SECULAR ARCHITECTURE (fn. 1)
Public and Commercial Buildings within the 1838 Borough
The earliest building used for public meetings of
which we have any architectural record was the Old
or High Cross which stood in the Bull Ring and
was demolished in 1784. It assumed its final form
in 1702–3 when a square upper room was added to
an existing arcaded market shelter; its hipped roof
was surmounted by a cupola enclosed by a balustrade. The Welsh Cross, at the north end of High
Street, was a similar but slightly smaller structure
which, in 1706, received an upper story to be used
as a guard-room. (fn. 2) By the end of the 18th century,
although lacking an adequate administrative centre,
Birmingham possessed several public buildings of a
more specialized kind, all of which have now disappeared. (fn. 3) In 1708 the old timber-framed building
of King Edward's School in New Street was
replaced by a two-storied brick structure with
projecting wings enclosing a three-sided forecourt. (fn. 4)
The central feature of the main block was a tower
of four stages and a cupola, a niche at the third
stage containing a figure of Edward VI. The
Blue Coat School, first built in 1724, was enlarged
and faced with stone in 1792–4, the architect being
John Rawsthorne. Its long four-storied front, with
a central pediment and niches containing figures of
a boy and girl in the school costume, survived on the
east side of St. Philip's churchyard until 1935. (fn. 5) The
workhouse in Lichfield Street, erected in 1733,
received additional wings in 1766 and 1779, (fn. 6) and
was described by Hutton as more like 'the residence
of a gentleman than of six hundred paupers'. (fn. 7) The
General Hospital in Summer Lane, the building of
which lasted from 1769 to 1779, was a substantial
three-storied structure, also having the appearance
of a Georgian country house; two wings in the same
style were added in 1790. (fn. 8) Two important 18thcentury inns were the Royal Hotel in Temple Row (fn. 9)
(1772) with an elegant assembly room, and the Hen
and Chickens in New Street (1798), its balconied
front attributed to James Wyatt. (fn. 10) The striking
classical façade of the Theatre Royal in New Street
was designed in 1777 by Samuel Wyatt (fn. 11) in a style
which, for elegance and sophistication, must have
been far ahead of anything else in Birmingham at
the time; it survived the fires of 1792 and 1820 and
was finally demolished in 1902. (fn. 12) Matthew Boulton's
warehouse, formerly at the junction of Lionel Street
and Livery Street, dated from 1787 and was also
designed by Samuel Wyatt; it was damaged by
bombs in the Second World War and demolished
in 1950. (fn. 13) A fine brick building in Suffolk Street,
probably dating from the 1770s, housed the offices
of the Birmingham Canal and formed the entrance
to the Old Wharf. It consisted of a central octagonal
block flanked by elliptical archways; beyond these
were two-storied terminal blocks with Venetian
windows. (fn. 14)
The first administrative building of importance
was the Public Office, erected in Moor Street in
1805–7. (fn. 15) It was the work of William Hollins, the
local architect and sculptor, and its front was of
imposing if not particularly inspired design. Above
a rusticated base the principal story was of six bays,
divided by paired Ionic columns supporting an
entablature and a balustraded parapet. Another
building by Hollins, demolished in 1957, was the
General Dispensary in Union Street (1808) which
had a pedimented central block, its three bays
divided by pilasters with fluted capitals showing
Egyptian influence. Lower side wings were connected to the main block by screen walls containing
doorways. Set in an arched recess above the central
entrance was a panel of symbolic sculpture, almost
certainly by the architect himself. (fn. 16) Sculpture by
Hollins is also a feature of the Birmingham Proof
House in Banbury Street, dating from 1813. (fn. 17) This
building, designed by John Horton, 'architect and
builder of Deritend', (fn. 18) has a two-storied brick front
with a central curved gable. Below this and above
the principal doorway is a semi-circular niche containing a fine carved group consisting of weapons,
flags, and shields of arms.
The great Market Hall, designed by Charles
Edge, was built between 1828 and 1835. (fn. 19) The
principal entrances at the two ends faced the Bull
Ring and Worcester Street, while along the Bell
Street front, where the ground fell away, there was
a row of basement shops. Above the rusticated
basement the building had tall round-headed
windows; each entrance was flanked by massive
Doric columns supporting an entablature. Although
reduced to a shell by enemy action in 1940, the
walls of the building were still standing in 1962. (fn. 20)
In 1830 a site for a town hall, also to be used for
concerts, was acquired at the junction of Congreve
Street and Paradise Street. Among competing
architects for its design were Charles Barry and
Thomas Rickman but the promoters selected a
scheme by the young J. A. Hansom and his partner
E. Welch. The building was to take the form of a
classical temple, based on that of Castor and Pollux
at Rome. It soon became evident that funds were
inadequate for this ambitious scheme: the contractors had submitted too low a tender and by 1834
the architects, as part guarantors, were made
bankrupt. In the following year Charles Edge was
appointed as supervising architect but work was still
delayed by financial difficulties and the building
was not completed until 1849. In particular the
interior had to be modified to accommodate the huge
organ provided by the musical committee of the
General Hospital. (fn. 21) Externally the brick structure is
faced with Anglesey marble and consists of a
peripteral temple of the Corinthian order, raised on
a high rusticated podium. The architectural weakness of the building lies in the fact that this sharp
horizontal division is not reflected internally, where
the hall rises through both stories. Thus the effect
of the podium is weakened by many narrow roundheaded openings while there is no opportunity for
an impressive entrance, approached by steps, at the
level of the temple itself. Nevertheless when it was
completed the town hall was by far the finest public
building in Birmingham and a great source of pride
to its inhabitants.

BIRMINGHAM GENERAL DISPENSARY
The Classical Revival gave the town many good
smaller buildings in the 1820s and 1830s. They were
mostly situated between Ann Street (now Colmore
Row) and the upper end of New Street, an area
which had remained undeveloped until this period.
A striking example was Thomas Rickman's exhibition room for the Society of Artists (1829) with its
Corinthian portico projecting over the pavement in
New Street. (fn. 22) Almost the only survivor is the same
architect's building for the Birmingham Banking
Company (now the Midland Bank) erected in 1830
at the junction of Waterloo Street and Bennett's
Hill. (fn. 23) The former Curzon Street station, which is
still in use as a goods depot, was the last important
building in this tradition. It was designed by Philip
Hardwick, architect of the Great Arch at Euston, (fn. 24)
and opened in 1842. The tall main block, originally
containing the booking hall, is fronted by four giant
Ionic columns and flanked by archways giving
entrance to the station. An impressive industrial
building of this period is the former electro-plating
works of Messrs. Elkington, built above the
Birmingham and Fazeley canal in Newhall Street
and since 1951 the Museum of Science and Industry.
It is said to have been designed by Josiah Mason (fn. 25)
and was intended to be attractive to visitors with its
long stucco front, classical porch, fine staircase, and
large showrooms.
The first Gothic-Revival building to appear in the
streets of central Birmingham, causing a considerable stir, was the rebuilt and enlarged King
Edward's School designed in 1833 by Charles
Barry (fn. 26) and demolished in 1936. His use of an early16th-century style with its strong vertical emphasis
and its rows of pinnacled buttresses foreshadows his
work at the Palace of Westminster. Another Gothic
structure, obviously influenced by the school
building, is Queen's College in Paradise Street,
dating from 1843–5 and designed by Drury and
Bateman; (fn. 27) it was refronted in 1904.
The latter half of the 19th century, which saw an
enormous increase in the public and commercial
buildings in central Birmingham, was a period of
great diversity in architectural styles. All had some
historical basis and many were influenced by
continental models. As time went on the tendency
was to employ more and more lavish ornament and
for the plain stone or stucco facings of earlier years
to give way to such materials as moulded brick,
terracotta, polished granite and mosaic. The newlyconstructed Corporation Street was much admired
in the late 19th century when the buildings in it
were said to 'exhibit a pleasing variety of angle,
height, and architectural style, in marked contrast
to the dull uniformity which prevails in the great
thoroughfares of other cities'. (fn. 28) More recently the
verdict on Victorian Birmingham has been 'en masse
the effect is an architectural jungle'. (fn. 29) Most of the
important new buildings in the city were the work
of local architects such as Yeoville Thomason, J. H.
Chamberlain, J. A. Cossins, and W. H. Ward. (fn. 30)
Early in the period a restrained Renaissance style
was used for the Birmingham and Midland Institute (fn. 31) by the London architect E. M. Barry.
Opened in 1858 this has a Corinthian order to the
upper stories and a rounded angle at the junction
of Ratcliffe Place and Paradise Street. The Central
Lending Library which adjoins it was given a
similar façade ten years later. After the great fire of
1879 (fn. 32) the front of the library was restored on the
old lines, but the extension in Edmund Street and
the highly-original interior of the reference library (fn. 33)
(both opened in 1882) were carried out by Martin
and Chamberlain. The use of mosaic externally and
of locally-made decorative ironwork internally are
characteristic of J. H. Chamberlain's work. An
addition to the Midland Institute in Paradise Street
(J. H. Chamberlain 1881) is of exuberantly Gothic
design and in general this style was considered
appropriate for buildings with any educational
function. Mason's College (J. A. Cossins 1875–80)
and the Municipal School of Art (J. H. Chamberlain
1885) are two notable examples. Other prominent
Gothic buildings are the Exchange in Stephenson
Place (Edward Holmes 1865) and the former Liberal
Club (J. A. Cossins 1885) at the junction of Edmund
Street and Congreve Street. The Chamberlain
Memorial Fountain in Chamberlain Square is also
Gothic, as was the canopy, resembling a miniature
Albert Memorial, which formerly stood above a
statue of George Dawson nearby. They were erected
in 1880 and 1881 respectively, both being the work
of J. H. Chamberlain. A heavy Renaissance style,
becoming more and more ornate and latterly
showing the influence of the French Second Empire,
was also much favoured, particularly for commercial
buildings. The Renaissance style was used at Snow
Hill and New Street stations and later for the
impressive new buildings along the north side of the
widened Colmore Row. The Council House,
designed by Yeoville Thomason and started in 1874,
provides the most grandiose example. (fn. 34) The upper
stories of the main façade have an applied Corinthian
order with a much-enriched frieze and cornice.
Mosaic figures fill the arch above the central portico
and there is symbolic sculpture in the main pediment
and in subsidiary segmental pediments near the
angles. The front range is crowned by a dome below
which internally is a grand vestibule and staircase.
A suite of elaborately-fitted reception rooms
occupies the principal floor. The City Museum and
Art Gallery, built behind the Council House in 1884,
continues the main lines of the earlier building on
its Congreve Street front, the Corinthian order
being repeated at the upper story of the large
entrance portico. Adjacent to this, however, the tall
clock tower, with its pyramidal tiled roof, shows
signs of breaking away from the Classical tradition.
The Council House Extension (1912 and 1919),
which is connected to the original art gallery by a
bridge over Edmund Street, returns to the Renaissance style in one of its 20th-century versions.
After the Council House the next landmark in
Birmingham's architectural history was the building
of the Victoria Law Courts in Corporation Street. (fn. 35)
A competition for designs was won by Aston (later
Sir Aston) Webb and E. Ingress Bell, the foundationstone being laid in 1887. The building is in a French
domestic style of c. 1500 — roughly corresponding
to 'early Tudor' in England — and the external
work has been carried out in dark red terracotta.
The grouping is informal, the great hall with its
flanking octagonal turrets being set back slightly from
the street frontage between gabled wings. All
possible surfaces are covered with decoration but
this is well executed and in keeping with the main
design. Much sculpture is introduced including a
statue of Queen Victoria by Harry Bates and
symbolic figures designed by Walter Crane. Internally the great hall is also richly decorated, having
an open hammer-beam roof and stained-glass
windows. The building, completed in 1891, was
universally admired and many of its features,
including the use of ornamental terracotta, became
identified with a 'Birmingham' style in architecture. (fn. 36)
Sir Aston Webb was also responsible for the
design of the Birmingham University buildings on
the Edgbaston site between 1900 and 1909. (fn. 37) His
red-brick group was arranged on a geometrical plan
and consisted of a semi-circular range with domed
blocks radiating behind it and a straight range across
the diameter of the semi-circle. These buildings are
still incomplete so that it has never been possible to
appreciate the scheme as the architect conceived it;
on the other hand the limitations of this type of
layout for an expanding institution have become
only too obvious in later years. The most striking
feature of the group is the tall detached clock tower
within the semi-circle, built as a memorial to Joseph
Chamberlain and modelled on the campanile at
Siena. Among additional university buildings
erected between the two world wars are the Students'
Union (1930), St. Francis Hall (1937), both by
H. W. Hobbiss in the Tudor style, and the Barber
Institute of Fine Arts (1939), designed by Robert
Atkinson and Professor T. Bodkin. A fine equestrian
statue of George I from Dublin stands in the forecourt of the Barber Institute. To the north-west of
the university site is the Queen Elizabeth Hospital
(Lanchester and Lodge, architects) (fn. 38) which, to
gether with the University Medical School, formed
the largest building scheme in Birmingham during
the period between the two World Wars.
At the city centre the monumental effect of the
public buildings near the town hall must always have
been marred by the fact that they were built piecemeal on comparatively restricted sites. Different
ideals of urban layout were current in the 1930s
when a new civic centre was planned to the north
of Broad Street. (fn. 39) T. Cecil Howitt's neo-Georgian
block of municipal offices (now known as Baskerville
House), the only part of the scheme to be completed
before the Second World War, is set back behind a
wide formal garden. The Hall of Memory, standing
at one corner of the garden, was erected as a war
memorial in 1923–4 to the designs of Cooke and
Twist; it is an octagonal domed structure of Portland
stone and incorporates bronze statues by Albert Toft
representing the armed and women's services. On
the opposite side of Broad Street the Birmingham
Municipal Bank (T. Cecil Howitt 1933) and the
former Masonic Temple (R. Savage), in 1961 being
converted into an Engineering and Building Centre,
are in the same Classical tradition. Another large
building of this period is the Fire Brigade Headquarters (H. Humphries 1935), built of brick with
stone dressings in a more domestic Georgian style
and occupying an island site of two acres at the
north end of Corporation Street.
The greatest changes planned for central Birmingham after the Second World War were in
connexion with the new Inner Ring Road scheme,
started in 1957. (fn. 40) Apart from housing and schools,
most of the new buildings completed by 1961 were
commercial in character and many were sited on the
course of the new road. They include the long row
of shops and offices in Smallbrook Ringway and
several tall blocks adjacent to the projected multilevel shopping centre at the Bull Ring. In Holloway
Head and Dartmouth Street blocks of flatted
factories have been erected to house small industrial
firms displaced by redevelopment schemes. (fn. 41)
Among other large-scale new buildings are Rackhams' department store in Corporation Street (T. P.
Bennet & Son), Five Ways House in Islington Row
(Cotton, Ballard & Blow), and the Birmingham
Chamber of Commerce building at Edgbaston
(J. H. D. Madin). All these are designed in a
contemporary mid-20th century style, owing nothing
to historical precedent. In many cases they tower
above the surrounding buildings and give an
entirely new skyline to the city.
Great changes have also taken place on the
university site since 1957 where development is
proceeding according to an overall plan by Sir Hugh
Casson and Nevill Conder. (fn. 42) This provides for an
open space north of the original 'diameter' range,
with a new library (Verner Rees, Lawrence and
Mitchell, 1960) on the axis of Aston Webb's central
feature. To the east of the open space is an arts
faculty building (1961) by the same architects, while
on its west side biology laboratories (Playne and
Lacey), a staff house, and a refectory (Casson and
Conder) were nearing completion in 1962. Chemistry laboratories (Playne and Lacey, 1961) have
been erected to the west of the original semi-circle.
Further north a large area beyond Pritchatts Road
has been designated as a site for halls of residence.
A statue of Lord Nelson by Sir Richard Westmacott was erected in the Bull Ring in 1809. Other
statues in the city include those of Sir Robert Peel
by Peter Hollins (1855), now in Calthorpe Park;
Joseph Sturge by John Thomas (1862) at Five
Ways; James Watt by Alexander Munro (1868) and
Joseph Priestley by F. J. Williamson (1874), both in
Ratcliffe Place; George Dawson by Thomas Woolner
(1881), now in the Birmingham Reference Library;
Queen Victoria by Thomas Brock (1901) in Victoria
Square. There are also statues of the Prince Consort
by J. H. Foley (1868) and of Queen Victoria by
Woolner (1887) in the Council House. (fn. 43) In 1956 a
bronze group by William Bloye, representing
Matthew Boulton, James Watt, and William
Murdoch, was erected outside the College of
Commerce in Broad Street. (fn. 44)
Domestic Buildings within the 1838 Borough (fn. 45)
Two important moated houses, the manor house
and the Parsonage, formed part of the medieval
village of Birmingham. Both finally disappeared in
the 19th century and little is known of their
architectural history. (fn. 46) The oldest secular building
to survive in the central area of the modern city is
the 'Crown' inn at Deritend. This has been identified with the 'mansion house of timber' seen by
Leland when he entered the town in 1538. (fn. 47) The
building was thought by Toulmin Smith, who
owned the property in the mid-19th century, to date
from before 1400. (fn. 48) The character of the structure,
however, suggests that it was rebuilt in the early
16th century. The house has two stories and a
cellar, the lower part mostly of brick and the upper
story, which is jettied on two sides, retaining much
of its original close-studded timber-framing. The
street frontage has a large gable at each end and a
small gabled projection above the central doorway.
This projection is supported on curved brackets at
first-floor level and internally forms part of the socalled 'gallery chamber' above the hall; its plaster
ceiling bears a fleur-de-lys and two star-shaped
devices. (fn. 49) Each of the flanking gables has a cambered
bressummer carved externally with a design of
interlacing arches. (fn. 50) The house was divided into
tenements in the late 17th century and owes its
preservation to Toulmin Smith who opposed its
demolition for street improvement on three separate
occasions. (fn. 51) He thoroughly restored the structure in
1862 and added a brick wing facing Heath Mill
Lane; this replaced some of the earlier outbuildings
which had formed a quadrangle behind the house. (fn. 52)
The 'Golden Lion' inn was another survivor of
the timber-framed houses which probably lined the
main street of Deritend in the 16th and 17th
centuries. It was taken down in 1911 and rebuilt by
the corporation in Cannon Hill Park. (fn. 53) It dates
from the late 16th or early 17th century and is a
three-bayed structure of two stories and attics with
modern brickwork below and timber-framing above.
The decorative framed panels, containing herringbone and quadrant designs, are typical of the 'blackand-white' houses of the west midlands at this
period. Several other examples still existed in the
older streets of Birmingham in the late 19th
century. (fn. 54) Stratford House, which still stands
between Camp Hill and Moseley Road, is a slightly
larger house than the 'Golden Lion' but of similar
character. It is said to have been built by Abraham
Rotton (fn. 55) and carries the date 1601 above the doorway. The ground floor and the back wall have been
cased in brick but the three front gables and the
two-storied gabled porch retain herringbone and
quadrant timbering. The original building consisted
of three bays and a cross-passage; a staircase wing
was added in the early 19th century. The house,
scheduled as an Ancient Monument, is now used
as offices, having been restored c. 1955 with the help
of a grant from the Historic Buildings Council. (fn. 56)
There is little evidence of later-17th-century
building in Birmingham (fn. 57) but it may be assumed
that timber finally gave way to brick as the domestic
building material at this time. The following
century saw an enormous increase in the number
of better-class houses, both in the centre of the town
and on its northern and eastern outskirts. Many of
these Georgian houses were converted to industrial
use as the town spread during the next hundred
years and most of the remainder have been demolished. (fn. 58) The first important group to go was Old
Square, largely destroyed in 1882 for the construction of Corporation Street. The Square, entered by
a street in the middle of each side, dated from 1713
and consisted originally of 16 more or less uniform
two-storied houses, their five-bayed fronts having
angle pilasters, pedimented doorways, and dormer
windows. In the last ten years of his life Dr. Johnson
was a frequent visitor to No. 1, then occupied by
his friend Edmund Hector; panelling from this
house is preserved in a room at Aston Hall. (fn. 59) Part
of a terrace in Temple Row, probably built soon
after St. Philip's church (1711–19), survived until
1957 when it was demolished to make way for a
modern store. The terrace consisted of narrow threestoried brick houses with stone doorways, windowheads, string courses, and balustraded parapets.
Several originally had business premises behind
them. In 1762 they were described as 'lofty, uniform
and elegant' and 'inhabited by people of fortune
who are great wholesale dealers in the manufactures
of this town . . . this is the highest and genteelest
part of the town of Birmingham'. (fn. 60) Throughout the
19th century the terrace continued to be occupied
by manufacturers and professional men, including
a high proportion of doctors. An almost unaltered
Georgian house, since 1840 occupied as Dingley's
Hotel, stands at the junction of Moor Street and
New Meeting Street. It was built in 1745 for his
own occupation by Joseph Smith, an iron merchant
and a prominent nonconformist. Nos. 18 and 19
New Meeting Street form together a smaller house
of the same period. The southern half of Newhall
Street, formerly an avenue leading to New Hall
itself, was developed after Colmore's private act
of 1747. Two houses of 1760–69 on the west side
were demolished in 1960, the larger (No. 22) having
a three-storied front of five bays with a segmental
pediment to the doorway and enriched keystones.
At Anderton Square in Whittall Street a threestoried house with a central 'Dutch' gable is set back
in a courtyard of smaller dwellings. (fn. 61) This is thought
to have been built by Isaac Anderton, a toymaker,
c. 1776, the surrounding houses being occupied by
his work people; John Wesley is said to have stayed
in the square in 1794. A group at the north end of
Easy Row is still predominantly Georgian in spite of
inserted shop fronts and a 19th-century Gothic
building at its centre. The original houses were built
between 1769 and 1782 and several retain good
doorways with open pediments and fanlights. Nos.
17–19 were designed as a symmetrical unit, the
central house being surmounted by a pediment.
Round the corner in Great Charles Street three
houses have similar doorways while a fourth, No. 7,
is larger and somewhat earlier in date.
As with St. Philip's church and Temple Row, so
the building of the other 18th-century churches, St.
Bartholomew (1749), St. Mary (1774), and St. Paul
(1779), was followed by that of dignified houses
overlooking their churchyards; in Hutton's words:
'wherever a chapel is erected the houses immediately,
as if touched by the wand of magic, spring into
existence'. (fn. 62) Near the site of St. Bartholomew's only
one mutilated house (No. 1 Jennens Row) survives,
while most of St. Mary's Row has been altered as
industrial premises. Between May 1780 and March
1781 the houses in St. Paul's Square had increased
in number from three to fifty-five. (fn. 63) A hundred
years later many had been replaced by warehouses
and few were in private occupation. A few still stand,
but the domestic character of the square has been
completely lost. The fashionable suburb of Ashted,
laid out in the last decade of the 18th century round
the proprietary chapel which had been Dr. Ash's
house, also declined rapidly in status. (fn. 64) As one of
the corporation's post-1945 redevelopment areas,
most of its remaining buildings have been demolished, but a partly derelict terrace on the south side
of Ashted Row still preserves traces of architectural
distinction. Its eleven double-fronted houses have
three-light windows divided by columns while the
doorways are surmounted by enriched friezes and
segmental pediments.
Except at Edgbaston, Birmingham is not rich in
houses built in the first twenty years of the 19th
century — a period which in many towns saw the
laying out of terraces, squares, and crescents on a
large scale. In 1790 an ambitious scheme had been
begun between Cambridge Street and the canal
which was to have consisted of a crescent of 23
stone-fronted houses, designed by John Rawsthorne
and built by Charles Norton. (fn. 65) Three years later
only the flanking wings had been completed and the
project was said to have failed because of the
depression caused by the French wars. The five
houses which remain, representing the east wing,
have been converted into the Crescent Theatre,
their rather plain stone facades having been preserved intact. In the 19th century this area rapidly
became unsuitable for residential development
owing to the concentration of industry along the
canal. A half-derelict survival of its earlier phase is
in Kingston Row, a street formerly crossing the
canal, (fn. 66) where the stucco fronts of five terraced
houses incorporate small-paned shop windows.
Further south St. Peter's Place and St. Martin's
Place, the latter a long terrace of late-18th-century
brick cottages with small front gardens, form
together a quiet backwater with almost a village
atmosphere. (fn. 67)
Bennett's Hill and Waterloo Street, constructed
across land which had remained open until after
1820, (fn. 68) contain some good stucco frontages of the
Greek Revival period, notable examples being Nos.
35–37 Waterloo Street and No. 5 Bennett's Hill. It
was laid down that all new houses on the south side
of Ann Street were to have stone or cemented
fronts (fn. 69) — an indication that, at this period, unfaced
brickwork was considered suitable only for cheaper
dwellings and industrial buildings.
The special character of Edgbaston as a residential
suburb has already been described. (fn. 70) Its development started in the early 19th century when the
'villa', as opposed to the terrace house, was becoming
the ideal for the wealthier town-dweller. A spacious
lay-out with large garden plots was envisaged from
the beginning and many of the bigger houses are
virtually country mansions standing in their own
grounds. Along the main thoroughfares, such as
Hagley Road, Calthorpe Road, and Bristol Road,
the arrangement is one of single houses and pairs,
rather than of continuous terraces, and many of the
frontages have great architectural distinction. On
the north side of Hagley Road, immediately west of
Five Ways, a row of three-storied terrace houses
was already in existence by 1810; (fn. 71) several of these
are still comparatively unaltered. The present
Grosvenor Hotel which adjoins them has an
ambitious stucco front in the Classical Revival taste
of c. 1815. Further west are a number of notable
early-19th-century houses, both of brick and stucco,
all in the Classical style. Among them a stuccofronted terrace of six three-storied houses (Nos. 97–
107) has its upper stories divided into panels by
engraved pilasters and its doorways and lower
windows set in arched recesses. On the south side of
Hagley Road at its west end are several large
detached brick houses dating from soon after 1800,
three of which are now part of Edgbaston High
School. Many plots on this side have been cleared
for the erection of mid-20th-century blocks of flats
and offices. Nevertheless as one proceeds westwards
along Hagley Road all the phases of 19th-century
architectural taste can still be recognized, from the
Classical examples mentioned above, through the
'Tudor' and 'Italianate' styles of the forties and
fifties, to the full-blown Gothic Revival of thirty
years later. In the Ladywood district north of
Hagley Road the early suburban pattern has been
almost obliterated by later working-class development and by the disappearance of the large houses
in their own grounds which formerly stood there. (fn. 72)
One survival, however, giving its name to Monument Road, is the former 'Perrot's Folly', a sevenstoried octagonal brick tower with Gothic windows
and an embattled parapet; internally it contains
rococo plaster-work. It was built in 1758 as a lookout tower by John Perrot and is now scheduled as an
Ancient Monument. (fn. 73) Since the late 19th century
the tower has been used as a meteorological
observatory by the Birmingham and Midland
Institute and in 1958 a successful appeal was
launched for its repair. (fn. 74)
After 1838 the history of building within the new
borough ceases to be concerned with the houses of
Birmingham's well-to-do inhabitants who were
moving well outside its boundaries. The central
district was progressively occupied by public and
commercial buildings (see above), while any undeveloped land immediately adjoining the built-up
area was taken over for industry and for the housing
of industrial workers. (fn. 75)
Buildings in the Areas added since 1838
Aston Hall, the most important secular historic
building in Birmingham, lies in that part of ASTON
ancient parish which remained outside the borough
in 1838. (fn. 76) As the former manor house of Aston its
description will be found elsewhere. (fn. 77) At Erdington,
originally part of Aston parish, the oldest building
is the 'Green Man' inn, a medieval timber-framed
structure east of Bromford Lane. (fn. 78) It contains a
much altered open hall of two bays, divided by a
cruck truss and having a second pair of crucks in
its south wall. At the north end of the hall is a
two-storied cross wing, probably of early-16thcentury date, with much of its original timber in
position. The building was altered in 1916 and a
timber-framed stable block to the south-west was
replaced by a new brick wing after the Second
World War. (fn. 79) Along the main road at the southern
end of Gravelly Hill there are early- and mid-19thcentury middle-class houses, arranged singly or in
pairs, of the type found in all the outlying areas of
Birmingham which were developing at this period.
Further north many late Victorian villas are set in
large gardens. St. Mary's College, lying just inside
the city boundary at New Oscott, was built
between 1835 and 1838, Joseph Potter of Lichfield
being both architect and builder. (fn. 80) After 1837
A. W. N. Pugin was employed to design the interior
fittings and in 1860 additions were made by E. W.
Pugin. The building is of red brick with stone
dressings in the Tudor style, the principal feature
of the entrance front being a central tower with
oriel windows to the upper stories. Other notable
19th-century buildings at Erdington are Erdington
Abbey (1879–98) (fn. 81) and Sir Josiah Mason's Orphanage (1868 with additions of 1874). The latter, a large
block of red brick buildings with central and
western towers, was designed by J. R. Botham in a
Romanesque style; Josiah Mason (d. 1881) is buried
in the chapel. (fn. 82) At the Lyndhurst estate a group of
stucco-faced detached houses, standing in large
gardens and dating from c. 1840, was demolished in
the late 1950s. The 38 a. site has been used for a
'mixed-development' housing scheme, incorporating
several tower blocks of flats as well as lower buildings; in 1961 the estate won a Civic Trust amenity
award. (fn. 83)
At SHELDON a number of old farmhouses,
which included Outmoor Farm and Mackadown
Farm, (fn. 84) have been taken down since the Second
World War to make way for new housing. In 1960
Moat Farm in Church Road was demolished and
the moat surrounding it was filled in. A partly
timber-framed house about 100 yards to the southwest, used for a time as the presbytery for the new
church of St. Thomas More, was demolished in
1962.
Most of the older buildings in the three former
Worcestershire parishes of Yardley, King's Norton,
and Northfield have been described in an earlier
volume (1913). (fn. 85) At YARDLEY, Hall Green Hall
was demolished in 1936, (fn. 86) Fox Hollies Hall between
1933 and 1937, (fn. 87) and Lea Hall in 1937. (fn. 88) Blakesley
Hall was thoroughly restored by the corporation in
1935 and opened as a branch museum devoted to
local history and archaeology; early fire engines are
housed in its 18th-century barn. (fn. 89) Hay Hall was
acquired in 1917 by Reynolds Tube Company Ltd.
and is still standing as part of their factory premises
in Redfern Road, Tyseley. The central part of the
house has an arch-braced collar-beam roof truss and
may well represent an open hall of the 14th or 15th
century. Timber-framing is exposed externally on
its south-east wall which has at one end a twostoried timbered porch containing a pointed arch.
A solar wing to the north-east has stone-mullioned
windows and was either encased in diaper-patterned
brickwork or newly built in the 16th century. It is
of three bays divided by open roof trusses which
were later enclosed in a dormered attic. Tudor wallpainting and a fragment of stained glass have
survived. The house was damaged by fire in 1810
and it was probably soon afterwards that the fivegabled south-west front was rebuilt. The building
was restored and altered in 1948. (fn. 90)
At KING'S NORTON, Hawkesley Hall, a mid19th-century house on a moated site, is now used
as a farm. In 1958 the site of Hawkesley Farm, about
1½ mile to the west, was incorporated in a new
housing scheme which won a Civic Trust amenity
award in 1961. (fn. 91) Part of the moat has been preserved
and now encloses one of the estate's three tower
blocks of flats, as well as several old people's
bungalows set round a green. Bell's Farm to the
east of Walker's Heath is a largely 17th-century
house approached through a gateway with sandstone
piers and ball finials. The front, which is of brick
and has twin gables, a central doorway, and altered
windows, is flanked by tall chimneys with fluted
stacks, one of which bears a date tablet of 1661.
The walls are now roughcast, but exposed moulded
bressummers to the side and rear gables suggest
that the back of the house is timber-framed and of
16th- or early-17th-century date. Part of a moat
survives in the farmyard. Highbury Hall, built by
Joseph Chamberlain for his own occupation in 1879–
80, was named after Highbury in London where his
early years were spent. The house was designed by
J. H. Chamberlain and is a brick mansion with
stone dressings, having many gabled wings and
Gothic bay windows. The gardens, parts of which
are now a public park, were elaborately laid out and
included orchid houses. After Chamberlain's death
in 1914 the house became a hospital and was
extended in 1922. In 1932 the property was given
to the corporation. Chamberlain's study and breakfast room were opened as a memorial museum in
1934, the remainder of the house being used as a
home for aged women. (fn. 92)
NORTHFIELD retains more village character in
the area immediately surrounding the churchyard
than any of the other parishes which have been
absorbed into Greater Birmingham. The buildings
are not of great individual interest but include a
group of cottages dated 1750 and the Great Stone
Inn, a whitewashed brick house of about the same
date. Behind the cottages a row of early- or mid19th-century nailers' houses still has small detached
nail-shops at the rear. Immediately north of the inn
the sandstone walls of the old village pound,
probably dating from the 17th century, have been
restored and the space within has been turfed over.
The 'great stone', which formerly stood against the
angle of the inn itself and is one of a number of
glacial boulders found in this district, (fn. 93) has been
placed inside the pound. Groups of 18th- and early19th-century brick cottages survive in Church Hill,
Church Road, Bristol Road, and Bell Lane. The
site of Weoley Castle (fn. 94) was partly excavated before
the Second World War and plans were made showing a 13th-century guest house, chapel, great hall,
kitchen, and dairy. In 1955 the site came under
the control of the Archaeological Department of
Birmingham City Museum. During excavations
undertaken in 1960–61 the remains of a timber hall,
probably of late 12th-century date, were discovered
below the level of the 13th-century manor house. (fn. 95)
Castle Farm, Wychall Farm, and Middleton Hall
Farm have all been demolished.
Bournville village began to develop immediately
west of Cadbury's factory in 1895. (fn. 96) Many of the
architectural features of the earliest houses, mostly
arranged in pairs along tree-lined roads, can be
recognized in suburbs built all over the country in
the following 40 years. The village grew up at a
time when many architects were showing an
increasing interest in traditional domestic building
and were turning away from the various imported
late 19th-century styles, with their often meaningless
applied decoration. This tendency is reflected in
Bournville's public buildings which are grouped
round a triangular green. They include the primary
school (1905), a separate school for infants (1910),
the Friends' Meeting House (1905), and Ruskin
Hall (1905 with a later addition). All were designed
by W. A. Harvey and are built of soft red brick in
a domestic Tudor style, having stone dressings,
gables, and steeply-pitched tiled roofs. The square
tower which forms part of the school building is
surmounted by a cupola containing a carillon of 48
bells, erected in 1934 to replace a smaller belfry. A
row of shops with half-timbered upper stories had
been built near the green by 1904. The octagonal
'rest-house' in the centre of the green, modelled on
the early-17th-century yarn market at Dunster
(Som.), dates from 1914. Two ancient timberframed houses, Selly Manor and Minworth Greaves,
have been reconstructed on a corner site to the
north-east. (fn. 97) The manor house at Selly, which stood
a mile away, was in existence in the early 14th
century but may well have been rebuilt after 1400;
it had been divided into three cottages before 1896 (fn. 98)
and was acquired by George Cadbury in 1907. The
west wing, thought to be the oldest part of the
present building, has close-studded wall-framing, a
jettied gable end and an outside staircase. Minworth
Greaves house came from outside the north-east
boundary of the city in 1911 and was re-erected
c. 1930. It incorporates a two-bayed hall of medieval
cruck construction, the third bay and the gallery
being modern additions.
HARBORNE has no definite nucleus of old
buildings and few which date from before the 19th
century. Along High Street and Vivian Road there
are several rows of late-18th- and early-19thcentury cottages, some brick and some stucco-faced.
Harborne Terrace, probably built c. 1800, was
originally occupied by nail-makers and within living
memory a detached nail-shop stood behind each
house. (fn. 99) The earliest residential streets, such as
High Street, Greenfield Road, and the streets
between them, contain small middle-class houses of
no particular architectural distinction. Greenfield
House is a larger and probably older house which
was occupied by David Cox between 1841 and
1859. (fn. 1) It appears to have been faced with stucco,
enlarged and given some of its 'picturesque'
features at this period. The more important country
houses, built by wealthy Birmingham men in the
late 18th and early 19th centuries, lay to the south
of the village. Harborne House, now Bishop's Croft,
is described elsewhere. (fn. 2) Metchley Abbey, where
E. A. Freeman was born in 1823, is a rambling house
built in the Gothic taste of c. 1800 with mid-19thcentury additions in the same style; it was divided
into two dwellings about 100 years ago. (fn. 3)
At HANDSWORTH the only ancient secular
building is the so-called 'old town hall', a timberframed structure thought to date from the 15th or
early 16th century. (fn. 4) It is of three bays, having
gable-end and intermediate cruck trusses, making
four pairs of crucks in all. A chimney at the east end
and some former brick infilling may have dated
from 1625 and it is probable that at least parts of
the upper floor were inserted at the same time. In
1946 (fn. 5) the building, used as three tenements at least
since the early 19th century, was reconstructed to
form two dwellings with tiled roofs, dormer windows, and new brick infilling between the timbers.
Soho House, the home of Matthew Boulton from
about 1766 until his death in 1809, still stands in
what is now Soho Avenue. When Boulton acquired
the lease of his property on Handsworth Heath in
1761 it included an uncompleted house which he
made habitable and later enlarged. (fn. 6) His alterations
were spread over a long period and the building
probably did not assume its final form until 1799.
Ten years earlier, however, he was employing
Samuel Wyatt as architect and the foundations of
new reception rooms were being laid. Among other
fittings Wyatt sent a water closet from London at a
cost of £11 2s. 3d. At some period heating plants
were installed, ducts through the house being
supplied with warm air from stoves in the cellars.
In 1796 James Wyatt, Samuel's more famous
brother, submitted plans and elevations which
apparently provided for a third story to part of the
existing house and for extensions to a south-west
wing; there was also a proposal to enlarge the
stables. Supervision of the work was evidently
inadequate and by 1798 Samuel was again in charge,
probably completing the scheme to his brother's
designs. There is no evidence that Robert Adam
was ever employed here. (fn. 7) In 1861 the house was
taken over as a vicarage for the new church of St.
Michael and most of the south-west wing and
several outbuildings were demolished. While the
house was occupied as a hotel in the 20th century
a first-floor addition to what remained of the wing
was built. In 1956 the property was acquired by the
General Electric Company for use as a hostel for
student apprentices. The present house, apart from
its modern addition, represents the original mid18th-century building as enlarged and remodelled
by the Wyatts. The principal entrance front of three
stories and seven bays is faced with slate, giving the
appearance of finely-jointed ashlar masonry. It is
divided by four tall Ionic pilasters supporting an
entablature with a boldly projecting cornice. The
central three-light windows, the upper one semicircular, are set in an arched recess; below them the
semi-circular Ionic porch, which had been taken
down, was reconstructed in its original form in 1957.
This elevation, including its top story, was almost
certainly the work of James Wyatt. Internally the
comparatively small rooms and the unimpressive
staircase may be legacies from the original house or
from Boulton's first modest additions. The principal
rooms, however, are elegantly fitted, the central
bay-windowed parlour having a bowed end, niches,
and a groined ceiling supported on Ionic columns.
Three pairs of fine mahogany doors in the hall were
supplied by Samuel Wyatt in 1799. The Soho
Manufactory, standing on low ground beside the
Hockley Brook about 100 yards from the house, was
demolished in 1862–3. (fn. 8) It is said to have been begun
in 1764 but it was some years before it could be
completed and extensions were made at various
times. In size and general impressiveness the buildings were something quite new in industrial
architecture. The front range of the main quadrangle
was of three stories with a four-storied tower-like
feature in the centre, surmounted by a cupola. This
front elevation was flanked by the pedimented
gable-ends of the side wings. The upper stories of
the side wings were said to have contained workmen's dwellings. (fn. 9) The Soho estate was broken up
for building in the 1860s and the only survivals of
the firm's activities are at Soho Foundry just outside
the city boundary in Smethwick. Here some original
foundry buildings, workmen's cottages, and an
early gas holder are incorporated in the works of
W. & T. Avery Ltd. Heathfield Hall, built for his
own occupation by James Watt in 1790 and demolished in 1927, lay within the triangle bounded by
Hamstead Road, Church Hill Road, and Heathfield
Road. It was a two-storied stucco house with a
low-pitched roof and a trellis verandah between two
projecting wings. (fn. 10) Sycamore House, the home of
William Murdoch, was a smaller square building
with a Doric porch and flanking single-storied
wings. It stood to the west of Queens Head Road
and was also demolished in 1927.
During the brief life of Handsworth as a superior
residential suburb (fn. 11) several of the principal roads
were built up with moderate-sized houses, arranged
singly, in pairs, or in short terraces. Many of those
dating from the first half of the 19th century are of
attractive design but all have now declined in social
status or have been converted to commercial use.
Near the parish church there are one or two gabled
cottage-style residences dating from the 1840s,
while Handsworth Wood, which survived longest
as a high-class suburb, contains much ornate lateVictorian domestic architecture. Two notable
individual buildings at Handsworth are St. Mary's
Convent in Hunters Road (A. W. N. Pugin, 1841–
7) (fn. 12) and the Wesleyan Theological College (1880)
built of brick with stone dressings and designed by
Ball and Goddard in an early Tudor style. (fn. 13) At Old
Oscott, in the Perry Barr division of the ancient
parish, the buildings at the Convent of Mercy,
Maryvale, have a nucleus which dates from before
1794 when the original Oscott College was opened
there. (fn. 14) Additions made before 1820 are mostly of
very plain red brick externally but include a stone
colonnade and an exhibition room built in 1816.
The old chapel of 1778 is in the Classical style but
there is also a Gothic chapel at a higher level which
dates from 1820. (fn. 15) Perry Bridge, known locally as
the 'zig-zag' bridge because of the line of its
parapets, is a stone structure of six irregular arches,
having cutwaters to the piers and refuges at road
level. It was rebuilt or extensively repaired about
1709 and in 1932 a new concrete bridge was built
beside it. The old bridge is scheduled as an Ancient
Monument and was underpinned in 1956. (fn. 16)
Workers' Housing in Birmingham (fn. 17)
By the early 19th century most of the less wellpaid workers in central Birmingham were living in
courts, more or less cramped according to the space
available for building in an already largely developed
area. The dwellings often backed on to industrial
buildings or on to one another. An early example
of such a court, probably more generously planned
than many others, is Anderton Square, dating from
c. 1776. (fn. 18) The court is approached from Whittall
Street by a covered passage through a front range of
buildings which include at least two 'back-to-back'
workers' houses, one entered from the passage and the
other from the court. Similar houses, backing on to
adjacent buildings, form the two sides of the court,
while the master's house occupies the further end,
opposite the entry. There were formerly privies in
the north-west corner of the court and a well near
its centre. Each house consisted of a coal cellar and
three rooms, one above the other, the entrance door
opening straight into the ground floor room and the
staircase leading off it. The condition of some of
these older courts was already causing concern at
the time of the sanitary report to the General Board
of Health in 1849. (fn. 19) Many were described as
'closely-built, narrow and ill-ventilated'; their surfaces were bad and there was 'want of good privy
accommodation, in some none at all'. Even some
of the newer houses at this period, particularly near
the River Rea, were shoddily built and soon in need
of repair. In general, however, each family was said
to occupy a separate house and there was 'no
congregation of families in flats and cellars'. (fn. 20) Many
of the insanitary courts were swept away by the
redevelopment at the town centre in the middle and
at the end of the 19th century, notably by clearance
for the railway stations and after the Artisans'
Dwellings' Act of 1875. (fn. 21)

ANDERTON SQUARE
Built c. 1776 Showing ground plans of typical workmen's houses

Mid-19th-Century Back-To-Back Houses
The courtyard system, on a slightly more generous scale, was perpetuated in the many new areas
which were built up after 1830. The usual layout
consisted of a row of houses facing the street and
backing on to it a second row opening on to a series
of courts. Often the front terrace was of three
stories while two-storied rows formed the back or
sides of the courts. These backed in their turn on
other rows which opened on to adjacent courts.
The only access to the courts, which contained
communal privies, ash pits, and wash-houses, was
by narrow covered passages through the double
terrace facing the street. The internal arrangement
of the three-storied houses varied slightly in detail
but was essentially the same as at Anderton Square.
Each had a coal cellar and three rooms, one above
the other, with a narrow and often unlighted space
partitioned off for the staircase; in the two-storied
houses the upper floor was divided into two small
bedrooms. This general layout seems to have persisted almost unchanged until the late 19th
century. (fn. 22) In 1849 the newer courts had been
considered 'excellent in their arrangement': their
surfaces were 'carefully laid with blue brick' or
divided into small gardens. Criticism was mainly of
inadequate sanitary arrangements and the fact that
the ash pits and privy middens were combined. (fn. 23)
By the time of the report of the Special Housing
Inquiry in 1914, when there were still over 43,000
back-to-back houses in Birmingham, the corporation
had powers to enforce certain improvements and
repairs: in general privy middens had been replaced
by pan closets and later by water closets, (fn. 24) while in
some cases cellars had been filled in and sinks
installed in the houses. Once more the main
objection to these houses was 'the degrading and
disgusting condition of their outbuildings . . . the
closet question is really at the root of the proper
housing of the working classes'. Owing to a growing
shortage of houses with low rents, however, it was
realized that back-to-back dwellings would continue in use for many years. (fn. 25) Between the two
World Wars, when the shortage was even more acute,
only a limited amount of slum clearance was possible
in spite of the corporation's vast new housing
schemes on the city outskirts. At this period valuable pioneer work was done by the Copec House
Improvement Society, founded in 1925. By the
acquisition and alteration of a few properties in the
worst areas it was shown how sanitary accommodation could be increased, light and air introduced
into the courts by the demolition of 'front' houses,
and, in some cases, how front and back houses could
be combined to form one 'through' house. (fn. 26) After
the Second World War the acquisition by the
corporation of five central areas for redevelopment
heralded a more wholesale attack on the problem.
By 1960 demolition was proceeding rapidly although
there were said to be still 25,000 back-to-back
houses in the city. (fn. 27)

Late-19th-Century Tunnel-Back Houses
The model by-laws adopted by the borough in
1876 laid down that every dwelling should have a
minimum air space on at least two sides, thus
putting an end to the building of back-to-back
houses in Birmingham. (fn. 28) The density of new
housing was thereby much reduced. A more open
courtyard layout with small front gardens but often
with communal closets and wash-houses seems to
have persisted for some years (fn. 29) and many houses at
this period were built in short terraces at rightangles to the street.
The two-storied terraced cottages with four rooms
and individual back yards which were built in such
numbers in some expanding towns in the 19th
century (fn. 30) never seem to have been provided for the
lower-paid workers in central Birmingham. Probably the value of land was always too high to make
this profitable. Where such cottages existed they
were originally intended for those who could afford
slightly higher rents. Several examples surviving
from the first half of the 19th century, although
now (1961) in poor repair, show distinct architectural character. In New John Street West and Guest
Street, for example, some quite elegant terraces are
stucco-fronted and have Classical or Gothic doorways. Plans of a terrace in Bridge Street West were
given in the sanitary report of 1849; here the
layout was commended but the juxtaposition of
water supply and cesspools was criticized. These
houses, which still stand, have two rooms to each
floor and individual back yards containing washhouses and closets; externally there are 'Tudor'
hood-moulds above the windows and decorative
eaves fascias. Such cottages were originally let at 5s.
a week while the rents of the newer back-to-backs
were from 2s. 6d. to 3s. 6d. (fn. 31) Still better terraced
houses, mostly along the main roads, are found in
all the areas which developed at this period,
showing that there was demand for accommodation
by a wide range of income groups. Later these
superior houses were often converted into retail
shops or small industrial premises.

BOURNVILLE in 1898
The so-called 'tunnel-back' house was a late-19thcentury version of the terraced cottage which
developed because of the generally improved
standards and the adoption of building by-laws. It
consisted of a front and back room on each floor
with a wash-house or scullery, generally having a
third bedroom above it, housed in a projecting wing
at the rear. Behind this again were a coal store and
water closet. The advantage to the developer of this
long narrow plan was the small frontage occupied
by each house, enabling a maximum number to be
built on any given site with a minimum of roadmaking. It was well adapted to continuous terraced
housing where back access could be provided at
intervals by entries from the street, but it could also
be used for semi-detached pairs. The tunnel-back
was, in fact, the basic plan for small urban dwellings
all over the country in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. In the outlying areas of Birmingham,
now often known as the 'middle ring', many
hundreds of streets were laid out with terraces of
this type. The tendency was for the better-paid
workers to move out to them, leaving the poorer
tenants to occupy the older houses near the city
centre. (fn. 32)
Until the First World War almost all the workingclass housing in Birmingham was built for profit by
private developers. The only schemes carried out
by the corporation were those in Ryder Street
(1889–90), Lawrence Street (1891), and Milk Street
(1898). (fn. 33) The Ryder Street scheme consisted of 22
four-roomed cottages with indoor closets but
communal back yards. In Lawrence Street there are
82 similar cottages arranged in a series of terraces
at right-angles to the street, again with communal
courts between the rows. All the terraces have the
arms of the city at their gable ends. The Milk Street
scheme was an experiment in tenement housing
which was not very successful. The three-roomed
flats are in blocks of two stories, the upper flats
having balcony access and ducts to convey refuse to
incinerators in the yards below.
Among building-society projects of about this
period (fn. 34) a notable example was the estate at Harborne developed about 1908 by Harborne Tenants
Ltd. under the chairmanship of J. S. Nettlefold.
This consisted of about 500 houses and was laid out
on garden-city lines at fewer than ten houses to the
acre. (fn. 35) Nevertheless the planning and financial
direction were so competent that the self-contained
cottages could be let for as little as 5s. a week. (fn. 36) By
far the most important scheme of this kind, however,
was that at Bournville, initiated by George Cadbury. (fn. 37) When the Cadbury firm moved from the
town centre in 1879 several semi-detached houses
were built for key workers. These were on the
tunnel-back plan and stood in large gardens. In
1895, and more particularly after the Bournville
Village Trust was founded in 1900, the estate was
much extended; it was never intended exclusively
for employees of the Cadbury firm, nor were the
dwellings of uniform size. Various experiments were
tried, both in the financing of different schemes and
in the design and layout of the houses. Bournville
became nationally and internationally famous, many
of its features influencing the garden-city movement
of the early 20th century. As the aim was to produce
a village setting, so the grouping of the houses was
open and informal. Architecturally the ideal was to
avoid monotony and to concentrate on rural rather
than urban styles. Even before 1900 the accepted
tunnel-back plan was giving way at Bournville to an
improved 'cottage' plan, made possible by the
provision of wider frontages. In this the scullery
and third bedroom were included in the main block
and a projecting rear wing was eliminated; thus
well-lighted back rooms could be provided overlooking the garden. This basic plan, particularly as
applied to small semi-detached houses, became the
standard one for local-authority housing all over the
country after the First World War.
With the granting of housing subsidies on a
national basis after 1918 the responsibility of
providing small rented dwellings passed almost
entirely to local authorities. Even before the war
such building had ceased to be profitable for private
developers in Birmingham and had come almost to
a standstill. (fn. 38) Between the two World Wars over
46,000 municipal houses were built, mostly at a
density of twelve to the acre and arranged in pairs or
short terraces. (fn. 39) The majority were of the threebedroomed type, having bathrooms either upstairs
or down. Vast new suburbs were created of which
Kingstanding was the largest and Weoley Castle at
Selly Oak one of the most ambitiously planned.
Characteristic features of this layout were numerous
culs-de-sac, curving roads, and the provision of
central community buildings. The only municipal
flats built in the early part of this period were in
Garrison Lane, Bordesley, begun in 1925; these
were in three-storied blocks with mansard roofs and
Georgian sash windows, the individual flats being
approached by communal halls and staircases. After
the Housing Act of 1930, however, it became
increasingly necessary to provide higher-density
housing for families displaced by slum clearance.
At first this was in the form of two-storied blocks
of flats, each flat having separate external access. (fn. 40)
At the Ashcroft Estate, Great Brook Street, the
Birmingham tradition was carried on by arranging
the blocks round large courtyards, the central spaces
being of asphalt and the perimeters divided into
small gardens. As time went on more tenement
dwellings were provided, several large-scale schemes,
such as that at Emily Street, showing the influence
of contemporary east-European housing. (fn. 41) Nevertheless by 1939 flats constituted only about 4 per
cent. of all the new dwellings built by the corporation. (fn. 42)
Immediately after the Second World War the
policy in Birmingham was to meet the acute housing
shortage by erecting temporary pre-fabricated
bungalows, followed by permanent buildings,
preferably in the form of small houses. (fn. 43) It soon
became evident, however, that the size of the
problem and the dwindling amount of available
building land would necessitate higher-density
housing. By 1957 it was the declared policy of the
recently-formed city architect's department to
provide in the central area one-third of all dwellings
in tall blocks of flats, another third in multi-storied
maisonettes, and the remainder in individual houses.
Over 100 blocks of up to twelve stories in height had
already been completed within the city boundaries
by 1957 and many more were planned or under
construction. (fn. 44) On selected suburban sites widelyspaced tower blocks rising to sixteen stories are now
(1961) a striking new feature of the Birmingham
landscape. Both in the five central redevelopment
areas and in the suburbs the aim has been to plan
comparatively large districts as a whole, providing
within them not only shops, schools, and other
community buildings but also dwellings for those
with widely different incomes and housing needs.
This policy of 'mixed development' has led to great
variety in the size and planning of individual dwellings. In addition to houses and flats, each area has
its quota of old people's bungalows and there has
been increasing use of two-storied family maisonettes, built one above the other in blocks of four or
six stories. (fn. 45)