ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Shelfield formed part of
Cannock forest by the later 12th century, and the
wood of Walsall was mentioned in 1199-1200. (fn. 72) The
woodland was still extensive in the late 16th and
early 17th centuries. (fn. 73) By 1843, however, 21 a. at
Paul's Coppice and 6 a. at Goblins Pit were all that
remained. (fn. 74)
Early clearance was presumably around the settlement at Shelfield. In 1086 a hide of arable there was
waste. (fn. 75) By 1317 there were three common fields.
Town field lay on either side of the present Field
Lane and was bounded by Mill Lane, Ford Brook
Lane, Coronation Road, Spring Lane, and Birch
Lane. Another field, called Wadgreve or Wadgrene
in 1317, Watgreave or Thorneyfield in 1766, and
Thorn field by 1784, lay north of High Heath. A
third, Rodbardesfeld, is probably identifiable with
the 18th-century Pool field, which lay west of the
heath and north of Coronation Road. All three
fields were apparently still open in 1766 but had
been inclosed by 1819. (fn. 76) The common fields, however, were small, and by the later Middle Ages most
farm-land was probably held in severalty. In the late
16th and early 17th centuries farming was mainly
pastoral, with stock consisting of cattle, sheep, and
some pigs. Rye, oats, and barley were grown. (fn. 77)
By 1576 much of the waste round Shelfield had
evidently been inclosed; it then consisted of three
commons, Shelfield Green (later Birches Green),
Colliers Ford Heath (probably the later Coalheath),
and High Heath. At Clayhanger 160 a. of 'sterile
ground' was held in severalty; the rest of the Walsall
Wood area was one large common. Squatting on the
waste, however, had already begun. A house and 4 a.
at Walsall Wood and a cottage on High Heath were
recent encroachments. (fn. 78) In 1617 a shop and 8 cottages stood on the waste; 6 cottages had been built
recently. (fn. 79) By 1763 there were 124 encroachments
at Walsall Wood, 11 at Coalheath, 10 at Green Lane,
Shelfield, and Irondish, and one at High Heath. The
waste, however, was still extensive. The southern
commons, High Heath, Shelfield Green, Coalheath,
and Moss Pit Green to the west of Shelfield, covered
37 a.; Walsall Wood and Clayhanger Commons
formed a single stretch of waste of 504 a. (fn. 80) The part
of Walsall Wood Common south of Lichfield Road
was known by 1805 as Holly Bank Common. There
were then some 218 encroachments; 25 were at or
near Shelfield and the rest in the north, 99 being on
Walsall Wood Common. (fn. 81) By 1843 the northern
waste, though still continuous, had been further
reduced; Clayhanger, Walsall Wood, and Holly
Bank Commons covered c. 365 a. (fn. 82) In 1876 the surviving commons, altogether 350 a., were inclosed
under an Act of 1865, partly for agriculture and
partly for new roads and houses. (fn. 83)
The area of farm-land was greatly reduced to make
way for housing after the Second World War. By
1974 four farms remained. Grange farm west of
Green Lane consisted of 177 a. used for dairying
and corn-growing. Dairy farm in Hall Lane, c. 70 a.,
produced beef, barley, and potatoes. Shelfield House
farm consisted of 63 a.; 8 a. was under barley and the
rest was used for dairy cattle, pigs, and poultry.
Vigo farm was a 12-acre small holding. (fn. 84)
A windmill was built at Shelfield between 1744
and 1786, but its location is unknown. (fn. 85) By 1816
there was a windmill on the north side of Mill Lane,
Shelfield, on the site of the present Shelfield mill;
it was presumably the windmill occupied in 1814
by William Bacon. (fn. 86) It had been rebuilt as a steam
corn-mill by the early 1880s and was worked as such
until the mid 1930s. In 1973 the building was used
as a factory by the Grafton Heater Co. (1960) Ltd.
and the Pelsall Tool and Engineering Co. Ltd.;
until a fire in 1953 part of the windmill had survived
within the later structure. (fn. 87)
The existence of a croft in Shelfield called
Bloomers Parrok in 1402 (fn. 88) may indicate early ironsmelting. A bloomsmithy stood on Shelfield Brook
west of the later Shelfield Farm in 1576, (fn. 89) but
nothing further is known of it. There is evidence of
light metal-working in Shelfield and Walsall Wood
from the early 18th century. In 1715 two Shelfield
buckle-makers and a stirrup-maker were mentioned. (fn. 90) A button-maker of Walsall Wood occurs
in 1729, (fn. 91) and a maker of tinned stirrups in 1813. (fn. 92)
Chain-makers occur throughout the 19th century,
mostly specializing in heavy chains. There was one
chain-maker in 1813, (fn. 93) and from at least 1834 to the
later 1840s Henry Homer was making chains in
Shelfield. (fn. 94) At Walsall Wood there were five chainmakers in 1834, all members of the Jackson family,
which continued to dominate the local trade until
the 20th century. William Jackson, who abandoned
the business at the beginning of the 20th century,
was the last chain-maker in the area. A hame-maker
occurs in 1860. Nailing was also practised by the
earlier 19th century. There were 5 nail-makers in
1860, and 4 nailers were assigned land when the
commons were inclosed in 1876. The last nail-maker,
Abraham Harrison, gave up the trade between 1892
and 1896. Between 1904 and 1908 John Grainger
began making boilers in Shelfield; the business
closed between 1932 and 1936. (fn. 95) There was an
iron-foundry in Beech Tree Road for some time
before 1952 when it was taken over by Stephen F.
Butler & Co. Ltd., who converted it for use as an
aluminium foundry. Butlers moved to Lindon Road
in 1958 and to Brownhills in 1964. (fn. 96) Several other
metal-working firms set up factories in Walsall Wood
and Shelfield after the Second World War, and at
least 16 were still in business in 1974. Products
included presswork, tools, rivets, wheelbarrows,
refrigerator equipment, aluminium castings, dies,
punches and drills, metal windows, and steel fabrications. (fn. 97)
The abundant Etruria Marl at Walsall Wood has
been used for brickmaking from at least the 18th
century, though the largest works in the area have
been just over the parish boundary in Aldridge.
Bricks were made on the manorial waste at Shire
Oak in 1775. (fn. 98) By 1843 there was a brickyard east
of Birches Green at Shelfield owned by John
Stokes, (fn. 99) and in 1858 one Brawn made bricks, tiles,
sewage pipes, and drain-pipes at a works in Shelfield. (fn. 1) The Walsall Wood Colliery Co. opened a
brickworks at Paul's Coppice in the late 1870s, (fn. 2)
which apparently closed at some time between 1916
and 1937; (fn. 3) most of the buildings had been demolished by 1938. (fn. 4) By 1882 Clayhanger Brickworks had
been opened on a site adjoining the Wyrley and
Essington Canal; it evidently made red bricks. It
was advertised for sale in 1896, but was disused in
1901. Though it seems to have been in production
again c. 1904 it had evidently closed by 1910. (fn. 5)
Walsall Wood overlies that part of the concealed
Cannock Chase coalfield which is bounded by the
Vigo and Clayhanger Faults. (fn. 6) The existence of coal
there was suggested in 1777, and in 1841 Lord
Bradford's agent urged that trial shafts should be
sunk. (fn. 7) Mining did not begin, however, until the
1870s. In 1873 Lord Bradford granted a lease to a
consortium and sinkings were begun at Paul's Coppice close to the Daw End branch canal. The lease
was assigned to the Walsall Wood Colliery Co. in
1876. (fn. 8) The Deep Coal was reached in 1877 at
1,677 feet, the shaft being the deepest in the Cannock
Chase coalfield. (fn. 9) Production began in 1879. (fn. 10) In
1899 the colliery was producing up to 4,000 tons a
week, (fn. 11) and c. 1955 it employed 660 men underground, working three seams. (fn. 12) It was closed in
1964. (fn. 13) In 1974 the buildings were occupied by
Brownhills Motor Sales Ltd. and by Effluent Dispersal Ltd. which used the workings for waste disposal; the rest of the site was being developed as an
industrial estate.
Since the Second World War several light industries have been established in Walsall Wood and
Shelfield. In 1974 there were a clothing factory and
a factory producing timber-framed buildings in
Coppice Road; two leather-goods works and an
electrical washer and gasket factory in Hall Lane; an
organ-building works in Walsall Road; and an
electrical-appliance works at Shelfield Mill.