Roads to Birmingham
By Peter Walker
Part 1: Before the 17th century
The early roads
Not being an ancient town, and located at the meeting of three counties (Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire), Birmingham grew up after a crude pattern of cross-country routes already existed. The crossing of the river Rea at Deritend, together with its mill, became the nucleus from which the later city was to develop.
In Roman times, there was a fort at Metchley, near Selly Oak, and Icknield (or Ryckneld) Street, passed it on its way north, skirting the west of Birmingham. It is said that some roads in Birmingham, such as Lifford Lane, the Pershore road at Stirchley, Icknield Street, Great Hampton Row, Wellhead Lane and parts of Kingstanding Road are on the line of the Roman road, but this is not much more than speculation.
Map 1: This conjectural map of roads and settlements around Birmingham area is based on work by the Birmingham Roman Road Project. It also shows principal rivers, which were the main obstacle to road building) and the location of later towns and settlements. CLICK BELOW
Fig 1: Remains of the Icknield Street in Sutton Park today. The road was probably built after AD 100, and remained in use for several centuries. An enclosed deer park was created here in Anglo-Saxon times, and the line of the road has been disused but undisturbed ever since. CLICK BELOW
Fig 2: Watling Street old and new, near Kilsby, Northants. The old Roman road followed the straight line of trees on the right, while a winding new road on the extreme left replaces it. CLICK BELOW
Mediaeval records reveal a network of tracks converging on Birmingham, which started to grow as a minor market town in the 13th century. King Henry III is known to have travelled from Lichfield to Worcester in 1235, and Henry VII from Nottingham to Worcester in 1486, in both cases presumably via Bromsgrove and Droitwich, along the ancient salt way which was a passable road by the 10th century between Bromsgrove and Droitwich.
During the later Middle Ages, roads and bridges in and around Birmingham were maintained by the Guild of the Holy Cross, founded in 1392. In those days, no-one was charged with maintaining the roads, and it was not until 1555 that an act of Parliament was passed which made each parish responsible for maintaining roads in its area, overseen by the local Justices of the Peace. In practice, maintenance by the Parish meant that roads might be virtually impassible for large parts of the year to wheeled vehicles except for very local journeys.
In the late seventeenth century, the Industrial Revolution brought a large increase in traffic, which required a much more reliable transport system. Birmingham must have felt the great strain of demands for the two-way movement of raw materials, food and fuel, and the export of manufactured goods on the primitive road system as much as anywhere in the country. This was the more so because the nearest navigable rivers were the Trent at Burton, the Severn at Bridgnorth and possibly the Avon at Stratford.
Fig 3: an artist's impression of road conditions before the turnpikes were introduce [from a Highways Agency web site]. CLICK BELOW
But things got worse without any action being taken. In 1763 it was announced that "The carriers from Birmingham to intercourse London intend to raise their prices . . . because . . . they cannot carry so much by one third of the weight as they aforetime have done, on account of the badness of the roads." According to a Directory of the period, carriers' carts were operated between Birmingham and 168 other towns. The Turnpike roads were to be the belated answer. They are described in the next part.