Rosary_Boy
master brummie
Looking to go to Moseley to take a load of photos of Victorian and Edwardian buildings any ideas please ?
thanks phil as I don't know Moseley that well so when am there wana try catch as many photos that day, plus phil are all these roads close to where the main road is with the pubs etc ?Rosary Boy
Don't bypass Park Hill, Chantry Road, Salisbury Road, Moor Green Lane, Reddings Road, Amesbury Road, and of course Moseley Hall, Uffculme House, and Highbury Hall.
thanks phil as I don't know Moseley that well so when am there wana try catch as many photos that day, plus phil are all these roads close to where the main road is with the pubs etc ?
thanks mate for infoAll within a five or 10 minute walk of Moseley Village, except for Uffculme and Highbury Hall they are a little further toward Kings Heath.
going to walk from Digbeth tomorrow and see what Moseleys got to offer and Hopefully get some great photos !All within a five or 10 minute walk of Moseley Village, except for Uffculme and Highbury Hall they are a little further toward Kings Heath.
great pictures mate I didn't go today because of the rain today etc so looking at the weather next week will be best now !
thanks phil for info againAlthough they have been photographed many times you might like to get some snaps of the houses opposite Highgate Park, hopefully they have finished renovating them by now. Next you might like to catch Stratford House just inside Stratford place. Then if you keep on the old Moseley Road (don't get run over crossing Highgate Middleway) you will come to the Friends Institute next door to Athelstan House the old junior remand home. As you progress along Moseley Road on the corner of Highgate Road there is a row of disused Georgian houses which may have fell down by now, further along on the corner of Vincent Street a row of Victorian buildings. Then of course next comes the Library and Swimming baths which the Council have been trying to close for years across the road from there is the school of art with next door J H Butchers Transfers business premises and house. I suppose the last building of interest would be the old post office on the corner of Cromer Road before reaching the Balsall Heath Institute. Wear some comfy shoes.
great pictures mate I didn't go today because of the rain today etc so looking at the weather next week will be best now !
Thanks mate for the info yeah its looks around 1600 or 1700 why are all these old buildings of ours being set on fireRosary Boy
post #16
Well for a start it's not Moseley it's Highgate which used to be classed as part of Balsall Heath. Moseley doesn't start until you reach Trafalgar Road and Moseley Road changes to Alcester Road.
The building is Stratford House which dates to 1601 it was built for Ambrose & Bridget Rotton it has had many uses since those lofty days and was recently damaged by a fire but it has been completely restored now.
Thanks mate for the info yeah its looks around 1600 or 1700 why are all these old buildings of ours being set on fire
its our History !
Listing Text
STRATFORD PLACE
1.
5104
Highgate B11
Stratford House
(formerly listed under
Camp Hill, Bordesley)
SP 0885 NW 53/12 25.4.52
II*
2.
Dated 1601 and built for Ambrose Rotton and his wife Bridget. Remarkable
survival of a 2 storey and attic timber framed and plastered manor house,
the ground floor partly refaced and underpinned in painted brick to support
jetty. Gabled cross wing to left and off centre gable and slightly smaller
gable to right, all slightly jettied on moulded brackets. Central 2 storey
gabled porch with first floor projecting on long angle brackets. Between
the cross wing and the porch either side of the modern brick window bay
the studding is exposed with a row of blocked wood mullion lights high
set on same level as the open one to sides of porch. The first floor
studding is braced in herring bone pattern and the gables have short curved
braces forming diamond patterns. Square headed moulded jamb opening to
porch with date on and initials on moulded cornice. The original battened
and studded door remains in situ with similar case to that of porch. Renewed
old tile roof with rebuilt clustered brick chimney stack, diamond shafted,
set on ridge by cross wing. Three light transomed metal casements with
leaded lights replacing C18 iron casements at time of restoration in the
195Os. Stratford House underwent considerable internal alteration in the
1820-30s when a rear brick built staircase wing and corridor were added.
Most of the door furniture is of this period but the 2 front rooms, flanking
the studded passage from the front door, retain chamfered ceiling beams
dividing the plastered ceiling, with deep cornice mouldings, into 2 compartments.
The left hand room retains 4 centred arch stone chimney piece and there is a
similar chimney piece, cased in a reeded early C19 surround, to the first
floor room of the cross wing. The back landing has exposed portion of the
original outside wall framing with a hammer-head wall post by the attic
stairs. The attics are plastered but the functions of some of the rafters
(partly renewed) and the framing of the gables are partially exposed.
Listing NGR: SP0732485648
This text is from the original listing, and may not necessarily reflect the current setting of the building.
Yeah its my pals local the Merry MaidMerry Maid is still open - it is now an Asian run pub serving superb curries - according to the taxi driver who drove us last week. He rated the food excellent but the atmosphere and decor less good.
I spent a good 3 hrs up there on the day I took 300 photos in Digbeth, Highgate, Moseley well worth it thanksMoseley: Victorian & Edwardian Buildings:
Hi Rosary Boy - if you are still exploring Moseley & residential property don't overlook the St Agnes Conservation Area. St Agnes Road has some particularly fine houses.
Two buildings which I would photograph would be the Moseley Art School and Moseley Swimming Baths, both nice pieces of old Moseley architecture. I went to MSA from 1951 to 1954.Looking to go to Moseley to take a load of photos of Victorian and Edwardian buildings any ideas please ?