I’m looking for anyone with recollections or photographs of Snow Hill (the street) before it was swept away in 1962. Like many streets in Brum, Snow Hill has totally vanished except for a short stretch at the northern end called Old Snow Hill. But once upon a time it has a life of its own outside of the station. Look at any old map of Brum and you’ll see that it was the main thoroughfare connecting the town centre to Handsworth and the north west. As time went on it became a major tram & bus route and was a commercial centre in its own right, bordering the “Gun Quarter”. It gave its name to the magnificent GWR station and even had its own theatre.
Why am I interested? My father had his bookbinding business in no 99 Snow Hill until the building was swept away for Great Charles Street to be widened and as a child I would catch the bus into town, get off at Greys and walk down the hill (looking in on the station) to meet him there & earn a few pence clearing up before we went home.
I’m looking for anyone who has memories of the businesses that lined the east side of Snow Hill between WW2 and 1962.
It is nice to know that the original line of Snow Hill is now between the two office blocks One Snow Hill & Two Snow Hill and the wall of Snow Hill Station. At the moment it is grassed over, but in 2014 metro trams will once again run up the line of Snow Hill. Historically Snow Hill saw steam trams, cable trams and electric trams running out to Handsworth.
I have established a website/blog where I plan to present my findings on the subject of Snow Hill:
www.snowhillbirmingham.info take a look!