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West Midlands Gypsy Liaison Group

Letter from Charles Parker, Chairman of the West Midlands Gypsy Liaison Group, to members, dated 3rd July 1970.

Westminster Endeavour for Learning and Development

Originally based at Westminster Road School in Handsworth, WELD was formed in 1968 as a community education and arts project. It was set up by a group of teachers who wanted to create "a form of education ...

Westminster Junior School, Handsworth

Photograph by Terry Lo.

'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 ...

When We Build Again (1943)

Section from the film 'When We Build Again', commissioned by the Cadburys firm and narrated by Dylan Thomas, discussing the various types of housing the working-class servicemen were returning to after ...

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 ...

Will made in Bombay in 1791

Will made by William Shepherd, merchant, of the house of Forbes, Shepherd & Co. on the island of Bombay, which left money to his wife and to his brother and sisters in Ayrshire.

Will Smith

Will Smith, photographed on Broad Street, Birmingham, 2005. From the collection "Muzik Kinda Sweet" by Pogus Caesar/OOM Gallery Archive.

William Mills (1856-1932)

Although William Mills is famous as the Birmingham inventor and engineer who developed the hand grenade familiarly known to First World War British soldiers as the 'Mills Bomb', he was born in Sunderland ...

William Morgan

According to 'Civilising Subjects' (2002) by Catherine Hall, William Morgan, "trained as a solicitor, and practiced in Birmingham. From an early age he was engaged with missionary and abolitionist ventures, ...

Win the War Day

This photograph of workers from Kynoch Limited in a tableau was taken for ‘Win the War Day’ on 21 September 1918. The group includes a black woman. Kynoch & Co. opened a factory to manufacture ammunition ...

Woman and four children

Photograph of a woman in a headscarf with four small children in a slum interior. Taken in Winson Green, Birmingham by Nick Hedges.

Women Dancing in the Dell at Muntz Park

From about 1914 organised dancing in some of Birmingham’s public parks became a popular activity. The Parks Committee made arrangements for dances to be held on public holidays and during the summer season ...

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 ...

Women with Bicycles in Cannon Hill Park

Cycling was an activity that became increasingly popular with women during the early part of the twentieth century. Cycling in parks, however, was subject to restrictions.

Women Workers at Mills Munitions Factory

This photograph shows women manufacturing grenade base plugs at the Mills Munitions factory in Birmingham. Soon after the outbreak of war it had become common for ‘an engineering shop to be staffed almost ...

Women's Cycling Shorts

Shorts like this were known as 'rational dress' because they were designed around function rather than fashion. Edgbastonia magazine printed articles about this development in women's dress in 1900.