mike is this the windmill pub if so its still there
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/uv?hl...hUKEwihtc797PfeAhWsB8AKHQUaDfwQpx8wDnoECAQQCw
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/uv?hl...hUKEwihtc797PfeAhWsB8AKHQUaDfwQpx8wDnoECAQQCw
This pub was right opposite Dudley Rd Hospital, now City Hospital, I was a Manager at in the 1960s. Went in their regularly.
This pub was right opposite Dudley Rd Hospital, now City Hospital, I was a Manager at in the 1960s. Went in their regularly.
Totally agree Compressorman! It is too easy to loose history in our so called future. They both need recognition but not a5 the experience of one another!Used it in the 1960s so if it was a Windmill it was well before my time, try accessing any OS maps...bound to be on those. TRY Francis Frith?
Pub was built in 1936 by M and B. So your going back possibly to pre 1900s.
Birmingham City Council declared a climate emergency in June 2019 and made the pledge to become net zero carbon by 2030. If it is serious about achieving this it must stop plans to wastefully demolish, rather than re-use, historic buildings.
I am standing in the local elections May 1st 2025 and one of my aims is to stop tearing down our heritages.
EXPENSETotally agree Compressorman! It is too easy to loose history in our so called future. They both need recognition but not a5 the experience of one another!
Is there a canal back of the windmill pub?..as I understand, they were used to move the water around the canal system, I know there is a canal in the City Hospital ground because my office was but 50 feet away from it when I worked there in the 1960s, I feel there is one because as you drive up Dudley Rd there are high bridges just past the Windmill pub, so there must have been a windmill then..ipso facto as they say Burmingum.Cannot find any reference to there being an actual windmill there. The Pigott smith map of c 1824 does not show one, though the position is on the verhy edge of the map, and things on the edge seem to be a bit sparse in general, so I would not take that as definite proof there was not one. There was an actual "Old Windmill" pub there in 1889 (see below) , though it was a beerhouse, and have not been able to check further back. The first definite landlord known was Henry George Wilkes in 1895.
Off topic, re- the attachment, Would be interested in knowing what the article form sale actually was
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thanks for that info...and we know the exact location of the workhouse that gives us a good idea of where the old windmill once stoodOn the old midlandspubs site it stated that the name of this former beer house commemorated the windmill that once stood across the heath. It was demolished to make way for the Birmingham Union Workhouse. The windmill, although not ancient, was active during the 18th century.
Mike, were new facilities built to take their place, and do you know what they were called?From post 71 at https://birminghamhistory.co.uk/for...ley-road-western-road-opened-1852.2280/page-3
At the same time as the prison and lunatic asylum were being built, so was the Birmingham Union Workhouse. Standing alongside the the Dudley Road with its entrance in Western Road, it replaced the workhouse built in 1733 in Lichfield Street, now the top end of Corporation Street. The late 18th-century Birmingham Heath windmill was demolished to make way for J J Bateman's Tudor-style building. Originally built to house 1100 inmates, by 1881 its population was more than double that number. Poverty led to illness and gradually much of the workhouse was taken over by sick wards. Now only the entrance lodge survives, the so-called Gateway of Tears, and this is cuirrently out of use