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Castle Bromwich Airfield (Part Two)

June 30, 2014 by William Dargue 1 Comment

In August 1914 Britain declared war against Germany and six months later the playing fields at Castle Bromwich were requisitioned by the War Office for use as an airfield.

044 1914 CB airfield 1914 maxfields plane royal hotel
Alfred Maxfield’s plane on display at The Royal Hotel in Birmingham

Castle Bromwich – home of the Midlands’ first powered flight
The first air flight in Castle Bromwich had taken place five years earlier, not from the playing fields but Castle Bromwich golf course. The golf course had been set up in 1896 north of Bromford Road on the higher ground above the Tame valley.

Alfred Pericles Maxfield who had made that first flight in 1909 (six years after the Wright brothers) was both an early aviator and an aeroplane builder. He already made bicycles and motorcycles  from his works in Victoria Road, Aston, and then went on to design his own plane.

The body of the aircraft was mostly made from bicycle tubes and it ran on three bicycle wheels. The plane was powered by a 3hp Garrard-Maxfield motorcycle engine. Maxfield made a number of successful test flights from the golf course in the autumn of 1909, later that year exhibiting his plane in the Royal Hotel in Temple Row (site of Rackhams/ House of Fraser).

Castle Bromwich Airfield opened as a military airbase in 1915
There is some dispute about where later flights took place, whether from the golf course or the playing fields, probably the latter. The celebrated Bentfield Hucks (the first Briton to accomplish a loop-the-loop) flew a Bleriot from Castle Bromwich in 1911, giving passenger flights for up to two people.

Founded in 1909, the Midland Aero Club was one of the country’s earliest private flying clubs and operated from Dunstall Park near Wolverhampton. In 1912 the club moved to Castle Bromwich playing fields where a hangar was built. The club left for Elmdon in 1937.

In 1914 the Castle Bromwich playing fields was one of the control points for the Great Air Race form Hendon to Manchester and back. Eight pilots competed for the ‘Daily Mail’ Gold Cup, there was a prize of £400 and 80,000 people turned up to watch. A French pilot, Louis Noel ran out of petrol near Coventry and landed near a road where a considerate lady motorist gave him two gallons of petrol from her car. However, this only got him as far as Castle Bromwich racecourse where he crash landed and was unable to continue. The race was won by an American, Walter Brock.

Six weeks later Britain and Germany were at war.

In 1915 an air training squadron was set up on the playing fields. The scale of it was very small: initially there were only four aircraft and half a dozen trainee pilots who were accommodated in tents with a marquee for a mess. Pilots also used the footballers’ dressing rooms as living quarters. Later, barracks were built for the airmen. By the end of the war there were ten Royal Flying Corps squadrons training at Castle Bromwich airfield.

First-hand accounts survive from the pilots who trained at the base during the First World War. They make it clear that the siting of the airfield was far from satisfactory. The main sewage works was at the eastern end of the runway, but there were also still filter beds at the western end. It was not unknown for trainees to overshoot the runway and land in the sewage works. There was also the hazard of the railway line with its telegraph poles along the southern edge of the field. Furthermore, the only access to the hangars and workshops from the Chester Road was right across
the middle of the airfield.

As the numbers of trainee pilots increased, accommodating them became a problem: for a time many of them were put up in the jockeys’ quarters at Castle Bromwich racecourse (These were near the present junction of Bromford Road and Bromford Drive). Later others were found digs in Erdington and brought to the airfield daily by truck.

Inadequate Training
It must be remembered that this flying force was being set up little more than ten years after the Wright brothers’ first successful flight. There were no systematic training schedules and very few instructors. Some of those carrying out the training were trainees who had shown themselves most able, others were pilots on leave from the war in France, some of whom were suffering from the nervous effects of battle and probably the least able to inspire confidence in new recruits. The main aim of the camp was to get in as many training hours as possible before the new pilots were sent over to France.

Maintenance of the aircraft was minimal, partly due to a lack of skilled engineers but also because of the need to keep the limited number of aircraft in the air for as long as possible. Planes were taken out of service only when something went wrong.

One of the early trainees described his time at Castle Bromwich as ‘wonderfully easy-going and happy-go-lucky’. However, this cavalier attitude belies the statistics regarding injuries and deaths at the airfield. Research by the Midland Aircraft Recovery Group (http://www.aviationarchaeology.org.uk/marg/) has revealed a list of casualties at Castle Bromwich, the majority of which were caused by pilot error, the result of inadequate supervision and training, and a significant number by mechanical failure.

A Toll of Injury and Death
There were some 70 incidents at Castle Bromwich between 1916 and 1918; over 30 air crew were killed, never to see combat in France; some 50 were injured, many of them seriously.

The list of accidents makes depressing reading. Some pilots crashed into trees on take-off or landing, others flew into the telegraph wires along the railway, hit stationary aircraft on the ground or flew up into planes that were airborne above them. Most common was the failure to complete manoeuvres correctly. Many pilots crashed while carrying out turns or loops, side-slipped or stalled while banking too steeply; or failed to land correctly. A small number of accidents were due to adverse wind conditions while in flight or fog on landing.

The reasons for many of the accidents due to mechanical failure are not detailed; most are just recorded as ‘engine failure’, caused no doubt by insufficient maintenance of the aircraft. Some accidents are hard to stomach. One trainee pilot was injured when he was forced to land after his plane ran out of fuel; he hit a tree and was badly injured.

Injuries and deaths also occurred due to structural failure and fabric being dislodged from the wings; a whole wing collapsed in one incident. One pilot fell to his death from his aircraft while performing a loop when his safety straps broke; the seat of another trainee came loose jamming the controls and he too crashed to his death.

Most of the aircrew were British although some came from Canada, Australia, India and South Africa. A number of Americans are listed. The majority of those killed were taken home to be buried, though some were interred at Curdworth and at Castle Bromwich.

Memorials in Castle Bromwich graveyard
2nd Lt D K Billings 71 Squadron RFC (Royal Flying Corps) died 14.9.1917; David Kitto Billings was from Chicago, Illinois. CWGC (Commonwealth War Graves Commission)
2nd Lt Lucien Herbert Higgs 5 TRAINING Squadron RFC died 8.6.1917 aged 25; Lt Higgs was from Brussels; the monument is in the shape of a cross and must have been put up at his family’s expense.
Lt P C Monyhan 54 Training Squadron RFC died 22.5.1918 CWGC; killed while flying.
Corporal C N Ryder 4 Squadron; Australian Flying Corps died 10.4.1917 CWGC; killed while flying; Clifford Newton Ryder was from Sydney.
2nd Lt William Moorwood Staniforth Queens Own Yorkshire Dragoons 28 Training Squadron RFC died 23.3.1917 aged 32.
Captain Edwin Tufnell Haynes, DSC DFC Royal Naval Air Service, Royal Air Force died 28.4.1919 aged 24; Haynes from Derbyshire was killed in 1919 after the war flying a Bristol Fighter and is commemorated by a private monument. “Let those that come after, see to it that his name be not forgotten”

044 1914 CB airfield 1917 cemetery Higgs
In Loving Memory of Lucien Higgs died 1917

The Germans had gained initial superiority in the air and the British made a great push to produce more aircraft and the pilots to fly them. Soon after the opening of Castle Bromwich airfield some 2000 pilots were in training there. Most stayed for a maximum of only six months and, although it was the flying aces and their daring battles in the sky who caught the public imagination, the emphasis was rather on air reconnaissance in the early days of military flight.

As industrial activity in Birmingham increased with the war effort, the prevailing winds brought smoke and pollution in the direction of the airfield which was low-lying by the River Tame and already prone to mists and fog. The airfield was then increasingly used for testing aircraft made in the Birmingham area and elsewhere. These were tested on the ground and in the air and included Handley-Pages manufactured by the Birmingham Carriage Company at Smethwick and the Metropolitan Wagon Company at Saltley, which were stored in large purpose-built hangars and then flown out the fighting squadrons.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Castle Bromwich, Castle Bromwich Airfield, Castle Bromwich In World War 1 & 2

Castle Bromwich Airfield (Part One)

June 30, 2014 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

The history of Castle Bromwich airfield is almost lost in the mists of Tame.

It was heads or tails, Castle Bromwich or Elmdon for Birmingham Airport in 1933. In the end Elmdon’s more open site and better atmospheric conditions gave it the edge over ‘Castle Fogwich’.

The airfield, which was incorrectly known as Castle Bromwich, was operational for some 40 years and lay north of the River Tame alongside the Chester Road. The site is now occupied by Castle Vale, a housing estate developed in the early 1960s.

Castle Bromwich Airfield – not in Castle Bromwich
That stretch of land was however never in Castle Bromwich whose ancient manor had the course of the River Tame as its northern boundary. The airfield lay in the medieval manor of Berwood, a sub-manor of Erdington which, like Castle Bromwich, was part of the extensive manor of Aston. However, the railway station which opened on the ‘wrong’ side of the river in 1842 was called Castle Bromwich station, the airfield was known as Castle Bromwich a hundred years ago and the Spitfire factory (now the Jaguar) and Fort Dunlop have always been described as being at Castle Bromwich. In placename terms, if you make a mistake often enough and long enough, it becomes de facto correct.

Berwood, a lost placename
The name of Berwood, like that of Castle Bromwich, is Anglo-Saxon and means open woodland where pigs were grazed. The manor house stood here from the 12th century off Farnborough Road and was for hundreds of years in the hands of the Arden family.

It is difficult to understand why the medieval manor house should have been built here (now Farnborough Road). Although this is fertile soil rich with alluvium, good for crops and livestock, it is part of the floodplain of the River Tame and must have known floods during the winter months. Sometime during the 13th century a moat was dug around the manor house, a symbol of status rather than a defensive measure.

Berwood was administered as part of Sutton Chase, although it did not lie within Sutton manor. A keeper of this part of the chase had a residence here where he would put up guests of the Earl of Warwick on expeditions hunting for deer.

By the 17th century moated halls had lost their status and Berwood Hall fell into ruins. It was replaced by a farmhouse which served as the airfield’s officers’ mess during the First World War. The building survived until the expansion of the area as Castle Bromwich airfield during the Second World War.

Berwood – Castle Bromwich’s dark side
The open area of flat land on which Castle Bromwich airfield was to be built was requisitioned for essential services before the First World War.

As Birmingham expanded rapidly during the 19th century, the disposal of sewage became increasingly problematic. Some sewage was run into the River Rea where it was carried off into the Tame, the Trent and ultimately the North Sea. The system for houses away from the river dated from the Middle Ages: so-called ‘night soil’ was collected by night men from privies and cesspits and taken in carts beyond the town boundary where it was spread on farm land to be decomposed by the elements. It was then sold to farmers and market gardeners as fertiliser.

Up until the middle of the 19th century, the system proved just about adequate. But the population in industrial towns such as Birmingham was growing apace and the quantity of night soil was outstripping the ability to dispose of it. Then in the 1850s there were catastrophic floods in Deritend and Digbeth caused by sewage backing up from the mill weirs along the River Rea downstream. So Birmingham began to construct a piped sewage system which carried waste to fields in Saltley and beyond, bought or rented by the town council where it was spread. The sediment was allowed to dry and sold as fertiliser and the water allowed back into the river.

044 1914 CB airfield 1868 sewage farm generic origin unknown
A sewage farm in 1868 – origin unknown

But the problem was far from solved. Sewage farms took up large areas of land as the process was a slow one. In 1862 the Borough Surveyor, W. S. Till, estimated that at Salford Bridge, the Tyburn, Berwood (and later Minworth and Hams Hall) some 60 tons of solid matter produced by a population of 250,000 was produced every day.

And the heavily populated areas of Kings Norton which included Balsall Heath, Aston andHandsworth were still discharging 12,000,000 gallons a day directly into the rivers, most of which passed along the Tame at Castle Bromwich.

By 1877, under the leadership of Birmingham mayor, Joseph Chamberlain, the Birmingham Tame & Rea District Drainage Board was set up and given authority and finance to act across the various boroughs concerned.

The system of spreading sewage over the fields needed ever larger amounts of land. Starting from the initial farms at Saltley, land was bought from Salford Bridge out to Minworth. In 1881 William Bagot of Pype Hayes Hall sold some 350 acres of Berwood Farm’s land to the Drainage Board and about the same again in 1888; this was a large area of treeless flat land along the River Tame with Plants Brook running across it (now Castle Vale). The field hedges were removed and Plants Brook was diverted to the east of the site. This large area of level ground alongside the river was ideal. However, the method had its limitations.

As the population of Birmingham grew, ever greater areas of land were needed; suitable sites for sewage farms alongside the rivers were a finite resource. But by the end of the century Birmingham had devised a system of passing sewage through filtration tanks which separated the solid matter as sediment. The system needed much less land than the old method.

Filter beds were built alongside the Kingsbury Road near Plants Brook and continued up to the outbreak of the First World War. With the men recruited as soldiers the work was completed by women, conscientious objectors and German prisoners of war. The filtration system released large areas of land which the Drainage Board sold for largely for farming; this was good fertile soil.

Castle Bromwich Playing Fields
‘For the youths of Birmingham’

From 1909 a large part of the former sewage farm was rented from the Drainage Authority by the Birmingham Housing Reform & Open Spaces Association as a recreation ground. In 1913 Birmingham City Council rented additional land here. Much of the site was given over to football pitches, some 60 at its greatest extent. There was no access all the way to Castle Bromwich by bus and, although the railway station was very close to the playing fields, this was not a cheap option.

In 1914 the City Council widened the Kingsbury Road to the Tyburn House Inn in order to extend the tram line from the City Centre giving better access to the fields and so ‘encourage their greater use by the youths of Birmingham’. It was also planned to extend the line from the Tyburn along the Chester Road as far as the entrance to the playing fields.

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Castle Bromwich, Castle Bromwich Airfield

A Tragic Suicide and the Castle Bromwich Riots

May 27, 2014 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

The suicide of a young woman jilted would perhaps have merited a paragraph in the Victorian press. But the story that led to large-scale riots in Castle Bromwich was widely reported in newspapers not only across this country, but made headlines across the English-speaking world.

“Once I was happy, but now I’m forlorn,
Like an old coat that’s ragged and torn;
No one to care for me, through the wide world I roam.”

These words, adapted from a popular song of the day (‘The Man on the Flying Trapeze’), were found written on a scrap paper by the bank of an icy pool in Castle Bromwich. Early on the morning of Thursday 11th March, on a bitter cold day in 1886, the body of Mary Ann Turner was discovered by a local farm boy. For Mary it was a tragic story that ended in the freezing water, but it was the beginning of an unforeseen series of events.

The newspapers of the day were discreet regarding the condition of 20-year-old Mary Ann. She was delicately described as ‘seduced’, ‘shamed’ and ‘enceinte’. However, the defence counsel in the ensuing trial, in which 15 individuals were accused of riot, was blunt: “Was Mary Ann Turner pregnant?” asked Mr Harris, using a term not generally then spoken in polite society.

Warwick House, New Street, Birmingham
Warwick House, New Street, Birmingham

Mary Ann was a seamstress from Cathcart Street off Duddeston Mill Road, an inner-city district of small terraces and back-to-back houses (Vauxhall Trading estate is now laid out on the site). She worked as a dressmaker for the prestigious ‘Warwick House’, Birmingham’s first department store, which was situated in a fine Georgian building in New Street (where the Britannia Hotel now stands). However, prestigious though, the pay and conditions were poor.

When she was just 17 Mary had fallen in love with a smart young man, one William Bagnall, the son of a well-to-do owner of a brickworks at Hodge Hill in the parish of Castle Bromwich. (The brickyard stood roughly where Doncaster Way is now on the Bromford estate). William was a prominent member of St Margaret’s church, Ward End and sang in the church choir; indeed it was in that church where the two had first met.

The couple were engaged to be married when, according to the contemporary newspaper reports, ‘she proved too trusting’ and found herself pregnant. She had returned to work after an absence and had shown her fellow dressmakers two rings which Will had given her. The one was her engagement ring; the other, she said, was her wedding ring. However, the girls were puzzled: for a new bride her demeanour was unusually melancholy.

Ward End Church
Ward End Church

The truth was that she was unmarried and pregnant. The unfortunate girl had been cast out by her own family and, unable to find support from a single relative or friend she set off, homeless and destitute, on the evening of Wednesday 10 March for St Margaret’s church where she knew ‘her Will’ would be attending choir practice.

It was a distance of two miles to Ward End, but Mary was used to walking. However, this was no ordinary March day. It had been no ordinary winter. Snow had been falling across the whole country since October (and would continue until May). That day was desperately cold, and the wind blew over the wastes of Washwood Heath as the distraught girl trudged towards St Margaret’s chapel. If she thought that her fiancé would make good his promise of marriage, Mary Ann was cruelly mistaken. On leaving the church after choir practice, Will harshly rebuffed her pleas and headed straight for the Barley Mow public house down the road.

Barley Mow Public House
Barley Mow Public House

In vain Mary waited outside the pub in the bitter cold hoping for a change of mind but, after several pints of ale, her Will’s cold heart remained resolute and he abandoned her in the lane. Mary set out for William’s house by the brick works at Hodge Hill. But here she was given the same stark answer from Will’s father: his son was in no position to marry her. And he too turned her away.

Mary disappeared into the darkness saying that if Will would not marry her, then she would end her life.

Nearby was the moat of the old Hay Hall, known as Chattock’s Moat. And it was here that Mary left her plaintive suicide note on the frozen bank, before throwing herself into the freezing water. (The site would have been near Redcar Croft on Bromford estate).

The next morning William Bagnall Snr sent one of his farmhands to inspect the ponds and pools round about and it was the boy who discovered her drowned in the waters of the moat.

Fox and Goose
Fox and Goose

The girl’s frozen body was pulled from the moat and taken to the Fox & Goose Inn at Ward End, where an inquest was held. Later that month the coroner’s verdict later was the inevitable one of ‘suicide due to temporary insanity’. However, coroner Joseph Ansell added, unusually, that her insanity had been ‘aggravated by the inhuman treatment of the Bagnalls.’

Mary’s funeral took place near her home at St Saviour’s church in Saltley and was attended by an emotional crowd of some 2000 mourners mainly women and girls. (The church could hold less than half that number.)

An angry mob head for Hodge Hill

Immediately after the funeral, an angry mob headed from Saltley to Hodge Hill, gathering outside the Bagnalls’ house and putting it in a state of siege. As news of the tragedy spread, day by day the crowd grew larger, with angry protestors coming from Saltley, Duddeston and Nechells and from Birmingham itself. Daily newspaper reports raised awareness locally and served to stir up anger still further with such headlines as, ‘Extraordinary Riots in Picturesque Village’, ‘Tragic Affair near Birmingham’ and lines such as, ‘man seduced the girl he refused to marry.’

A small body of police were able to hold back the crowd for a while, but the fence they stood behind collapsed under the weight of numbers and they were forced to withdraw. Bricks and tiles from the Bagnalls’ own brickyard were hurled at the house and soon not a pane of glass was left unbroken. Old Mrs Bagnall, aged 70, was hit by a brick which came hurtling through the window and badly hurt. The entire brickworks was wrecked, a wagon was rolled down the hill, the woodpile was burnt and finally the mob gained access to the house, which they also wrecked.

Police reinforcements sent from Aston

A further contingent of police were called from Aston and some 20 officers were deployed under the command of Inspector Caleb Hall (who later became Chief Constable of Rugby). However, although estimates of the size of the mob varied, there were certainly many thousands of people on the scene. One estimate put the number at 30,000.

In the house the rioters found only women there; the male Bagnalls having fled, it was said to Derby, never to return. One of the daughters was injured when the kitchen collapsed and she had to be taken to hospital. With the women out of the house, what remained of it was looted and then burned.

Despite their small numbers and the unusually large size of the mob, the police were nonetheless able arrest a number of individuals. Some 30 were taken in handcuffs, though many were no more than boys who were later released without charge. 15 men were charged and were sent for trial at the Warwick Assizes in May 1886. Inspector Caleb Hall was there to give evidence, but neither William Bagnall nor his father, William Snr turned up. Mrs Elizabeth Bagnall stood in the witness box alone and was given no quarter by the counsel for the defence.

Rioters found guilty but leniently sentenced

The rioters were found guilty. However, the punishments handed down by the judge, Mr Justice Mathew were remarkably lenient. He came to the conclusion that the damage to the Bagnalls’ property had been largely accidental and due to the circumstances, rather than deliberate acts by the defendants. Five of the rioters were given two months in jail, though without hard labour, as they were of previous good character. It may be that the judge also felt that Mary Ann Turner had been wronged by the Bagnalls and that there had been a justified meting out of ‘folk justice’.

As for the Bagnalls, they received compensation for the damage to their property and subsequently rebuilt their brickworks at Lichfield, never to return to Castle Bromwich.

And, somewhere in Saltley churchyard, in an unmarked grave, lie the last mortal remains of Sarah Ann Turner and her unborn child.

1886+Mary+Turner+-+Saltley+church
Saltley Church

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Hodge Hill

A new Secondary School for Castle Bromwich

May 5, 2014 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

‘Castle Bromwich Park Hall Secondary Modern School’ was opened by Warwickshire County Council on 1 May 1951 with just 309 children and ten members of staff. (Prior to this, senior children had attended what is now Castle Bromwich Junior School). The population of Castle Bromwich is now some 12,000, but in the early 50s new housing developments on the Hall estate and around Marlborough Road and Wykham Road were only just beginning. Much of Castle Bromwich was still agricultural at this time.

The new school stood in open countryside and was designed as separate boys’ and girls’ schools. However, it was initially co-educational as only the boys’ half had been completed. The girls’ school which mirrored the boys’ was to open two years later.

Park Hall - architect’s original drawing (from the school website).
Park Hall – architect’s original drawing
(from the school website).

The school’s name was taken from the nearby manor house of the Arden family. An ancient Anglo-Saxon family, their first Park Hall was a moated manor house whose site now lies beneath the junction of Parkfield Drive and Faircroft Road. The dried-up moat was still visible in the fields at the time the school was built. A new hall was built about 1589 close to the River Tame. Rebuilt in brick in the late 17th century, although dilapidated, it still stood when the school opened. The remaining buildings were demolished about 1970. Park Hall’s school badge is a simplified version of the Arden family’s coat of arms.

Left: Arden family coat of arms. Right: Park Hall School badge.
Left: Arden family coat of arms. Right: Park Hall School badge.

The first headmaster to be appointed by the County Council was George Waite, a stern but much-loved head who had served his time in the Army during the war. He later recollected the state of the school when it first opened. Although the boys’ block was supposedly finished, there were still workmen everywhere, the drive up to the school was unfinished, the hall floor had not been laid, corridor tiling was incomplete and the gym was only partially built. The playing fields resembled a ploughed field.

In 1953 the girls moved into their building which was then known as Park Hall Girls’ School. The new headmistress was Dorothy Evans who remained at the school until her retirement in 1971 when the boys’ and girls’ schools were amalgamated as Park Hall Comprehensive School.

In 1974 reorganisation local government brought the school under the control of Solihull Metropolitan Borough.

The old school demolished 2009. Photograph William Dargue.
The old school demolished 2009. Photograph William Dargue.

In 2009 Park Hall School moved into a new £27million building and became Park Hall Academy. Park Hall has extensive playing fields and the new school was built on the fields nearer to the M6 motorway. Pupils and staff were then able to move immediately from the old into the new building. The old building was then demolished and most of that site turned back into playing fields.

Art work

Two relief panels which were formerly mounted on the old Park Hall building have now been reinstalled by the entrance to the new building. Designed by Midlands’ sculptor Walter Ritchie, they represent sporting achievements but have an implicit theme of striving to do one’s best.

One of Walter Ritchie’s panels: Hurdling. Photograph William Dargue.
One of Walter Ritchie’s panels: Hurdling. Photograph William Dargue.
Steve Field's preparatory sketch for Fons Juventis (Fountain of Youth). Image reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0.
Steve Field’s preparatory sketch for Fons Juventis (Fountain of Youth). Image reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0.

In 2011 the Academy, on the occasion of the school’s 60th anniversary celebrations, a new sculpture was unveiled. Designed by a student of Walter Ritchie, Midlands’ artist Steve Field’s piece represents the school’s four houses; Bradford, Spitfire, Jaguar and Arden. It was unveiled in the presence of former headmistress, Miss Evans.

Park Hall Academy
Park Hall Academy

Park Hall Academy. Image by Michael Westley on the Geograph website, reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0.
Park Hall Academy. Image by Michael Westley on the Geograph website, reusable under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Castle Bromwich, Park Hall School History

Some notable Park Hall Alumni

May 5, 2014 by William Dargue Leave a Comment

Gift later Blackfoot Sue. Images from the official website.
Gift later Blackfoot Sue. Images from the official website.
Blackfoot Sue
Blackfoot Sue

Tom Farmer & Dave Farmer (born 1952) are twins who formed a rock groupcalled The Virus, later Gift, later Blackfoot Sue and had a top 10 hit in 1972 with ‘Standing in the Road’. They reputedly had the longest hair at school. Official website – www.blackfootsue.com

 

Roger Taylor with his parents, Jean and Hughie.
Roger Taylor with his parents, Jean and Hughie.

Roger Taylor (born 1960), drummer of Duran Duran, used to live in Hawthorne Road. Since the 1980s the band has had 14 hits in the UK top 10, 21 in the USA and has sold over 70 million records.
Duran Duran official website – www.duranduran.com

 

David Benson - Image in the public domain.
David Benson – Image in the public domain.

 

David Hodgson (born 1962) aka David Benson is an actor with anuncanny facility for mimicking accents and voices; he is perhaps best known for his one-man show about the life of Kenneth Williams and for playing Noël Coward in BBC tv’s ‘Goodnight Sweetheart’. Aged 13, his story ‘The Rag-and-Bone Man’ won a competition for BBC1’s ‘Jackanory’ and was read on the programme by Kenneth Williams.Official website – www.davidbenson.webs.com

 

Stephanie Chambers - Image from Fanphobia website.
Stephanie Chambers – Image from Fanphobia website.

 

 

Stephanie Chambers (born 1971) is an actress whose credits include ‘The Bill’, ‘Fields of Gold’ and ‘Brookside’.
Entry on IMDb – www.imdb.com/name/nm0150446

 

Daryl Burgess - Image from his Total Football website.
Daryl Burgess – Image from his Total Football website.

 

 

Daryl Burgess (born 1971) first played for West Bromwich Albion in 1989. He spent 14 years at the club playing some 400 first-team games for the team mostly in defensive positions.
See – totalfootballuk.com

 

 

Marc Silk - Image in the public domain.
Marc Silk – Image in the public domain.

 

Marc Silk (born 1972), is a voice-over actor for television, computer games, commercials and films including Star Wars, Johnny Bravo, Bob the Builder. He is known as ‘the man with a million voices.’
Official website – www.marcsilk.com

 

 

Lee Hendrie - Image in the public domain.
Lee Hendrie – Image in the public domain.

Lee Hendrie (born 1977) played mid-field for Aston Villa and England. Starting his career at the Villa youth academy, he spent 14 years with the club achieving the Young Player of the Season award in 1998. He played for England Under 21s and for the England team itself in 1998. He played in the Chelsea v Villa (1-0) FA Cup Final of 2000, the last to be held at the old Wembley Stadium.
Official website – www.leehendrie.com

 

Luke Rodgers - Image in the public domain.
Luke Rodgers – Image in the public domain.

 

Luke Rodgers (born 1982) is a professional footballer, playing for Shrewsbury Town first team as a youth player. He was known as a goal-scorer and took part in 3rd Division Shrewsbury ‘s giant-killing victory over Everton (2-1) in the 2003 FA Cup.

 

 

 

040x Park Hall School Tom ClarkeTom Clarke (born 1986), lead singer of The Enemy used to live in Wasperton Close. Formed in Coventry in 2006, the band’s first album went straight to Number 1 in the UK, their second album reached Number 2 and their third in 2012 was their third UK top 10 album.
Official website – tomclarkeofficial.blogspot.com

Filed Under: Birmingham Places, Castle Bromwich, Park Hall School History

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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…

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