Mikejee, can you point me to any documentation relating to the founding in 1784 of the John Giles & Co you cite in post #4? The 1792 Charles Pye Plan of Birmingham still simply shows this as Giles's Brewery. In 1789 Sir Henry Gooch leased (further/) land for 21 years to John Giles of Greenwich, David Giles of Sandpits (Birmingham) and Alexander Forrest for a [new] brewery but I believe this was on the south side of Warston Lane. John Giles thereafter disappears from the record, and the partnership of David Giles and Alexander Forrest was dissolved on 1st May 1807 (ref. london Gazette), three years before the original lease was due to expire. I wonder too whether this John Giles was one and the same as a victualler of that name operating in Deritend. My particular interest is that John is a suspected gt gt gt gt grandfather. My grandfather told my mother a story (apparently without further detail) of the family once having some wealth, but that it was taken by a solicitor. ("Swindled" was the word used). Alexander Forrest became a powerful man, ref. the tablet to him and his family just inside the west door at St Paul's. I just wonder!The print would be looking at the brewery on the north corner of Warstone lane and Icknield st. It was founded in 1784 by John Giles & Co., by 1817 r was owned by Forrest & Sons, who, in 1828, merged with the James Richards brewery in Alcester St to form the Warston & Deritend Brewery. In 1834 all brewing was concentrated in Warstone Lane, but this brewery was closed in 1840 and the site sold in 1841 and used for house building