip gives another account with the mention of Vaughton’s Hole.
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