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Lawley Street

Astoness

TRUE BRUMMIE MODERATOR
Staff member
nice one of lawley st from vaughan st.
 

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paul i am not entirely sure of the exact location...maybe someone will put us right on this...

lyn
 
Lyn, surely you mean Vaughan street.

thanks for the correction john we rely on them.. not being my area i wouldnt have known that..its what was on the caption of a shed load of photos i have been given...

will go and edit the post

lyn
 
this is a bonus....the viaduct pub lawley st

lyn
 

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Lyn

Without a doubt The Viaduct, next to Belmont Passage just after the Railway Arches.
 

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excellent phil now i wonder what is coming through the railway arches in my photo...whatever it is the folk are showing great interest...

lyn
 
I have enlarged and tried to sharpen photo. I think it is the back of an old style charabanc with Palace (?) written on back.

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thanks mike whatever it is seems to be more on the pavement than the road but there again that could just be an illusion...
 
If you look at the bottom of the object in the enlarged part of the photo above it looks like it says 109 Park .... Have just found that in the 1932 Kellys 109 Park Lane was Richard M Wright, motor coach proprietor, so maybe it was a charabanc parked partly on the pavement for some pub trip.
 
If you look at the bottom of the object in the enlarged part of the photo above it looks like it says 109 Park .... Have just found that in the 1932 Kellys 109 Park Lane was Richard M Wright, motor coach proprietor, so maybe it was a charabanc parked partly on the pavement for some pub trip.


crikey mike your eyes are good but yes i see it now...you could very well be right

lyn
 
Montague Street used to be Birmingham City Salvage Department the place where bin rubbish was sorted and salvaged some of the residue was incinerated and some taken on to a landfill site. They also parked the bin wagons there and years later when salvaging the bin rubbish became unprofitable they continued to use the offices and parking facilities.

There was never a tipping facility (rubbish transfer station) but there was one at the rear of the salvage department premises. It was a commercial enterprise that I can't recall the name of at the moment, it may have been "Biffa"
 

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Hi paul
Yes it was Montague street just behind Lawley street I know the area very well and I worked at the British ropes
Which was wrights ropes on Lawley street
And the one in Ladywood was in rotten park street off ickneild port road and facing Johnsons paints,
Also that was my neck of the woods along with Winston Green , and yes again when I was sixteen hearts old
I worked for the Birmingham Alluminuim casting facing rotten park street and our kid ran the stores for them at Johnsons paints for years he did work at Halfords main building until there big fire and he started at Johnsons
Best wishes paul,,, Alan,,, Astonian,,,,
 
This might ring some bells - John Kyte's ginger beer. Made in Lawley Street, formerly Clifford Street. Love ginger beer. Viv.

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thats nice viv...clifford st is my neck o the woods..will have a look at my clifford st photos..never know one may show kytes...

lyn
 
When my dad was a lorry driver, he would go down Lawley St on his way to the Coventry Rd and on to London. He did this trip many times...however, one time he got stuck under a bridge there. He was delivering Standard cars that were in packing cases. Unfortunately, they had been loaded the wrong way and were too high. The solution was to let the air out of his tires and tow him out.
Dave A
 
I have traced my ancestor Joseph Gibbs to 162 Lawley Street, Aston, Birmingham, in the 1851 Census.
He married Maria Freeth in 1836 in Birmingham, St Philip and they had more than five boys, one of whom was my great great grandfather, William. They were both born in 1817 in Birmingham.
I came across details while researching on the fourth floor of Birmingham library today that Joseph, who was a "plater" by profession, a skilled worker who coats articles with a film of metal (usually silver or gold), was imprisoned for six months in 1847 for "larceny by servant" at Birmingham Boro Sessions. I wonder which prison he was sent to?
I noted that both the witnesses of their marriage signed with an X so were unable to read or write and I have no reason to think that Jospeh and his wife were able to, either.
My suspicion is that they lived in back-to-back houses in dire poverty all their lives and were probably buried in pauper graves in Brum of one kind or another.
Does anyone know what the properties in Lawley Street were like at that time in history and what kind of circumstances people lived in?
 
Welshnwobbly

Looking at the OS maps of the 1880, I would assume that the houses from that period were the ones that were standing in that period were the same ones as in the 1830's so once again assuming that there was no renumbering in between these dates I think the house I have indicated here would have been number 162.

As you can see the houses in the area were a mixture of back to backs and back courts, though it looks like your ancestor was one of the lucky ones who had a normal type house that fronted court number 34.

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