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Faces and Places: The Middlemore Archive Collection

[Submitted by Angela Skitt, Birmingham Archives and Heritage Department] The Middlemore Homes were founded in 1872 by John Throgmorton Middlemore as the ‘Children’s Emigration Homes’. The first ...

Faces and Places: Thomas Ewart Mitton

Submitted by Maggie Burns, Birmingham Archives and Heritage Thomas Ewart Mitton, called Ewart (his family name)in this article, born in April 1897, died young. Like most of his generation he enjoyed ...

Fancy Dress Costume worn by Florence Barrow

This fancy dress costume was worn by Florence Barrow, aged ten, in 1886 for the Lord Mayor's Children's Party. Florence was the daughter of Richard Cadbury Barrow and grew up in Edgbaston. Later she ...

Farm labourers at Booths Farm, Perry Barr by Sir Benjamin Stone

Parts of Birmingham were very rural until relatively recently and many children were employed in agricultural work.

Female American Serenaders

This advertisement for the Female American Serenaders from 1847 represents a form of performance that was popular in Victorian England during the nineteenth century- blackface minstrelsy. The performance ...

First Day School - Floodgate Street.

Image: Photograph of First Day class on Floodgate Street. Joseph Sturge's involvement helped to found the original Quaker Severn Street 'First Day Schools' in 1845. Many more schools and classes spread ...

First Report of the Ladies Society For The Relief of British Negro Slaves.

The 'First Report' of the Ladies Society For The Relief of British Negro Slaves(1825)bore on its front cover the female figure of a slave seeking justice. A significant number of other archives also left ...

Fisk Jubilee Singers

The Jubilee Singers, The Ex-Slave Singers of Fisk University, At Birmingham Town Hall,February 26th and March 3rd, 1874. Founded in Nashville in 1866, Fisk University was one of a number of educational ...

Floor tiles from 'Longworth', Edgbaston

These floor tiles, from 24 Priory Road, were rescued from the home of John Thackray Bunce, editor of the Birmingham Daily Post from 1862 to 1898. His daughters Kate and Myra were students at the Birmingham ...

George and Elizabeth Cadbury with their children

Families were often larger than today, and the death of one parent often resulted in extended step-families. George Cadbury had five children with his first wife Mary Tylor: George junior and Edward ...

Girls Exercising in the School Hall, Birmingham by William Woollaston

This image shows girls exercising with Indian clubs. A growing concern for the health and welfare of school children led to physical drill and exercises being introduced into the curriculum. Such activities ...

Girls of Gower Street School, Ladywood, carrying maypoles

The street was the focus of community activities and celebrations of national events. Processions marked special days in the calendar such as May Day.

'Grace before Meat', by David Wilkie

Oil painting by David Wilkie (1785-1841). ‘Grace before Meat‘ shows three generations of a family saying a prayer before sharing a meal together. In paintings like this, Wilkie presented an intimate ...

Great Western Arcade

Image of the Great Western Arcade today.

'Gypsies near Bromford Forge', by Joseph Barber

There have been Romany travellers or ‘gypsies’ in Britain since the 1500s, and from the beginning they were suspected and persecuted. The first evidence we have of a travelling family in Birmingham comes ...

Gypsy camp, Black Patch, Handsworth by C. L. Stait

'Gypsy Encampment', Cookley

This photograph shows children on a traveller site on Whittington Lane, Cookley.

Gypsy tent, Black Patch, Handsworth by E.A. Teague