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You are here: Home / Archives for People Associated with Castle Bromwich

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

A Rugby Legend – Peter Jackson

May 26, 2015 by William Dargue 1 Comment

1930 Peter JacksonSports writers of the day vied with one another to find epithets to describe Peter Jackson’s unorthodox style of play, one reporter hailing him as ‘a cross between Stanley Mathews and Nijinsky’. Jackson was a rugby union player for Coventry at the height of their prowess and was capped for England 20 times.

Born in Birmingham in 1930, he attended King Edward VI Grammar School where he discovered his passion for rugby. He was called up for National Service and played for the Army, later joining the Old Edwardians team.

Selected for England

In 1953 Jackson joined Coventry RFC where he captained the team. It was while at Coventry that he was selected to play for England earning the first of 20 international caps. An unassuming character off the pitch, Jackson’s style of play on the wing was one of the most entertaining ever seen, in large part because of his unpredictability.

Although not the fastest of runners, his ability to side-step, to weave and duck and dive through the narrowest of gaps was the result of his instinct to always hold onto the ball and not to kick it out of play. He had an uncanny ability to anticipate the moves of opposing players and was a master of the feint.

It was not just the sports writers who enjoyed dubbing him with a variety of nicknames. To fellow players he was PBJ, the prince of wingers, or cadaver, due to his very pale complexion. To one commentator he was the Pimpernel.

Match Winning Try

Jackson’s winning try in the England-Australia match at Twickenham in 1958 is legendary. The home side was down to 14 men and at full time the score 6-6. Jackson received the ball on the touchline well inside England territory. He dodged the mass of Australian players surrounding him and ran a spectacular zig-zag for 30 metres finally dodging the Wallaby full-back to put the ball right in the corner over the try line. 60,000 spectators saw England triumph 9-6 in the closing minutes and a good-natured mass pitch invasion ensued. One writer described Jackson as having joined the ranks of the rugby immortals.

The following year Peter Jackson was selected for the British and Irish Lions tour of Australasia, where his prowess on the wing was rated as the best ever seen in New New Zealand.

Despite his achievements and popularity, Jackson’s comparative lack of speed and idiosyncratic style of play caused the English selectors to replace him with the Olympic sprinter John Young after the Lions tour, but three years later he was back, playing at Cardiff against Wales where he ran the length of the field to score for England in the team’s last victory at Cardiff for 28 years.

Retirement

After retiring as a player Peter Jackson became involved in rugby administration serving as fixtures secretary, club secretary and finally president of Coventry RFC. Living in Castle Bromwich opposite the Bradford Arms, Jackson went on to run an export business. He died in March 2004 at the age of 73.

Filed Under: People Associated with Castle Bromwich, Peter Jackson

Steve Hunt – Have Boots, Will Travel

May 26, 2015 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

1956 Steve HuntBorn in Witton in 1956, Steve Hunt was signed for Aston Villa School Boys in 1967 and as an apprentice in 1972. He became a professional with the Villa at the age of 17 in 1973.  The club was promoted from the old Second Division in 1975 under manager Ron Saunders. At this time Steve lived in Wasperton Close, Castle Bromwich, then a new housing development.

He then played for the New York Cosmos before returning to England to play with First Division Coventry City. He was back with the Cosmos in 1982, then returned to struggling Coventry. Steve Hunt scored 27 goals in 185 games in his six years with the club.

His next move was to West Bromwich Albion, who were relegated in 1986 under Ron Saunders. During his time at The Hawthorns Steve Hunt was capped twice for England, playing against Scotland and the USSR in 1984. He then rejoined the Villa, who were also relegated the following year, but back into the top flight under Graham Taylor in 1987-88.

After his retirement in 1987 with a knee injury, he became the player-manager of Willenhall Town, Hinckley, then V.S. Rugby. In 1990 he coached the Port Vale youth team and then the Leicester City youth team during the following year. After moving to the Isle of Wight in 1993, he now coaches students from the Isle of Wight College working with AFC Bournemouth’s Community Sports Trust.

Filed Under: People Associated with Castle Bromwich, Steve Hunt

Stephen Kettle, Sculptor in Slate

May 25, 2015 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

It was working for his father’s building company in Castle Bromwich that enabled Stephen Kettle to develop the skills that he now employs for his unique form of stacked slate sculpture.

Born in Castle Bromwich in 1966, Stephen served in the Royal Navy for seven years after leaving school and then worked for over 15 years with his father in the construction business, practising a whole variety of building techniques especially plastering.

At the dawn of the new millennium Stephen began to experiment with sculpture, developing his own unique style with small pieces of slate glued with an adhesive of his own invention built up to form realistic forms.

A Full Time Sculptor

He became a full time sculptor in 2002 following a life changing event. As a member of the Oxford Dangerous Sports Club, he witnessed a fellow ‘human catapult’ fatally injured while attempting to be flung across the Thames by a replica medieval trebuchet.

Following this tragic accident, and showing his enterprising spirit (in the same year he rowed single handed across the English Channel), Stephen decided to dedicate himself to sculpture with slate as his chosen medium, a love affair that had started on family holidays to north Wales.

Stephen Kettle working on a statue of American philanthropist Sidney E Frank who funded the R J Mitchel work
Stephen Kettle working on a statue of American philanthropist Sidney E Frank who
funded the R J Mitchel work

He says it ‘cannot be matched by any other substance on earth, natural or man made, in terms of beauty. It is silky when dry and glistens when wet. It incises cleanly which makes it unmatched in terms of durability.’

Using slate of different hues and texture from various parts of Wales, Stephen regularly works sixty hours per week. Stacking slate takes a great deal of time, the process can’t be hurried without compromising quality which is something he will not countenance.

Kettle has produced works both figurative and abstract and in a variety of sizes. Deeply patriotic, he is especially known for his statues of Winston Churchill, codebreaker Alan Turing and Spitfire designer R J Mitchell.

Notable Works

The Churchill statue is part of the Darrah /Harwood Churchill Memorabilia Collection at Bletchley Park and is made from pieces of slate taken from the mansion during repairs in 2008.

Alan Turing statue at Bletchley Park; image by Elliott Brown on Flickr reusable under a Creative Commons licence.
Alan Turing statue at Bletchley Park; image by Elliott Brown on Flickr reusable under a Creative Commons licence.

The Alan Turing statue is comprised of tens of thousands of pieces of slate weighing over 1½ tonnes. Also housed at Bletchley Park, it shows the famous codebreaker at work on an Enigma machine.

Fittingly for someone brought up in Castle Bromwich, Kettle has also created a life-sized statue of R J Mitchell, the designer of the Spitfire.

1966 Stephen Kettle r j mitchell sc museum cc
The R J Mitchell display at the Science Museum in London on Flickr and reusable under a Creative Commons licence

Mitchell is portrayed standing at his drawing board working on a drawing of the plane’s prototype. Taking over 2000 hours to create, the statue was unveiled on 15 September 2005 to mark the 65th anniversary of the Battle of Britain.

The Mitchell statue is on permanent display at the Science Museum in London, the city which Stephen Kettle now calls home.

 

Filed Under: People Associated with Castle Bromwich, Stephen Kettle

Edwin Cooper Perry – Knight of the Realm

March 30, 2015 by William Dargue 2 Comments

Although his stay in Castle Bromwich was brief, the dazzling career of Sir Edwin Cooper Perry began with his birth in the village.

His father, Rev Edwin Creswell Perry was from an old Darlaston family and had trained for the priesthood. However, the 1861 Census records that he had no living, being ‘without the cure of souls’, and that he was the schoolmaster of the Classical and Commercial Boarding School on the Chester Road which had been run for many years by John Blewitt.

1938 Edwin Cooper Perry Castle Bromwich boarding school-1
Castle Bromwich Boarding School

The school was in what had been the Bridgeman, later the Bradford Arms; the building still stands and is now two private houses, Delamere and Wayside.And this is where his son, Edwin Cooper Perry was born in 1856.

The 1861 Census records just eight pupils at the school aged between 6 years old and 13 with the exception of Edwin Cooper Perry who was only 4 years old.

1938 Edwin Cooper Perry Seighford churchIn 1861 Edwin’s father secured the living of Seighford near the county town of Stafford (where he remained vicar for 38 years until his death in 1899 aged 71). Rev Perry ran a boarding school in the vicarage for the sons of gentlemen where he also continued to educate his son.

Eton, then King’s College Cambridge

Young Edwin then spent some time at Rev Thomas Gascoigne’s school at Spondon near Derby before winning a King’s scholarship to Eton College in 1870 where he became head boy. At King’s College, Cambridge, he obtained the highest honours in the classical tripos in 1880.

He then turned to medicine, quickly rising through the ranks to become Dean of the Medical School at Guy’s Hospital by 1888 and Hospital Superintendent in 1892. His skill was in administration and was able to drive forward new initiatives, many of them still in place. He was involved in founding the Dental School and the School of Massage at Guy’s, the College of Nursing and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Knighted by Edward VII

Edwin Cooper Perry was knighted by King Edward VII in 1903 for his work in setting up the Royal Army Medical College in London after the Boer War. In 1900 he joined the Senate of the University of London as the representative of the medical faculty; he served as vice-chancellor from 1917 and principal from 1920 to 1926. He helped organise the medical faculty of Cairo University and became its director in 1926 at the age of 71.

In 1935 Edwin Cooper Perry was awarded GCVO by George V in 1935 in recognition of services to the Prince of Wales’s Hospital Fund with which he had worked since its inception in 1897.

Like his father, Perry was multi-talented: a classical scholar to the end, a musician, a skilled physician and surgeon and a talented administrator. He was shy and modest and was most interested in achieving a goal than being credited with it.

Sir Edwin Cooper Perry died in 1938 at home in Worthing, Sussex and his ashes were buried in Seighford churchyard. (Seighford Council School was subsequently renamed Cooper Perry School in his honour.)

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Castle Bromwich, Edwin Cooper, People Associated with Castle Bromwich

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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…

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