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Bath Street Birmingham

robert

master brummie
Does any one know where this street is please.
Bath st
.
 
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Bath Street was between 50 Snow Hill to Loveday Street, central Birmingham.
 
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Bath St is of  Snow Hill on thr right as you go down before Loinel St which is on your left at the bottom.
I have Maps I can scan if you wish.
 
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on the census it seems to say lodging house, but the people living there were "inmates".
 
in kellys it is also listed as a lodging house. on the 1911 census there are men of all ages and they all have occupations. single, married and widowers.
 
Thanks Mike an ancestor there in 1911 and on the index is says 'Institution',he works as a Wood Sawyer.
I know there was a big Salvation Army hostel in the area at one time.
 
moving this thread to the streets section of the forum...will have a look in my files to see if i can add any photos to those already posted by mike

lyn
 
here is another one pauline dated 1959 bath st taken from gt charles st showing the crown pubBath Street and Snowhill from Great Charles Street with The Crown Pub.jpg

lyn
 
here is another one pauline dated 1959 bath st taken from gt charles st showing the crown pubView attachment 135815

lyn
Thank you once again, memories are flooding back of the old Street where I lived, went to church at St. Chads.
also got married there. Happy, but hard times, never afraid to walk along Bath Street, lots of work places, as it was known as the Gun Quarter. Small Gun Smiths etc. Seeing the photographs takes me back to childhood. Our house had one living room, one bedroom and an attic that had fungi growing out of the ceiling. Living there was mom,(my father was deceased) and my siblings. 2 brothers and 2 sisters making 6. Mom kept the house spotless, everything had its place (it had to be as there was no room for it, to be littered). We were happy.








r house consisted of
a living room, 1 bedroom
 
lovely memories pauline...i was born in our nans back to back in aston...nan in one bedroom mom dad and my brother in the other...like most folk we didnt have a lot but what we did have was kept spotless..people had a lot of pride in those days even sweeping the pavements outside their houses...

lyn
 
lovely memories pauline...i was born in our nans back to back in aston...nan in one bedroom mom dad and my brother in the other...like most folk we didnt have a lot but what we did have was kept spotless..people had a lot of pride in those days even sweeping the pavements outside their houses...

lyn
I have never lived in a house that did not have a garden and fronted the street. However, I do remember - and there are films and documentaries supporting this - that many of the women folk scrubbed their thresholds and doorsteps, polishing the brass if it was there. There was a saying in the past, about a houseproud and home loving woman, that "it is so clean that you could eat of the floor". I never saw it done, but I knew what it meant. ;)
 
Been studying the photographs of Bath Street, the one with St. Chads church and the houses and the factory showing Walkers Fine Tools 60 these were not there when I was a child. It was an open space with a lot of steps leading to the side of the church. We used to play there with our dolls. We also used to go into church to christen our dolls and on on occasion we had a cardboard box which contained my cat which had died, we had a little service then buried him on the peck. We always had a look out in case the priest or nuns caught us. The service was held by the holy water by the doors that led into the church, so not actually inside. Remember the Bishops house opposite the church where the priests lived, I had been inside there. What a lot of memories a few photographs bring.
 
A few more photos, one of the Cathedral, another of the Bishops house and the last I would guess was taken from Snow Hill during the demolitions and reorganisation.

City St Chads Bath St .jpgCity Bath St - Weaman The Bishops House St.JPGCity Bath Street .jpg
 
The Barrel Inn corner of Bath Street and Snow Hill from a London exhibition of inn signs. Viv.7795EE94-EE56-4AC0-9334-3CE284932A2E.jpeg
 
Thank you once again.
I remember the Bishops house on the corner of Weaman street and as a child I had to go there to take Mass requests when it was my father's anniversary. I would ring the bell and then the door opened and the housekeeper would let me into the hallway to wait for the priest. It always smelt of polish and I stood rooted to the spot incase my shoes left a dirty mark on the floor. The Bishops house was just along the street from where I lived.
 
also looking for information on a Terence Kenny ..younger brother of Thomas..who was the proprietor of rackett Court ..32 Bath street...and was there a link between St chads ...bishops house and rackett court ? my dad remembers a cannon roskell or similar name and a sister Gertrude thanks
 
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