Excellent video, very informative!A nice short video by Andy Tidy on the lost canal basins of Birmingham, including the picture under discussion…
1913 apparently, from another thread on this page. Birmingham Mail Archive picView attachment 161785
Trying to date the picture of Old Wharf.
The last mention of Garbett and Young is around September 1885. By 1890 Garbett was a coal merchant with an address of 58, New Street, while Thomas Young is still at Old Wharf. Young is also listed in 1915, but by around 1927 Old Wharf had gone.
Bill Dargue tells us that “Broad St was a field track until the end of the 1700s. From around 1780 building began on the high class Islington estate, around what would become Islington Row.” (Islington Row mentioned from at least 1814).
We can see from post 1318 that the extent of the area “Islington” could include Bishopgate Street and the towpath of the canal. There is a reference to a William Mitchell, Steel Pen and Pen-holder manufacturer moving to Washington Works, Cumberland Street, Islington, Birmingham in 1852. This may suggest that the area was loosely defined and extended down towards Gas Street. Maybe to have an address that could be tied to Islington could be considered upmarket.
The upmarket development in Fleet Street is called Islington Gates…
“Leaseholders of Islington Gates have been told to replace the cladding which covers their building. Residents of a Birmingham apartment block feel “trapped” after being slapped with bills for up to £100,000 to replace flammable cladding.”
All necessary work!Not Birmingham but Fradley Junction. Short video showing the trimming of the canal side trees and bushes.
Just watched this again, so much history there and so much overlapping technology reaching back to the city’s foundation!Don’t think this has been highlighted before, College Road to Spaghetti by Canal Hunter Alan Tidy enjoy…
Can you PM me title and ISBN No of your book please, seem to be three or four of a similar name, I may already have it. Had six happy holidays doing the four rings and the Stratford canalThe detachable engine for canal craft was detailed on page 78 and 79 of my book Birmingham Canal Navigations published by Tempus in 2002. This was a scheme proposed by Arthur Hook for the Watercraft Installation Ltd in 1917.
ThanksThat one was the Birmingham Canal Navigations at the Heart of the British Canal System
ISBN 7524 2767 9
The latest BCN book will be launched by author Phil Clayton at the Titford Pump House in May- That new book is the publishers Crowood. I did a book for them on the Trent & Mersey Canal last year, but because of Lock Down could not have a launch. Such is life!
I went on a booze barge trip from Gas St Basin to Worcester and back. 13 Irish brothers on board. Run out of beer by Selly Oak.Not Birmingham canals, but Birmingham related.
Latest YouTube episode of Cruising the Cut shows a great range of "barges" going to the Elsmere Port celebration. Including Clematis that featured in Peaky Blinders.