Greetings David: Thanks for the message. Sorry you lost your message. As you can see I have been a member of this forum since 2002..going on seven years. You have come tantalizingly close to where I lived years ago. I still have major connections to this road since the older neighbour now in her 90's is still living and there are two close neighbours were younger than my parents by several years and I go back to visit them when I am in England.
Mr. Riago, you can find references to him on Google, was very prominent in Alsatian raising circles in Birmingham and did much for the Dog Association as you would know.
So that brings me to my school, at least Junior. This was indeed Marsh Hill
Junior and Infants which was scant minutes from my home. A clue...from the back bedroom of our house we could see a wide skyline including the
Villa Grounds, prefaced by Allotments at Wyreley Birch,the GEC Main
Office Block and on into Birmingham so we were very high up. My second school was a College in Birmingham and then to Fentham Girls in Erdington.
There is a member on our forum Peter Walker who lived in the Rdigeway and Hawthorn Road area I believe, who has also written extensively on the Witton Lakes area before the houses were built on the lands. Hopefully, you can post your writings on the history of this area.
As for Ransom Road, Mr. Rieago lived at the end house across from Marsh Hill School on the corner of Woolmore and Ransom. I am not sure I would have known Peggy but I might have. The Aston Villa connection was very strong in Ransom Road since the very famous, for his day, Scottish International and Pompey player, Jimmy Easson brought his family to live in Ransom Road from Portsmouth. Mr. Easson's claim to fame. He scored 100 goals in one season with Portsmouth in the l930's. He came to be a Trainer/Scout for Aston Villa Football Club in the l950's and his son, also called Jim, was a good friend of my brother Peter. Jim emigrated many years ago to Eastern Canada. Jim Easson lived until a good old age in Ransom Road.
I know the whole area so well as I lived there for 21 years and my nickname was "Roamer". Witton Lakes Park was my playground and access to it was also by a similar passageway as you describe. I had friends in Short Heath and would walk along Hesketh Crescent past Griffin Road and on to Bleakhill Road to visit them very often. My piano teacher Mrs. Mansell was just around the corner at the top of Bleak Hill. I remember a Robinson family, Archer's and Andrew Hey and Jennings across the road in Hesketh Crescent.
The bottom end of Woolmore Road which had an entrance to Witton Lakes Park had the nick name of "The Banjo" by locals. In the "Banjo" lived the most children in the area in one place. It was called the Banjo because it was a cul-de-sac and shaped like a banjo. Perhaps some of these children were your rivals in turf warfare David.
I was christened at St. Mark's Church mostly for convenience because of the bombing that was going on at the time. Aston Parish was my father's family's church and my two brothers were christened there. One of it's ministers was the husband of one of my teacher's at Marsh Hill, Mrs Wright and he was Reverend Wright. However, I did not attend St. Mark's. My church was St. Barnabas in Erdington High Street.
David, hopefully this gives you some more clues as to where I lived.