• Home
  • Contact

Birmingham History

The local social history of Birmingham and its environs

  • Birmingham People
    • Alan Coleman
    • Alex Henshaw Spitfire Test Pilot
    • Colin Tooley
    • Edwin Cooper
    • Eric Birch
    • Flight Sergeant Peter Bode
    • Gary Shaw
    • John Gibson
    • Mary Ashford
    • Maurice Meader
    • Paul Henry
    • Peter Jackson
    • Peter Murray
    • Rifleman Joe Murphy
    • Rock God of Castle Browmich
    • Stephen Kettle
    • Steve Hunt
    • William Hutton
  • Birmingham Places
    • Castle Bromwich History
    • Sutton Coldfield
    • Hodge Hill
    • Shard End
You are here: Home / Archives for William Dargue

A History of Boldmere

June 15, 2017 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

Boldmere Shops 1906

The district of Boldmere came into being around the middle of the 19th century. When St Michael’s church was consecrated in 1857, the district was described as Boldmere near Oscott, Sutton Coldfield. The modern district forms a rough triangle whose sides are the Chester Road to the west, Sutton Park to the north and the Birmingham-Sutton railway line to the east.

This had been rural land for time immemorial on the western edge of the Coldfield, a large area of heathland covering some 6000 acres. It was of poor quality and considered fit only for grazing sheep. Adjoining were the many acres of the commons of Perry and Great Barr, also lying on pebble and sandstone conglomerates and poor agricultural land.

Boldmere Beginnings

Boldmere takes its name from a lake which lay in the Court Lane area until the 19th century. Moor was a word used by the Anglo-Saxons to describe marshy land. The first element, may derive from Bald, an Anglo-Saxon personal name meaning Bold, or ‘bald’ in the sense that is was heathland and that no trees grew here.

In 1841 just eight families were recorded at the Baldmoor Lake, a hamlet along the Chester Road. Most heads of households were agricultural labourers, though Joseph Armishaw is named as a publican, possibly of the pub which was rebuilt in the 1930s as the New Oscott Tavern. In 1884 the pub had its own brewery on site. In 2009 the pub was bought by the adjacent Hall’s Garden Centre and opened as a café known as The Garden Room.

From the second half of the 18th century wealthy landowners began to see opportunities in common land and open fields. If the majority of people who had rights over such land agreed, the land could be allocated to each in private ownership. The process was heavily weighted in favour of large landowners. Rights sometimes had to be proved by documentary evidence, something poorer people were unlikely to have; and plots had to be enclosed by fencing or hedging which poorer people could not afford.

Housing Development

In 1825 parliament approved an act enabling the enclosure of common lands in Sutton. Over 3500 acres were enclosed bringing a variety of blocks of land into private ownership. Maps of the period clearly show the division of the common lands and wastes into regular rectangular fields and these are still reflected in the lay-out of housing to this day. With the coming of the Birmingham-Sutton railway this was to lead inexorably to housing development.

Initially, like many rural areas on the periphery of Birmingham, a few large houses in extensive grounds were built for the seriously wealthy, usually people who had made their fortunes in the Midlands Metropolis, as Birmingham was known at the time. At Normanhurst opposite St Michael’s church in 1891, Henry Yates was an edge tool manufacturer in Birmingham; also on Boldmere Road, Francis Hawkes at Ashbourne was a hardware merchant; at Boldmere House Albert Dean was a carpet factor and cabinet maker. All are listed as employers and all had large households with servants.

Fernwood Grange was built for Birmingham jeweller, Alfred Antrobus in 1872, and was a particularly large house standing in 9 acres of grounds. Demolished before the Second World War, it stood at Fernwood Close off the Chester Road; the lodge still stands at the junction of Fernwood Road and the Chester Road. St Michael’s vicarage was not very far behind with its eight bedrooms and extensive gardens. Few of these large houses now stand, having been replaced by modern middle-class housing estates between or after the World Wars.

Arrival of the Railway

With the opening of railway stations at Wylde Green and Chester Road in 1862, the development of substantial middle-class housing proceeded rapidly. Commuters could be in central Birmingham 7 miles away in 20 minutes and return at night to their high-status suburb in the country well away from the smoke and grime of industrial town. Building continued until the 1930s when most of the available space had been taken up. Opportunities still crop up, however. In 2016 the vicarage of St Michael’s was demolished to make way for 48 retirement flats.

Sutton Park Hotel Image from Google Maps Streetview
Sutton Park Hotel                                                       Image from Google Maps Streetview

Boldmere Road was largely built up at its northern end by the end of the 19th century. These were smaller houses, semi-detached and short terraces. Gradually many were converted into shops. Kelly’s Directory of 1892 lists just half a dozen shops here including a post office on the corner of Highbridge Road, a grocer’s and a butcher’s shop. Few of the original buildings survive, but this is now one of the more thriving local shopping centres in Birmingham, boasting almost a hundred businesses, the majority of which are independently owned.

The Gate Inn opened some time during the second half of the 19th century, probably in a converted house. Known as the Boldmere Hotel, it was replaced by the present public house in 1939. It is now called The Harvester, one of 1700 pubs and restaurants owned by Mitchells & Butlers.  At the junction with Jockey Road the Sutton Park Hotel was also built around the mid-century to take advantage of the burgeoning interest in the use of Sutton Park as a leisure facility. The hotel was rebuilt early in the 20th century. While the very high-status villas are long gone, Boldmere has retained its position as an attractive middle-class suburb.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Sutton Coldfield

Boldmere Churches

June 15, 2017 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

St Michael, Boldmere

The Rector of Sutton Coldfield, Rev William Riland Bedford (1826–1905) was instrumental in setting up schools and churches in Sutton at a time when the town was expanding into the surrounding countryside. Much of this development was caused by the building of the Sutton Coldfield Branch Line from Birmingham New Street with stations opening at Chester Road, Wylde Green and Sutton in 1862. The line was extended to Lichfield in 1884 with stations at Blake Street and Four Oaks. Building was enabled by the parliamentary act enclosing the common in 1825. Land previously held in common was divided into private plots, which made building land more readily available. The Rector was able to pursue his ambitions for churches and schools by a Court of Chancery decision in 1825 to permit funds belonging to the Sutton Corporation to be used for educational and charitable purposes.

Rev. William Riland Bedford by Camille Silvy, albumen print, 9 January 1861.
Rev. William Riland Bedford by Camille Silvy, albumen print, 9 January 1861.

Riland Bedford’s method was to build a school room in one of the Sutton hamlets which would double as a church and to build the church at a later date. This he did first in the remoter areas of Sutton: Hill village, Little Sutton and at Walmley, with the church buildings following at St James, Hill in 1835 and at St John, Walmley in 1845. In the expanding south of his parish, he had a boys’ school built in Green Lanes in 1840, where church services were held, and a girls’ and infants’ school in Boldmere 1848 which was also used for church services. These were the predecessors of St Michael’s church.

However, there were problems with choosing a suitable site, with the architect, with the builder, with a less than proactive committee and, above all, with raising the money. But Riland Bedford was made of sterner stuff. He dealt with the problems almost single-handed and himself put up a third of the cost of the building. In 1856 the foundation stone was laid by the Countess of Bradford and the church was consecrated on St. Michael’s Day the following year by the Bishop of Worcester.

Boldmere Church before the fire.
Boldmere Church before the fire.

The church was built in 14th-century Decorated Gothic, a style much loved in the Victorian period and consisted of a nave, chancel and tower. However, as the district began to be built up, the need for more accommodation soon became pressing. In 1871 a north aisle was added, the project made easier because the original design had incorporated the possibility of expansion. On completion, the spire proved to be one foot higher than the architect’s design. The errant builder the put in a bill for an additional £30 for the work but refused by the building committee.

Further expansion took place in 1896 with renowned Birmingham architect J A Chatwin’s addition of a south aisle and vestries. A parish room was also built on Boldmere Road which is still very much in use.

St Michael’s Church 2015                                     Image from Google Maps Streetview
St Michael’s Church 2015                                     Image from Google Maps Streetview

In 1964, a fire destroyed practically all the church, except for the tower and the south aisle. The old south aisle facing Church Road was kept but the main body of the church was constructed in plain blue engineering brick. Internally, this has produced a practical, flexible space, but opinions differ as to the external appearance of the church.

In 1906 the church’s single bell was replaced with a peal of eight cast by Barwell’s of Great Hampton Street, Birmingham. One of the bellringers, Alfred Paddon Smith, later successfully rang two bells at the same time for a peal at Birmingham Cathedral lasting for over 3 hours. In 1950 he was elected Lord Mayor of Birmingham. Following the first ring of the bells at Boldmere the ringers were invited to a heavily laden table across the road at the house of Mr Appleby, the Mayor of Sutton Coldfield.

A band of experienced ringers must have been brought in from elsewhere for this inaugural peal lasting 2 hours 47 minutes. James Groves, the conductor was well known across the city for his prowess. They were impressed with the ‘go’ of the bells describing it as perfect, although they thought the sound of the bells in the ringing chamber was too loud. It is interesting that they thought the tone ‘full and rich’. In the 1890s Taylor’s of Loughborough had perfected scientific tuning, harmonising the notes and harmonics of a bell with the dominant note to produce an accurate melodious chord. They installed the first true harmonic ring in Birmingham at St Barnabas, Erdington 1904. Boldmere’s eight, however, were cast by Barwell’s in the old way giving a tonal quality that is 18th-19th century. In Birmingham most bells were recast during the 20th century with scientific tuning, leaving Boldmere bells a rare survival in the city.

St Nicholas’ Catholic Church

Image Copyright Robin Stott licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic
Image Copyright Robin Stott licensed for reuse under Creative Commons Licence Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic

A Roman Catholic chapel was authorised to be built on Jockey Road in 1840. A small and simple building, it was designed by the architect A W N Pugin, who was at that time lecturer in Ecclesiastical Art and Architecture at the nearby St Mary’s College, New Oscott. The dedication was in honour of Nicholas Wiseman, Rector of Oscott College; he was later to become England’s first cardinal since the Reformation. The chapel was one of the first to be established in the Birmingham area subsequent to the Roman Catholic Relief Act of 1829. There was no resident priest at that time, the church being served by priests from New Oscott.

With only 50 seats the chapel soon proved too small for an expanding congregation. In 1929 a new church was built with a moveable sanitary screen to enable the building to double up as a school and parish hall. The third and present church building was opened in 1953; hanging in the porch is the bell from Pugin’s first chapel.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Sutton Coldfield

Old Oscott

June 15, 2017 by William Dargue 1 Comment

Old Oscott College

Old Oscott, is now most associated with Cardinal John Henry Newman, a prominent Anglican and later a Roman Catholic priest of the 19th century who was beatified by the Pope in 2010. Now part of Kingstanding, Old Oscott has been an important centre of English Catholicism since the 18th century.

The district takes its name from an unknown Anglo-Saxon called Osa whose ‘cot’ or cottage stood here over a thousand years ago; Osa is known to have been a nickname for Oswald. His cottage is likely to have been a small farmstead at the foot of Old Oscott Hill where a small stream, Oscott Brook wound down to the wide fertile valley of the River Tame. (The brook was culverted after World War 2.) By the time of the Norman Conquest, Oscott lay within the extensive manor of Handsworth.

Born about 1652 in Oscott House, Andrew Bromwich was a member of an old Catholic family in Staffordshire. Trained for the priesthood in Lisbon, Bromwich was one of the last English Catholic priests to be tried for treason. Condemned to death in 1679, he was ultimately released and he returned to the family estate at Oscott. On his death in 1702, his house and lands were bequeathed to support a priest locally. In 1752 the Roman Catholic bishop, Thomas Hornyhold, Vicar Apostolic of the Midlands had the old house rebuilt as his residence and this plain Georgian building survives. The bishop never lived here however, and the house was used as Catholic girls’ school and priest’s house.

A simple chapel was added in 1778 after the passing of the Papists Act which eased earlier restrictions on Catholics. Because of subsequent alterations, little now survives of this chapel.

School and Seminary

With the Roman Catholic Relief Act of 1791 allowing Catholics to open schools, a group of local Catholic gentry established a school here for their sons with a seminary for trainee priests known as Oscott College. It was the first Catholic seminary to be set up in this country since the Reformation.

Bishop John Milner, Vicar Apostolic of the Midland District, was instrumental in altering and extending the building from his appointment in 1803, notably in 1809 with the addition of a 3-storey wing built at right-angles to the original block to which it was later linked with a cloister. There were then 35 boys on roll. Milner renamed the college as St Mary’s and set up the first Sacred Heart Chapel in England in 1814: this has remained a focal point of the site ever since. The chapel is designed in a light gothic style and has stained glass by the noted Birmingham glassmakers, Egintons.

With continually expanding numbers of trainee priests, it was decided in 1827 to build a new ‘Oscott’ college on farmland some 2 miles to the east at the junction of the Chester Road and what is now College Road. Much of the finance was provided by the Earl of Shrewsbury, who generously funded many Catholic projects in the Midlands, including the building of St Chad’s Cathedral in Birmingham.

Thus in 1838, the place known as Oscott for a thousand years became Old Oscott in distinction to the New Oscott.

 

John Henry Newman and Maryvale

Old Oscott was home to the Blessed John Henry Newman from 1845. Oscott College was dedicated to St Mary and it was Newman who dubbed it Maryvale, a name by which the site is still known.

Born in London in 1801, the son of a wealthy banker, Newman underwent a conversion to evangelical Christianity while at Great Ealing public school. He entered Trinity College, Oxford at the age of 16 and was ordained into the Anglican priesthood, later being appointed vicar of the university church of Saint Mary the Virgin, where his inspiring sermons proved very popular with the students. Newman’s views on Anglicanism began to change and it was here that he and others set up the Oxford Movement with a vision that the Church of England was a Catholic church alongside the Church of Rome and the Orthodox Church and with a mission to restore pre-Reformation traditions in the Anglican church, many of which were retained by the Roman Catholics. Newman finally found that he could not square the circle and was received into the Roman Catholic Church in 1845.

While studying in Rome for the priesthood, he was attracted to the concept of an oratory, specifically that of St Philip Neri. This was a congregation of ordained priests and lay brothers who did not take vows as monks do, but worked together in a similar way. His ambition was to create an English Oratory.

After his confirmation at (New) Oscott College in 1845, Bishop Wiseman offered Newman and his followers the use of the old Oscott College buildings which were still in use as a Catholic school. Newman was ordained priest in 1847 at St John Lateran, the Cathedral of Rome, and spent the next months studying the history and traditions of the Oratory to see how they could be adapted for his home country. His vision was not of a rural retreat but of an Oratory in a city where he felt he could make most impact. On his return to Maryvale, he carried with him a papal brief to establish the first Oratory in England which was to be in Birmingham.

Birmingham Oratory

In 1849 Newman set up the Oratory in a former gin factory in Alcester St, Deritend with seats for 500 worshippers; the building stood adjacent to the site of the present St Anne’s Catholic Church. Three years later, the Oratory moved to its present site on the Hagley Road, Edgbaston. Newman was made a Cardinal by the Pope in 1879. He died on 11 August 1890 and was buried at the Oratory Cemetery at Rednal, remembered as a major figure in English Catholicism.

Maryvale Orphanage, 1920s
Maryvale Orphanage, 1920s

In 1851 Bishop Ullathorne invited the Sisters of Mercy to establish an orphanage at Maryvale. Founded in Dublin 1831, the Sisters were a society of nuns concerned with the welfare especially of women and children suffering poverty, sickness and lack of education. They set up a single classroom here for their resident orphans, a school which eventually evolved into Maryvale Catholic Primary School and Cardinal Wiseman Secondary School. The Sisters of Mercy left in 1980.

Maryvale now houses the Maryvale Institute International Catholic College which has a wide remit to provide lifelong learning and research in Catholic evangelisation, theology and religious education. The chapel is regularly open to the public for services.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places

New Oscott

June 14, 2017 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

St Mary's College 1839
St Mary’s College 1839                                       Image from Thomas Roscoe 1839 The Book of the Grand Junction Railway

St Mary’s College, Oscott, from which the district of New Oscott takes its name, was first established in 1791 at Old Oscott which is now in the modern district of Kingstanding.

The passing of the Roman Catholic Relief Act allowed Catholics to set up their own schools. Consquently, a number of Staffordshire gentry sponsored a boys’ school at (Old ) Oscott House together with a seminary or training college for priests. At the time this was a completely rural area. Just three men became students at the first Catholic seminary to be founded in England since the Reformation.

In 1803 Bishop John Milner, Vicar Apostolic of the Midland District, began to increase the number of seminarians and extend the building. With 150 boys at the school and 20 priests, accommodation was becoming a problem and the decision was made in 1827 to build a new ‘Oscott’ college.

An equally rural site was chosen at Holdford Farm alongside the Chester Road some two miles east of Old Oscott. A generous donor to the project was the wealthy Earl of Shrewsbury. Known as ‘Good Earl John’, he funded many Catholic chapels and other sites in the Midlands, including Birmingham’s St Chad’s Cathedral.

Oscott College

Designed in a Tudor style by Joseph Potter of Lichfield, the new college building was opened in less than three years, the name, Oscott being transferred to the new site which then became known as New Oscott, with the original site becoming Old Oscott.

St Mary’s College at New Oscott became the central seminary for the Midlands Catholic dioceses and an important national centre of Catholicism. In 1852, the first Synod of Westminster of the re-established Catholic hierarchy took place here with John Henry Newman preaching a sermon entitled ‘The Second Spring’.

The College Chapel Image from Wikipedia by Boldmere Boy Reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported 
The College Chapel
Image from Wikipedia by Boldmere Boy
Reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Oscott College is built of red brick with stone dressings and designed in the style of an Oxford college with a central tower, quadrangles and cloisters. No sooner was the building finished than the Earl of Shrewsbury called in the architect, A W N Pugin to furnish and decorate the interior. Pugin, a convert to Roman Catholicism, was a prime mover in bringing medieval Gothic back into English religion and had worked with the Earl on other Catholic projects. He completely refurbished the chapel in rich colour and used a number of medieval artefacts brought from the Netherlands when he had toured there with Shrewsbury. Pugin’s precise and detailed work included the pulpit and choir stalls, the reredos and even the candlesticks. Much of the stained glass is by the noted Birmingham firm of Hardman’s.

The Weedall Chantry with its four side chapels was added by Pugin’s eldest son, as was Northcote Hall lecture theatre completed in 1881 by his youngest son, Peter Paul Pugin.

St Mary’s New Oscott, a relatively unknown but remarkable building, also has treasures within it. The museum set up by Pugin, while he was Professor of Ecclesiastical Art and Architecture here, has fine examples of religious art from the 15th to the 17th century. The library, on whose walls hang 260 paintings given by the Earl of Shrewsbury, has a collection of 30,000 books including early printed books.

The chapel is open regularly to the public for church services and there is a programme of guided visits to the College.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places

A Life Cut Short – Maurice Meader

June 25, 2015 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

Maurice, Dolly and Phil Meader
Maurice, Dolly and Phil Meader

Philip Edmund Meader was a Jewish boy who was born in Birmingham in 1898. The surname is possibly of Polish origin. During the First World War Philip served in the Royal Engineers 18th Divisional Signals. Signals companies supported infantry divisions with a range of services including taking despatches and setting up and maintaining telephone systems.

Military records show that Philip was aged 19 on his enrolment into the Army in 1914. In fact, he was only 16 years old.

At the outbreak of war, the new recruits of Philip‘s division were trained in the Colchester area. However, conditions there were chaotic: there were few trained officers, no organised accommodation and very little equipment. When transferred to the Continent, the division served on the Western Front for most of the war and took part in many significant battles including the Somme, Passchendaele, Ypres and Amiens. By the end of the war the 18th had suffered 46,503 soldiers killed, wounded and missing, of whom 13,727 died. But Philip Meader was able to return safely home to Birmingham.

Mother’s Early Life In Norfolk

His future wife Dorothy was born in 1905 at Mitford in Norfolk, a district which included her home village of Bawdeswell where her father was a baker delivering bread around the area by horse and cart. (Whitesides is a common name in Norfolk.)

Rural Norfolk
Rural Norfolk

Much of the employment in the coastal areas of Norfolk depended heavily on the North Sea fishing industry both directly and indirectly. The prime catch was herring. Before the First World War there had been so many fishing boats in the harbour at Great Yarmouth, it was said that you could walk across from one side to other without getting your feet wet.

The coming of the railways had contributed to the boom, enabling fish to be taken to London and to the markets of the great cities of the Midlands and the North within hours of being caught

However, the good times were not to last. So many herring were caught that the species became all but extinct in the North Sea. The fishermen had killed the goose that laid the golden egg.

Sisters Move To Birmingham

After the First World War, the fleet was decimated and the local economy was seriously affected. Many from this largely rural area of the country emigrated to the cities to find work. And Dolly and her sister Gladys, seven years her elder, decided to make the 180-mile journey to the Midlands Metropolis of Birmingham.

What a culture shock it must have been, from rural Norfolk to the smoky industrial city of one million inhabitants.

Industrial Birmingham - Image used with the kind permission of the late Keith Berry
Industrial Birmingham – Image used with the kind permission of the late Keith Berry

But the girls made their homes in Birmingham and both married enterprising young men who did well for themselves and their families.

In the summer of 1920 Gladys travelled back to her home town of Yarmouth to marry Birmingham-born George Hall, a young man her own age who was later to set up a family home and business in Castle Bromwich.

Maurice Is Born On Christmas Day

Five years later, in the summer of 1925,  sister Dolly married Philip Meader in Plymouth, he was now 27 and Dolly was 20 years old. The following summer a son, Nathan was born in Hammersmith, London. The couple then settled in Phil’s home town of Birmingham where Dolly gave birth to another son, Maurice on Christmas Day 1928. Their joy was not to last. Sadly, in December 1932, Nathan died aged just 7 years old.

(In 1971 Gladys Whitesides’ grand daughter Susan gave birth to her first child whom she named Nathan. Phil Meader, then in his seventies, called on her in Castle Bromwich to thank her for naming the child after his own son and gave her a £20 note for the boy. But the family never saw him again.)

Phil Meader – Wrestling Referee

Young Nathan‘s death was registered in Lambeth, London. The couple seem to have moved addresses a number of times. This may be due to Phil’s employment as a wrestling referee. A popular attraction before the First World War as a variety act, wrestling all but died out after the War. However, in the 1930s it was revived with the influence of professional wrestling in USA with its gimmicks and showmanship. The sport attracted many young men with the hope of making their name and fortune at a time of economic depression and was a popular working-class spectator sport. In London alone before the Second World War there were some forty regular wrestling venues.

Being an all-in wrestling referee was not without its hazards. On one occasion ‘The Cave Man of the Ring’ Gorilla Jones defeated opponent Jack Dale, ‘King of the Flying Tackle’, on falls. Dale refused to accept the referee’s decision and physically attacked referee Phil Meader. Gorilla Jones and a number of the spectators had to intervene to save Phil from Dale’s fury.

In 1938, in a more serious case, Phil sued a heavyweight Polish wrestler for damages. Carl Reginsky, ‘so tough he chews nails and spits out rust’, attacked Phil in the dressing room after he had disqualified him in a match against American Joe Devalto at Paddington’s Seymour Hall. During the contest the previous October, Devalto had been lying defenceless on the mat when Reginsky took several flying kicks at him. Reginsky had then punched Phil in the mouth cutting his lip and loosening his teeth.

1948 8 maurice meader phil wrestling ref 1938The judge, a former collegiate boxer, clearly did not regard wrestling as a proper sport. When told there were certain rules to be followed in wrestling matches, he quipped that wrestlers were not allowed to eat their opponents then. Some of the rules were read to the court, including one that wrestlers’ seconds were not permitted to give their fighter strychnine or cocaine – ‘loud laughter’. The judge described Reginsky’s attack as ‘a little discourteous’.

Philip Meader was, however, awarded £150 and Reginsky had to pay costs. However, Phil never did receive the money because Reginsky was shortly afterwards declared bankrupt by the Inland Revenue over unpaid tax.

Phil’s address at that time was given as Angell Road, Brixton.

Phil And Dolly Return To Brum

Maurice Meader
Maurice Meader

Just before the Second World War the Phil and Dolly were living with their young son in Gough Street close to Birmingham city centre, a cramped area of back-to-back houses and an area of Jewish settlement. Singers Hill synagogue was (and is) just around the corner in Blucher Street.

Young Maurice Meader was just 10 years old when war broke out in 1939. Maurice lived in the most bombed city outside London and his childhood must have been dominated by the War.

Maurice Finds Work In The Jewellery Trade

Maurice Meader
Maurice Meader January 1943

When the Victory was won in 1945, he was 16 years old and probably by then he had left school.

He found work as a jewellery maker’s assistant; Gough Street is just a 20-minute walk from the Jewellery Quarter. Little jewellery making went on during the war, many of the factories and workshops having been turned over to making munitions. However, military medals continued to be made and it may be that Maurice started his working life in this line.

Golden Hillock Road
Golden Hillock Road in 1952, just around the corner from Somerville Road

The family did well. Just after the War’s end they were able to buy a house in Somerville Road, Small Heath, at that time a respectable district of artisan workers and the lower middle class. Their house, No. 240 is no longer there, though many similar houses remain.

Maurice must have been the apple of his dad’s eye. Immediately after the War he had learned to drive a car and seems to have had his own vehicle, this at a time when less than one in ten households owned a car. Theirs must have been the only house in Somerville Road with a car parked outside.

From the Lichfield Mercury 1947 courtesy of Terry Carter Birmingham History Forum
From the Lichfield Mercury 1947,  courtesy of Terry Carter, Birmingham History Forum

There is an interesting snippet posted in the Lichfield Mercury in October 1947. Now aged 18, Maurice was stopped by a Lichfield police officer and asked to produce his driving licence – perhaps he looked too young to be driving. His licence was found to have expired. Driving tests had been suspended during the War and were not resumed until 1946. You had to be 17 to drive, so presumably he had taken his test just after his 17th birthday.

Interestingly, the newspaper report states his age as 24. Could this be a reporter’s error or had Maurice misrepresented his age to the policeman?

Qualifies As A Pilot

Maurice Meader
Maurice Meader

Not only could Maurice drive a car, but he had also gained an aeroplane pilot’s licence. In October 1946, just after his brush with the law in Lichfield, 17-year-old Maurice was awarded his flying certificate by the Midland Aero Club.

The Club had been based at Castle Bromwich before the War, but had moved in May 1946 to Elmdon airport. The teenager had taken his test in a Taylorcraft, a light plane used for training and surveillance. Flying at this time cost £3 an hour – well over £100 at today’s prices.

Courtesy of Mark James, Birmingham History Forum
Courtesy of Mark James, Birmingham History Forum

It is thought that Maurice may have had ambitions to become a Spitfire pilot. His mother’s sister, Auntie Gladys lived in Castle Bromwich during the War and he must have watched the planes as they were tested from Castle Bromwich Aerodrome before being sent on to their new bases across the country. However, when the War ended, the last squadron to operate from Castle Bromwich, the 577th, an anti-aircraft co-operation unit, was disbanded in June 1946 and the aerodrome was turned over to civilian use.

Maurice Meader
Maurice Meader

Unfortunately in 1948 Maurice’s promise was cut short. He caught rheumatic carditis, an illness caused by the streptococcus bacteria; in some people antibodies produced to counter the infection attack the body’s own tissues, initially the joints and then the heart. Rheumatic fever was a common and often fatal disease which affected children and young people up until the middle of the 20th century. It was and is not easy to detect as the patient merely shows signs of a bad throat. The disease is uncommon now and is easily cured with antibiotics. Nonetheless, Maurice was unfortunate to catch the illness – it usually affected youngsters up to 18 years old rather than adults.

Maurice was taken to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Edgbaston and died there of cardiac failure caused by rheumatic carditis on 16 June 1948. He was 20 years old. He was buried in Castle Bromwich graveyard where his grave may still be seen topped with the badge of the Midland Aero Club, a sad sign of a career that was never to be fulfilled.

1948 7 maurice meader close-up badge

Postscript: After his death, Phil and Dolly preserved Maurice’s bedroom as a shrine to him; it was just as he had left it. Maurice’s model planes were hung from ceiling and young relations were taken up to visit the room when members of the family went round to visit at Christmas. Phil and Dolly never got over their grief.

Maurice’s mother, Dolly is buried in the same grave as her son. She died in 1968, while his father, Philip Meader lived to the age of 82, dying in 1980. Maurice’s Auntie Gladys, Dolly’s sister died in 1986; her husband George Hall had died in 1963. They too are buried together in Castle Bromwich graveyard.

1948 6 maurice meader grave

 

 

 

Filed Under: Maurice Meader, People Associated with Castle Bromwich

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • …
  • 13
  • Next Page »

Looking for something?

About The Author

I was born in Southport, Lancashire (now Merseyside); my family origins are to be found in the wild hills of Westmoreland. I trained as a teacher at St Peter's College, Saltley, qualifying in 1968 and have now worked as a primary school teacher in Birmingham for well over forty years. Read More…

Recent Posts

  • Highway Robbery in Sutton Coldfield
  • Bishop Vesey’s Stone Houses
  • Sutton Park

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in