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My journey to and Life in Britain

My Expectations of coming to Britain; My expectations were that I could find a job and earn some money, and come back to my country and live a better life. Farming in Punjab was just working hard and ...

My journey to and Life in Britain

I have lived all my life in Handsworth and my family came to this country in 1963. At that time we lived together in the houses with Afro Caribbean people. I lived with mixed families up until 1974. ...

My journey to and Life in Britain

I got married in 1957. My parents arranged my marriage and that was the tradition of those days. Bride and bridegroom had no say in the choice of their partners. Those marriages lasted for a long time, ...

My journey to and Life in Britain

I joined Indian Workers Association in late sixties and was a trade union shop steward. I am very proud of the Indian Workers Association because of the help and advice that I received from the comrades. ...

'My Second Sermon', by Millais

'My Second Sermon', by John Everett Millais (1829-1896), shows a girl asleep in a church with her legs dangling uncrossed. No Bible can be seen. It is one of a pair of paintings, the other being 'My First ...

Neville Chamberlain addressing a meeting of the armed forces

This photograph shows Neville Chamberlain addressing a meeting of soldiers at a civic meeting as Lord Mayor of Birmingham, an office to which he was appointed in 1915; Prime Minister David Lloyd George ...

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 ...

News Article on 'Suicide in Cannon Hill Park'

There are a surprisingly large number of references in the Birmingham Daily Post between 1857 and 1900 to suicide or attempted suicide in Calthorpe and Cannon Hill parks. This evidence gives an insight ...

News article referring to 'The New Slums'

The Birmingham Gazette article reported complaints made by a resident of Quinton to Birmingham's Licensing Justices regarding the building of a pub serving a new nearby housing estate.

News article, 'It's live and let live in Britain's Harlem'

Balsall Heath, a Home for Immigrants1 The Daily Herald’s article ‘It’s live and let live in Britain’s Harlem’ is included in a volume about ‘ethnic communities’ which was assembled by Birmingham Central ...

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 ...

Norton Reformatory admission register

Reproduction of Joseph Pagett, aged 14, a young offender from the admission register of Norton Reformatory. Identification photographs such as this were made for the authorities to be able to identify ...

Norton Reformatory Punishment Book

On March 14 1886 four boys were caned for planning to run away. One of them had been previously caned for bullying. Of all of the institutions which children came into contact with the reformatories generally ...

Notebook of Robert Aglionby Slaney

These pages are from a series of notebooks kept by Robert Aglionby Slaney, who served as MP for Shrewsbury for several periods between the 1820s and early 1860s. He was interested in social, economic ...

Notice sent to the parents of children who were to be evacuated from St. Clement’s Junior and Infants School Nechells

Children from St. Clement’s School, Nechells, were evacuated to Church Gresley, near Swadlingcote, Derbyshire on 1 September 1939. After the bombing of Birmingham in summer 1940 a second group of children ...

NUDAW Stirchley Branch Dinner

The National Union of Shop Distributive and Allied Workers recruited from the TASCoS workforce and the branch dinner, which this menu refers to, was held directly across the road from TASCoS’ central ...

Nursemaid with her three charges in the Triangle, Sycamore Road, Bournville

Many upper middle class and wealthier families had nurses or governesses to take care of the children. Children often grew very attached to these women and sometimes had a closer relationship with them ...