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Two girls in a doorway in A B Row by W. Archer Clark

A B Row was so-called because it separated the ancient parishes of Aston and Birmingham.

University of Birmingham Council Minutes

At this Special Meeting of the University of Birmingham Council on 11 August 1914 action was agreed to immediately implement previously agreed directives to hand over the university buildings on the Edgbaston ...

University of Birmingham Great Hall as a Military Hospital Ward

The story of the 1st Southern General Hospital in Edgbaston starts with the work of Lord Haldane, whose reforms as Minister of War between 1905 and 1912 included the creation of the Territorial Army. ...

Valencia Croft, Castle Vale

The building on Valencia Croft opened as a children’s home in 1967. It was a purpose-built detached house on the newly built Castle Vale housing estate. It was in close proximity to another children’s ...

Viennese girls with Elizabeth and George Cadbury in the garden of their home

On 29 October 1920 18 girls from Vienna arrived in Bournville where they lived with local families for a year. They were all between 8 and 12 years of age and lived in Bournville until 2 September 1921 ...

View of New Tower Blocks and Infrastructure, by Reginald Edgecombe

Reginald Edgecombe was a designer commissioned by the Council to produce artist’s impressions of what Birmingham might look like post-war once reconstruction was complete. A collection of his watercolour ...

'Visiting Day at Dudley Road Section', by Will Adams

This is one of several caricatures published by wounded soldiers in the Edgbaston WW1 military hospital magazine that express deeply conflicted feelings towards their visitors. Illustration from The ...

Wall Plaque from Westfield Road, Edgbaston

This cast iron plaque, one of a set of three, was attached to a wall along a footpath in Westfield Road, Edgbaston, listing plants, supplied by Barr & Son, that were planted there between 1884 and 1897. ...

'War', by W.L. Sherwood

This dramatic frontispiece to the fourth issue of 'The Southern Cross' (the Edgbaston military hospital magazine) is entitled simply ‘War’. It is the third in a series of visionary works by Staff Sergeant ...

Watercolour depicting A Bournville Workroom, attributed to H.N. Bradbear

Two images that typify the depiction of Cadbury and, indeed, the image of its female employees in the early twentieth century, are the watercolour design of A Bournville Workroom, c.1910, attributed to ...

Watercolour depicting Cadbury's Girls' Ground, by H.N. Bradbear

‘[Where] industrial life today is concerned, Work and Play are not only closely related subjects, but one subject’.1 The classic image of the Cadbury’s girl at leisure, in the early twentieth century ...

Watercolour depicting Cadbury's Q Block, by Frederick Taylor

The watercolour design by Frederick Taylor of Q Block was reproduced as a colour print in various publications, including the centre-fold to Bournville Work and Play.1 Q Block was described as a large ...

Watercolour depicting entrance to Cadbury's Bournville Works, by Claude Buckle

This watercolour depicts the main entrance hall on Bournville Lane. The artist Claude Buckle painted a number of different views of new factory buildings during the 1930s. In this view Buckle used the ...

Watercolour depicting Factory Girls Dancing in Bournville Grounds

This watercolour of girls participating in open-air dancing was taken from a photograph dated 1921. The watercolour was an exact copy of the photograph. Both images are illustrative of gender segregation ...

Watercolour depicting the Men's Recreation Ground, by H.N. Bradbear

‘[Where] industrial life today is concerned, Work and Play are not only closely related subjects, but one subject’.1 Bradbear produced watercolour views of both the men’s and girls' recreation grounds, ...

Watercolour Design for Cover of The Factory in a Garden

The Factory in a Garden was first published during the 1930s along with a companion publication Bournville Village Trust. Cadbury regularly commissioned leading graphic artists of the period, including ...

'What I think of the Estate' by a resident, Weoley Castle

Anonymous letter illustrating the views of a tenant printed in the Weoley Castle Review on the estate and its facilities.

'What the MO Looks Like in a Surgical Ward', by H. Gardner

This is one of several caricatures published by wounded soldiers in the Edgbaston WW1 military hospital magazine that express deeply conflicted feelings towards the medical and administrative staff. Illustration ...