If anyone is still interested in William Henry Sreet I can give you more details, My Fathers family all lived in that street, and it was a 'dead end' it did indeed start from 'Rocky Lane' opposite Cheston Road, looking up the street from Rocky Lane the 'Hen and Chickens' pub was on the right, (my father met my mother there when she worked as a barmaid during WW 1!) there was a cafe on the opposite corner then three or four hoses, from then on the houses had long front gardens and the houses (Terrace Type) were immediately at the foot of the railway embankment, these carried right on on up to the top of the street. at the top were Railway Sideings. coming back down there were houses with no front gardens, but also houses lying at the back of them, these were accsessed by narrow 'entry's', one of my aunt's lived up one of these and her neighbour used a horse and cart to sell fruit & veg around Aston, overnight he would leave the cart in the street but would un harness the horse and send him up the entry, many a time I've come face to face with the horse as a child and boy was he big! his stable was alongside the house. As was the norm in those days, nearly all my fathers brothers and sisters, when they married managed to rent houses in William Henry Street. My motger by the way originated from Kidderminster and was sent to Birmingham on War work, making blankets for soldiers, she worked for Brintons in 'Kiddy' as a carpet weaver, and the bar work was extra. Don Clive