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Photograph of Dr Mary Sturge

This photograph accompanied a feature on Mary Sturge in Edgbastonia magazine. Mary Sturge was a pioneer of medical training for women, and also campaigned for women's suffrage. She was among the first ...

Photograph of group of nurses and infants at the Royal Orthopaedic Hospital, Newhall Street

The Royal Orthopaedic Hospital helped to cater for children suffering from, for example, disease of the bones and joints caused by tuberculosis.

Photograph of Helen Caddick

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

Photograph of Joscelyne with her mother and her sister Margaret in front of a bookcase by William Smedley Aston

Photograph of Joscelyne’s sister Margaret and their father in front of a bookcase by William Smedley Aston

Photograph of the Parsons family of Halesowen, 1915, showing Abednego Parsons, his wife Fanny, and their daughters Sarah and Norah

Abednego was a Private in the Royal Army Medical Corps and served in France. He survived and returned home at the end of the war. The family is shown in a conventional studio pose with the father standing ...

Photograph of the rear of 12-13 Upper Priory Court by James Burgoyne

This is one of a series of photographs which Burgoyne made showing the conditions in slum properties in Birmingham. These were properties which were to be demolished as part of the 1870s Improvement Scheme. ...

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 by Lisel Haas

The photographer Lisel Haas (1898-1989) was born in Germany. She was a Jewish refugee who fled Nazi Germany. She initially applied to the USA for asylum but was turned down and came to Birmingham in 1938. ...

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 ...

Photographs of Norton Juvenile Offenders

The harsh discipline of the reformatory was reinforced through the use of stark uniforms. The uniform was intended to remove the child’s individual identity. Each new inmate in the reformatory was photographed. ...

Pigott-Smith Map of Birmingham

Section of map by John Pigott-Smith, Borough Surveyor of Birmingham Borough Council, showing back-to-back housing and courtyards, John Street, Dale End and surrounding streets prior to the implementation ...

Pin and Flag in Support of Belgian Refugees

This pin and flag was issued by the Birmingham Belgian Refugee Committee, which included Elizabeth Cadbury amongst its members and which was formed by the City to raise money and provide food and shelter ...

Plan for a Midlands Arts Centre for Young People

This plan formed part of a proposal prepared by John English concerning the establishment in Cannon Hill Park of a Midland Arts Centre, which he hoped would be administered by an independent trust. The ...

Plan of Uffculme Open-Air School

Uffculme Open-Air School opened in 1911 in the grounds of the Uffculme estate, between Moseley and Kings Heath. The land was provided by Barrow and Geraldine Cadbury, whose son Paul had benefitted from ...

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 ...