I only new this building as Singer factory. Did it originally belong to BSA?
In 1920 the Birmingham Small Arms Company Motor works was being built and behind it in this aerial view is St Benedict's Road and looking at all the sheets on garden washing lines it was probably a Monday .... '
washing day' in most districts of Birmingham.
Left click the image twice to enlarge
View attachment 178301
image source 'britainfromabove'
I am trying, but failing, to get my bearings. There was an entrance off Heather Road with a gate and two sandstone/granite pillars to St Ben's school. I am sure the walkway was parallel to the boys' playground which is clearly visible, as is the girls' to the side of the buildings on a slight incline. Hopeless for netball! The Infant School playground is tucked behind. But the entrance to BSA with its lovely metal pedestrian entrance was next to Holy Family School and St Gregory's church was on the other side of Golden Hillock Road which I can't see in the pic.
Regarding washing day... it all depended on how much smog there was! The air looks pretty clear in the pic.
But I do remember the Rootes building on the Cov Rd. This looks like the same square building of my childhood. It had red lights on the side at night advertising Humber, Hillmann, Sunbeam, Singer, Commer, Carrier. I could see the lights clearly from Mum and Dad's bedroom. (The site is now an ASDA.) Could this be the Rootes building which was bombed in WW2 as they turned away from car manufacturing to making items for the war effort? (I lived in a house that had been caught in the fall out of the bombing.)