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  1. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    Wonderful photo of Martineau Street. Love the two window gazing ladies with their fearsome hats!
  2. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    I read an article recently that to try and save it from demolition when the congregation had dwindled, the last vicar tried using the church also as a venue for slide shows.
  3. edcartermo

    Suicide in Prison

    I also have found valuable information about ancestors in newspaper archives that has illuminated their lives in a way that bald facts cannot do. One grumbled about losing a contract supplying watering carts to Birmingham corporation, another involved, though innocently, it seems, in a copyright...
  4. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    So, more than one petrol pump then! Thanks for the memory Phil.
  5. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    Just around the corner to the right, next to the white building, was a small garage with, as I remember it, only a single petrol pump. In the 1950s the word would go around that conkers were for sale there. It seems the family had a farm in the country where these coveted items actually grew on...
  6. edcartermo

    My dad

    How fortunate you were to have such a father. As Brian says "hang on to all those good memories". Perhaps when the time is right you might share some of those memories, particularly those relating to why he is your hero? Condolances from Ed and Mo.
  7. edcartermo

    Soho Foundry

    I've noticed those gaps when walking in City Road. As there doesn't appear to be corresponding gaps in Poplar Avenue I wonder if it was intended for there to be one crescent road?
  8. edcartermo

    The Hydrostatic Van

    Thank you for your kind response. Yes, the Hydrostatic Van was seen as the solution to the vexed problem of inefficient and, for many angry citizens, unfair allocation of street cleansing resources.
  9. edcartermo

    The Hydrostatic Van

    My mother's Ist great grand uncle had his nose put out by the introduction of the Hydrostatic Van as this letter of 1875 to the Birmingham Post shows. It led to an exchange of letters in the newspaper in which my ancestor defended his watering cart but the tide of history was against him. The...
  10. edcartermo

    Soho Foundry

    I took a few pics of the cottages in 2012: https://images.birminghamhistory.co.uk/coppermine/displayimage.php?pid=9182
  11. edcartermo

    Lodge Family 1814+

    Hi familysleuth, welcome to the forum. I'm not a fellow researcher for the Lodge family but I took a look on the British Newspaper Archive (which you may likely have a subscription to as you mention 'advertisements') and found a notice in the Birmingham Gazette for Mon 16 Aug 1824 wherein Ann...
  12. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    The Gullet was cleared for the creation of Corporation Street.
  13. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    Thanks for the confirmation on Immanuel Church, Mike. As for the buildings below and set back, it looks to me as if this was number 192, which, according to Kelly's 1883 was the premises of Abraham Hoskins, surgeon. By 1892 it was occupied by Charles Edwin Pursloe, MD, surgeon, and continued...
  14. edcartermo

    Old street pics..

    So many wonderful photos on this thread so thanks to all who take the trouble to revive our memories and give much pleasure thereby. The photo of the Church of the Immanuel in particular is so familiar that I have just checked for its position on the 1914 Birmingham West OS map. There is a...
  15. edcartermo

    Newspapers : From Birmingham Post 150 years ago

    This cutting of 19 Sep 1864 gives some idea of the interior decoration of Day's Hall. How much poorer would the history of Birmingham have been had Mr. Gem had his way. Ed.
  16. edcartermo

    Newspapers : From Birmingham Post 150 years ago

    "youth for the brazils " Could that be "Brazila", Mike, perhaps to do with coffee? Ed.
  17. edcartermo

    A respectable gentleman 'decieved', Birmingham Gazette 1828.

    Charles Dickens was sixteen when this cold bit of business took place but he would go on to attack the hypocrisy behind such transactions, most famously in his novel, "Oliver Twist". Ed.
  18. edcartermo

    Paxton Road

    I feel pretty sure this is Paxton Road as I remember it. I went to All Saints school and one of the things we used to love doing was running up the dark, enclosed entry that served the back doors of the corner building, to the obvious great annoyance of the residents, and emerge a little...
  19. edcartermo

    BHF,s SUMMER MEET UP

    This was my first meet-up and it was, apart from being a most enjoyable social event, an opportunity to put a face to those many members whose postings I have been entertained, intrigued and informed by. I was accompanied by my wife Maureen (the 'mo' in my user name) who rather indifferently...
  20. edcartermo

    Newspapers : From Birmingham Post 150 years ago

    Where is 'Glucester' Cathedral? I've noticed that proof reading was lax in 19th cen newspapers.
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