• 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

Barrow's Stores

Aidan

master brummie
Another lost street name - Bull Lane. Would be now somewhere under the Eastern extension of Colmore Row between Livery Street & Bull Street.

Possibly two lost names as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colmore_Row reckons it was called Monmouth Street from about 1746.

The picture shows I guess an early supermarket delivery fleet maybe c1900 which I am lead to believe was situate on Bull Lane (but can't be if it was then called Monmouth St) - it may be a matrix error.

I can't read the early part of the sign so if anyone can look up or knows about Barrow's, Bull St/Monmouth St and any additional pictures they would be welcome...
 
Barrows Stores in 1900, as well as being at Bull St, was at 74,76 and 78 Corporation St., which must be the photograph.
Bull lane seems to have existed from sometime between 1751 and 1778 to between 1808 and 1815.
Monmouth St seems to have existed from 1808-1815 to 1879, In 1880 it is part of Colmore Row.
Mike
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Barrows Store was originally a drapers shop opened by Richard Tapper Cadbury and passed to his son Benjamin Head Cadbury, in 1849, when they decided to expand further into the chocolate and cocoa manufacturing business, the shop was taken over by their nephew Richard Cadbury Barrow and became Barrows Stores.
https://www.bhamb14.co.uk/index_files/CADBURY.htm

Colin
 
Last edited:
Thanks both.

Mike - do I understand that you think this is at 74-78 Corporation St or did they also have a Bull St site? Either way my thread title is wrong - is there anyway of me renaming it?

Cadbury connection is very interesting. Thanks Colin
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Aidan
Kellys gives the two sites 74-78 (74 and 78 can be read on the ends of the fascia in the picture) and also one at 93 Bull St . Im pretty sure the store is shown in blue on the c 1910 map, which shows that it is one shop, with entrances in both streets
Mike

map_c_1910_Barrows_stores.jpg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
That's brilliant Mike - thanks.

I hope there is a way to change the title of this thread to just "Barrow's Stores"
(Done)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I remember Barrows Stores, but only just. It looked posh from the outside. They had, if I remember rightly, baskets of fruit in the windows, and possibly with a kind of sash or ribbon on the basket. The Cobden was demolished about 1958/9, and Taylor Woodrow put viewing platforms on the opposite side of Corporation Street with telephones so you could lift up the receiver and hear just where they had got to in terms of rebuilding. The platform would have been about where Barrows was (or there may have been two), so thinking on, Matineau Street etc, must have been demolished at about the same time. Where I lived there were only boys, so I had no-one to talk to or do anything with, so I used to take myself off into town and this was a favourite place for me, museum at the time came second, but I used to disappear into there once I had listed to what they were doing with bricks and mortar.

Shortie
 
Thanks Shortie - nice memories and that does give us a good date fix. Seems quite advanced for the builders to offer a telephonic update at that date, very interesting.
 
I guess it must have been very forward looking for the time, but I did not think about it. It was only a recorded message, but I suppose updated weekly. It probably seems an odd thing for a girl to do, but bricks and mortar have always interested me.

shortie
 
More shots of Barrows Stores...

Just by chance, from the deeds to my house in Church Rd, it would seem that in 1891 Frederick Welch Barrows, an Engineer from Oxford; and his brothers Joseph Barrows of Beacon House, Handsworth, a wine seller; and a Thomas Welch Barrows flogged the land on which our house was built in 1896. The plot backs on to what is now Barrows Lane (which was previously Smarts Hill). Anyone know if any of these are related to the same Barrows Store owners? I may be missing out on discounts here...
 
Very interesting Dennis - particularly for me, as I have used Church Road frequently. My gran used to live at 430 Brays Road, my granddad is buried at St Giles, and I used to live in Wensley Road. I have often wondered where Barrows Lane got its name, perhaps we are now about to find out. I shall be leaving this thread shortly, about to board a plane, but will be back in a week to follow up.

Shortie
 
Ha so Glasshopper. You noted this too. I have been frantically trying to find any reference to this Ringo Fu Man Chew bloke elsewhere. I certainly can't recall him...Phil, Phil, Heathcliffe....anybody!
 
Yes, there are several queries with that sign. Any company that offered "Free deliveries to all parts" would be asking for trouble these days (or overcharging greatly) but was expected in the pre-personal vehicle days.

I can't find too much on the sickly-sounding brand apart from that it must be Indian Tea, or more likely Ceylon (Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka or just இலங்கை). I think that it's advertising jingle was "Chundah's Song - A Hindoostanee Melody" https://books.google.com/books?id=zlMJAAAAQAAJ&vq=chundah&pg=PA336#v=onepage&q=chundah&f=false "Boy! Let yon ruby liquid flow........Be gay and scown the frowns of age"
 
There is a little more info at the great madeinbirmingham site https://madeinbirmingham.org/barrows.htm
* Tolkien often had a tipple there (is there nothing that man didn't do in Birmingham)
* Barrow's delivered to all the big houses around - so was obviously the Waitrose of its day and needed the fleet of delivery carts shown in pic on post-1 (other posh supermarkets do exist....)
* The Bull St site was the location for the first Cadbury shop
 
Back
Top