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Neville Chamberlain, by Basil Byng

Pencil portrait.

News Article on a 'Garden for the Blind'

This article documents the initial reactions of some of the first users of a garden for blind and visually impaired people that opened at Queen’s Park, Harborne on 31 July 1953.1 The Parks Committee minutes ...

Norman Chamberlain

Norman Chamberlain was the paternal cousin of Neville Chamberlain. He was Chairman of the Parks Committee of Birmingham City Council between 1912 and 1914, when he volunteered to serve in the First World ...

Organised Games

This report was compiled by the organisers of schemes that ran in a number of Birmingham parks and recreation grounds during the summer of 1911. It was managed by Norman Chamberlain, chairman of the Parks ...

Page from the album of photographs for the Bournville Village Trust, showing scenes of urban childhood by Bill Brandt

Most working class homes were so small and overcrowded that there was little space to play indoors. Parents encouraged their children to play outside in the street. The street became a place for running, ...

Pearson’s Fresh Air Fund Day at Manor Farm Park

A number of ‘Fresh Air’ funds were set up in both Britain and North America during the late nineteenth century, to provide days out or sometimes summer holidays, in the countryside, to children from low ...

Pearson’s Fresh Air Fund Day at Manor Farm Park

One of a series of photographs documenting days out at Manor Farm Park for children from city centre schools, run by Pearson's Fresh Air Fund with the assistance of Elizabeth Cadbury who offered the use ...

Photo of Sturge Statue (2006)

Image: Photograph of Sturge Statue(taken by Pete Ashton) Joseph Sturge was a nineteenth century antislavery campaigner living in Birmingham. (Click on Zoomify to Enlarge).

Photograph of Helen Caddick

Helen Caddick, the traveller and diarist, was featured in Edgbastonia magazine in March 1900. This photograph illustrated that article.

Photographs by Bill Brandt

The following photographs by the British photographer Bill Brandt (1904-1983) were taken for the Bournville Village Trust from 1939-1943. Exhibition compiled by Dr Nicola Gauld

Photographs for the Bournville Village Trust by Bill Brandt

This photograph shows members of the Dawson family who moved from a back-to-back house in Hockley to a maisonette in Harborne. They subsequently moved to a modern house on the Weoley Castle Estate. The ...

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 ...

Photographs for the Bournville Village Trust, 1939-1943, showing a family at the dinner table

This photograph was taken on the Weoley Castle Estate. The shot is clearly posed. Another photograph showing the family in the garden reveals how high the window was from the ground. The child could never ...

Playing Tennis at Birmingham Botanical Gardens

'The lovers of lawn-tennis will perhaps be surprised to learn that Major Gem was the first to bring that game before the public, but it is an unquestionable fact'. An obituary for Major ‘Harry’ Gem ...

Portrait of a Girl by George Hallett

Hallett (b. 1942) is a South African photographer. Whilst living in exile in Britain in 1971 he was commissioned by the Times Educational Supplement to take a series of photographs in Handsworth. Many ...

Portrait of Joseph Sturge

Image of Joseph Sturge, leader of the 'Birmingham Anti-Slavery Society'. 'Timmins' Birmingham Portraits, Large Folio (part 2), SE6. Click on web link below for more biographical information of Joseph ...

Portrait of Rev. Cohen

A portrait of Cohen, minister of Singer's Hill 1913-1949.

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