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Photographs for the Bournville Village Trust, 1939-1943 showing a girl on a swing by Bill Brandt

Bournville Village Trust was established by George Cadbury in 1900 to manage his model village at Bournville. It had a longstanding interest in improving housing conditions for the working classes. In ...

Selly Manor

Henry Baker’s painting shows Selly Manor in a ruinous condition. By the early 1900s it was threatened by demolition. George Cadbury arranged for its re-location from Selly Oak to Bournville, where the ...

The Men's and Girls' Works Committees

The following photographs depict the Men’s and Girls' Works Committees at Cadbury in 1907. The Works Committees were established in 1905 as management committees. The Girls' Committee consisted of nine ...

Tug of war at Bournville Children’s Festival

The Bournville Children’s Festival took place every year to encourage children and families to take part in healthy leisure activities. Young workers from the Cadbury works were also encouraged to take ...

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 ...

White Cotton Cap worn by a Cadbury's Employee

This white cap is one of a number of items donated by Amelia Drew, an employee at Cadbury’s Bournville Works during the early twentieth century. This particular cap dates from 1941 and, therefore, it ...

Women Employees arriving at work

Cadbury’s archives hold a bound volume of Personal Reminiscences of Bridge Street and Bournville 1870-1929 by 63 men and women living at the time of the Bournville Jubilee 1929.1 Each account was hand ...

Woodbrooke

This nineteenth century house in Selly Oak has been much extended, originally for private purposes and since 1903 in connection with its use as a Quaker education centre (see also ink drawing of Woodbrooke). ...

Woodbrooke College, Selly Oak

This ink drawing depicts Woodbrooke College in Selly Oak. It was produced in 1956 by James Porteous Wood. He was a noted artist and designer whom the Birmingham Post commissioned to produce drawings of ...