Those wooden sleepers were most likely close to 150 years old!But if you hunt around remnants of the past can still be found - wooden sleepers on the bay platform buffer stop:-
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Remnants of the old trackwork still remain:-
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Broken wooden sleeper on the bay platform line:-
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Platform 2 & 3 buildings are wonderfully preserved:-
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Metal plates on concrete platform footbridge:-
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And on the roadbridge:-
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Good Old OakThose wooden sleepers were most likely close to 150 years old!
Great photo! Could this be the now location? Holy trinity parish church - Coleshill street side? Obvious changes in wall height and supports missing. But entrance looks the same.Old Stocks and Whipping Post Sutton Coldfield May 1896.
creator: Sir John Benjamin Stone.
(Birmingham Archives and Collections)
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And maybe a little creosote!Good Old Oak
Oh my!Great photo! Could this be the now location? Holy trinity parish church - Coleshill street side? Obvious changes in wall height and supports missing. But entrance looks the same. View attachment 204747
Thanks Lady P. Emmanuel College and Vesey School seems right.
This is from Sarah Holbeche’s diary, March 1855:
‘Carpenter Holbeche left opposite house and it became "The White Hart" (disgusting). Mr Cull became our next door neighbour.’
(https://sclhrg.org.uk/sarah-holbech...ge-45.html?highlight=WyJ3aGl0ZSIsImhhcnQiXQ==)
Carpenter Holbeche is not otherwise mentioned in her diary but it is reasonable to assume that he was a relative.
Kerry Osborne, in People and Buildings of Sutton Coldfield, vol. 3, p10 tells us that Sarah Holbeche lived on the east side of the High Street in a house that was demolished in 1878 to make way for the railway.
My suggestion would be that the 'opposite house' - which fits the location of the Hart Inn - was renamed the White Hart in 1855. Not sure why SH should find this disgusting. Perhaps just annoyed at the change of name. Her diary does not reveal any antipathy to drink or pubs.
Looks pretty old and disheveled.............This picture appears under Sutton Coldfield but No title, date, creator, subject or description is given.
(Birmingham Archives and Collections)
Anyone know where it could be ?
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