SHOWELL'S
Dictionary of Birmingham.
Sabbath Breaking.—In 1776 the churchwardens threatened to
punish everyone caught playing at ball on the Sabbath. In 1779 they
frequently stopped waggons travelling on that day, and fined the
owners for so doing. In December, 1781, thirty-eight publicans were
fined for allowing "tippling" on Sundays.
Sailor's Return.—There are several public-houses in
the town with the sign of "The Sailor's Return," but few
of the landlords can tell the history of the first so-named, which is
in Watery Lane, at the bottom of Lawley Street. It is near a hundred
years ago since "Old Dr. Spencer" was Vicar of Aston Church,
and, though he was fond of hunting, and could be "a jolly good
fellow" occasionally, few parsons have gone to the grave more
lamented, for he was a man without cant,—a Christian who never
thought himself better than his neighbours, be they rich or poor. His
only son was mortally wounded in one of Nelson's battles, but he
lived just long enough to give his watch and a few trifles for his
father to the sailor who waited on him. 'Twas some time before the
"old salt" got to land, and he had been in another brush
with the French, and had left a leg behind him. When he delivered his
message to the Dr., the latter asked what he could do for him.
"Why, sir," said the sailor, "I should like to keep a
public-house;" and he did, the Dr. christening it "The
Sailor's Return."
Saltley.—So far as our ancient histories can tell us,
there was a mansion here long previous to the Conquest, and the
diligent antiquarian may still find an old Saltley Hall, though it
looks wretchedly neglected and desolate. Saltley is one of the busiest
of our suburbs, there being very extensive Railway Carriage and Wagon
Works here, besides other factories and the Corporation Gas-works, the
population being about 7,000.
Sandwell Hall and Park.—Seat of the Earl of Dartmouth,
who frequently permits the Park to be used for public purposes. Of
late, however, it has acquired a far greater interest through the
discovery of coal underneath its surface. The extension of the coal
seams in this direction was long a debateable question, and the
originators of the Sandwell Park Colliery Company were deemed by many
to be very foolish people to risk their money in such a venture, but
after a four years' suspense their most sanguine expectations were
more than realised, and their shares, which at one period were hardly
saleable, ranked amongst the best investments of the country. By their
agreement with the owner, the Company have the right of mining under
an area of 185 acres, at a royalty of 6d. per ton, with the option of
taking a further area of 1,515 acres at a like royalty. The first sod
was cut April 12, 1870, the thick coal being struck May 28, 1874, at a
depth of 418 yards, the shaft, which is 10ft. diameter, being carried
down to a total depth of 440 yards—a quarter of a mile; the
second shaft, which was commenced June 24, 1874, is 15ft. in diameter.
The following are the "winnings"; brooch coal, 2ft. 6in.
thick, at a depth of 380 yards; best coal, 20ft. 6in. thick, at 418
yard; heathen coal 4ft. thick, at 427 yards; white ironstone, of
excellent quality, at 434 yards, and good fire-clay, 6ft. thick, under
that, besides thin seams of gubbin ironstone, and new mine coal.
Saturday Half-holiday.—The introduction of this boon to
workingmen took place in 1851, Mr. John Frearson, of Gas-street,
claiming the honour of first giving it to his employees.—See
"Excursions".
Scandalous Schoolmasters.—The Rev. Mr. Wills, of
Brumingham, with several county esquires and gentlemen, were appointed
Commissioners under an Act passed towards the close of "The Long
Parliament," to summon and examine any "publique preachers,
inefficient ministers, and scandalous schoolmasters who shall be
proved guilty of drunkenness, common haunting of taverns or alehouses,
dealing with lewd women, frequent quarrelling or fighting, frequent
playing at cards or dice, profaning the Sabbath Day, or do incourage
or countenance by word or practice any Whitsun ales, wakes,
Morris-dances, Maypoles, stage plays, &c.," and to remove the
same where needed. A little quarrelling or fighting, or playing
at cards, was apparently no offence.
School Board.—The first election took
place Nov. 28, 1870, there being the following twenty-eight
candidates, the first fifteen named being the chosen elected by the
number of votes attached to their names, viz., Canon O'Sullivan,
35,120; S.S. Lloyd, 30,799; Dr. Burges, 21,925; Dr. Wilkinson, 19,829;
John Gough, 17,481; Rev. F.S. Dale, 17,365; G. Dawson. 17,103; G.
Dixon, M.P., 16,897; W. Dale, 16,387; C. Vince, 15,943; J.S. Hopkins,
15,696; W.L. Sargant, 15,683; J. Chamberlain, 15,090; J.S. Wright,
15,007; A.J. Elkington, 14,925; G. Baker, J.A. Cooper, Jesse Collings,
Rev. H.W. Crosskey, Dr. Sebastian Evans, Rev. H.W. Holland,
—— Kirkwood, G.B. Lloyd, Dr. Merson, W. Middlemore, W.
Radford, —— Raffles, and Archdeacon Sandford. 29,183
voters, out of 52,340, recorded their votes. A considerable amount of
party feeling was shown in the contest, the candidates being divided
(with one or two exceptions) into two distinct classes, the Liberals
who wanted the Bible read in the schools without explanation or
comment, and the Churchmen who went in for Scriptural teaching. The
latter party obtained the majority by electing the whole of the eight
they put in nomination, the Liberals, who thought they could run the
whole fifteen, find that by grasping at too much they had lost all the
power they had fondly hoped to acquire. The first meeting of the Board
was held Dec. 15, Mr. Sargant being elected chairman and Mr. S.S.
Lloyd vice-chairman. During the three years' reign of this Board
the religious question was a continual bone of contention, the payment
of school fees for the teaching of the Bible in denominational schools
being denounced in the strongest of terms in and out of the Board-room
by the "Irreconcileables," as the Nonconforming minority
were termed. The practical results of the Board's proceedings may
be summed up thus: The Education Department decided that school
accommodation was required for 15,000 children; the School Board
borrowed £40,000, received £20,500 from the rates, built
five schools (in Lingard-street, Jenkins-street, Farm-street,
Garrison-lane, and Steward-street), which would hold about 6,000
children, boys, girls, and infants, and engaged fifteen teachers, 52
pupil teachers, and two assistants. They also allowed the sum of 1s.
per week for every child detained in a certified industrial school,
committed by the borough magistrates, enforced in some measure the
compulsory clauses of the Education Act, entered into negotiations for
the building of four other schools, quarrelled with the Town Council,
and dissolved without thanking their chairman.—The second
election of the School Board took place Nov. 17, 1873, when eighteen
persons were nominated, as follow (the three last being the
unsuccessful candidates):—G. Dixon, M.P., 39,447 votes; J.
Chamberlain, 38,901; Miss Sturge, 37,260; C. Vince, 36,505; J.S.
Wright, 36,417; R.W. Dale, 34,986; G. Dawson, 34,301; Jesse Collings,
33,877; Canon O'Sullivan, 32,087; S.S. Lloyd, 29,783; Dr. Burges,
24,582; A.J. Elkington, 24,213; W.L. Sargant, 24,207; Rev. F.S. Dale,
23,864; Dr. Wilkinson, 23,157; G. Heaton, 23,140; W.H. Greening,
22,881; and W. Warlow, 19,193. This election was fought with all the
rancour of a political contest, Tory and Liberal being pitted against
one another in the name of religion, the Book of Books being dragged
through the mire of party warfare in the most outrageous manner,
discreditable to both sides, and especially so to those teachers of
the Gospel, who delighted in the almost blasphemous alliterations of
"Bible and beer," "gin and Jesus," &c., so
freely bandied about. The Liberal party this time gained the
ascendancy, their first "liberal" action being to take away
the allowance granted to the Industrial Schools, and reversing as much
as possible the policy of their predecessors. It would be waste of
space to comment upon the doings of the Board during the past ten
years otherwise than to summarise them. The Liberal party have
maintained their ascendancy, and they have provided the town with a
set of schools that cannot be equalled by any town in the kingdom,
either for number, magnificence of architecture, educational
appliance, high-class teachers, or (which is the most important) means
for the advancement of the scholars, to whom every inducement is held
out for self-improvement, except in the matter of religion, which, as
nearly as possible, is altogether banished from the curriculum. At the
end of 1833, the thirty completed schools provided accommodation for
31,861 children, 10,101 boys, 9,053 girls, and 12,707 infants, but the
number of names on the books reached nearly 40,000. Other schools are
being built, and still more are intended; and, as the town increases,
so must this necessary expenditure, though, at first sight, the tax on
the ratepayers is somewhat appalling. In 1878 the "precept"
was for £46,500; in 1879, £44,000; in 1880, £39,000;
in 1881, £42,000; in 1882, £48,000; in 1883,
£54,000; in 1884, £55,000. The receipts and expenditure
for the half-year ended 25th March, 1884, gives the following
items:—Balance in hand 29th September, 1883 £10,522 1s.
7-1/2d.; rates (instalment of precept), £27,250;
maintenance—grants from Committee of Council on Education,
£9,866 18s. 4d.; school fees, £4,806 3s. 8d.; books,
&c., sold, £223 18s. 6d.; rent of Board schools, £655
9s.; needlework sold, £215 12s. 2d.; grant from Science and Art
Department, £306 Os. 3d.; total, £16,074 1s. 11d.;
scholarships, £114 13s.; sundries, £44 Os. 3d.; total
income, £54,004 16s. 9-1/2d. The following was the expenditure:
Repayment of loans, &c., £11,016 13s, 6d.; maintenance,
£30,040 16s. 1d. (including £23,300, salaries of
teachers); scholarships, £126 13s. 3d.; compulsion and
management, £3,857 3s. 4d.; sundries, £28 4s.; amount
transferred from capital account, £30 1s. 10d.; balance in hand,
£8,905 4s. 9-1/2d.; total, £54,004 16s. 9-1/2d.
A Central Seventh Standard Technical School has been originated
through the offer of Sir. George Dixon to give the use of premises in
Bridge Street, rent free for five years, he making all structural
alterations necessary to fit the same for the special teaching of boys
from the Board Schools, who have passed the sixth standard, and whose
parents are willing to keep their sons from the workshops a little
longer than usual. The course of the two years' further
instruction proposed, includes (besides the ordinary code subjects,
the three R's) mathematic, theoretical, and practical mechanics,
freehand, geometry, and model drawing, machine construction and
drawing, chemistry and electricity, and the use of the ordinary
workshop tools, workshops being fitted with benches, lathes, &c.,
for the lads' use. The fee is 3d. per week, and if the experiment
succeeds, the School Board at the end of the five years will, no
doubt, take it up on a more extended scale.
Aston School Board.—The first election took place July
29, 1875, and, as in Birmingham, it was fought on the usual political
basis, the Liberals gaining the day. The Board has nine Schools, with
an average attendance of 11,500 children, out of nearly 15,000 on the
registers; 187 teachers, and a debt of £110,000
King's Norton Board.—The first election took place
March 19, 1876. Eight Schools have been built since that date.
Schools and Colleges.—What with thirty
board schools, about sixty church and chapel schools, and nearly 300
private enterprise schools, Birmingham cannot be said to be short of
educational establishments, even for the 100,000 children we have
amongst us. At the end of 1881 there were 93,776 children in the
borough between the ages of three and thirteen. Next to the Free
Grammar School, the oldest public school in the town must be the
Lancasterian School, which was opened September 11, 1809, and was
rebuilt in 1851. The National School in Pinford Street was opened in
1813, the Governors of the Free Grammar School having the privilege of
sending sixty children in lieu of rent for the site. The Madras school
was formerly at the bottom of King Street. The first Infant Schools we
read of were opened in 1825. The first stone of the Industrial School
in Gem Street was laid April 13, 1849. Ragged Schools were opened in
Vale Street, September 11, and in connection with Bishop Ryder's,
September 17, 1862, and in Staniforth Street, January 11, 1868. The
schools in the Upper Priory were erected in 1860; those in Camden
Drive in 1869. The Unitarian Schools, Newhall Hill, were opened in
1833; the New Meeting Street Schools in 1844. Winfield's in one
sense must be called a public school, though connected with a factory
and built (at a cost of over £2,000) for the education of the
young people there employed. The respected owner of the Cambridge
Street Works, like many other Conservatives, was one of the most
liberal-minded men, and hundreds owe not only their education, but
their present position in life to the care bestowed upon them at this
school.—A Roman Catholic School was opened in Bartholomew
Street, October 1, 1872; in Brougham Street, December 27, 1872; and
new Schools in Shadwell Street, (costing about £4,500), June 25,
1883—The Palmer Street Congregational Schools, which cost
£2,500, were opened February 12, 1877. The old Wesleyan chapel,
in Martin Street, was fitted up for schools in 1865. The same body
opened schools at Summer Hill, in 1874; in Icknield Street West,
January 1, 1875; and laid the first stone of another school in
Sterling Road, September 22, 1884.—the Hebrew National Schools,
Hurst Street, were opened May 21, 1844.
The Birmingham and Edgbaston Proprietary School, Hagley Road, was the
property of a company constituted by deed of settlement, dated
February 28, 1839. The cost of the land chosen to build upon and the
handsome edifice erected was £10,500, the school being opened in
1841. In 1874 there was originated a Birmingham Higher Education
Society, and in 1876 a scheme was adopted for a High School for Girls
in conjunction with the Proprietary School, a company being formed,
with a nominal capital of £20,000, for the purchase of the
property; but the days of the School's prosperity seem to have
passed away, and in August,1881, it was bought over by the Governors
of the Free Grammar School.
Blue Coat School (facing St. Phillip's
Churchyard) founded in 1721, and was erected in 1724, provision having
been made in the Act for building St. Philip's Church for securing
the necessary land required for the school for a term of 1,000 years
at 10s. per year. The first cost of the building was about
£3,000, but many alterations and extensions have since been made
thereto, the quaint little statues in the front being put up in 1770;
they are the work of Mr. Edward Grubb, and are said to have been
portraits of two of the children then actually in the school. The
first bequest recorded is that of Mrs. Elizabeth White, who in 1722
left nearly 30 acres of land worth about £250 per year for the
support of the school. In 1726 Benjamin Salusbury left 30s. per year
for the preaching of a sermon at St. Martin's and St.
Philip's, and a further 40s. per year as a subscription; as did
also Thomas Dunscombe in 1729. In 1795 the Lord of the Manor presented
the school with a slice of Birmingham Heath, above five acres in
extent, which is now let on a long lease at £96 10s. per year.
In 1806 other land was devised, and from time to time considerable
sums have been invested in like manner and in consols, so that a fair
income is derived from these sources, in addition to the voluntary and
annual subscriptions, but judging from the past and the admirable way
in which the funds have been administered it may be truly said that if
the income were doubled or trebled so would be the benefits in like
proportion. At first opening 22 boys and 10 girls were admitted, and
10 others of each sex were taught and clothed; the latter system,
however, had many inconveniences, and was soon discontinued. At
present the average number is 150 boys and 100 girls on the original
foundation, 20 being paid for out of Fentham's Trust.
Bourne College is situated at Quinton, and is an institution
for the education of the sons of friends belonging to the Primitive
Methodist denomination. The memorial stones were laid June 6, 1881,
and the College was opened October 24, 1882, with accommodation for 70
boys.
Church Schools.—St. Alban's Schools were commenced in
1865. Bishop Ryder's Schools were opened in December 1860, and for
girls in March 1866. Christ Church Schools were built in 1837 at a
cost of nearly £4,000 St. George's Schools were built in
1842; St. John's (Sparkhill) in 1884; St. Mary's, Bath Street,
in 1824, the present schools dating from January, 1847. St.
Martin's Church Schools were opened Nov. 1, 1846, but were
transferred to the School Board, July 9, 1879; St. Matthew's,
Lupin Street, October 20, 1841; St. Paul's, December 18, 1845; the
Legge Lane Schools being erected in 1869. St. Anne's School,
Deritend, was opened May 31, 1870; St. Mary's, Aston Brook, April
16, 1872.
King Edward the VIth's Schools.—For 300 years known
as the Free Grammar School, having been founded in 1551, the fifth
year of the reign of Edward VI., and endowed with part of the property
taken by his reforming father Henry VIII., in 1536, from the religious
foundation known as the "Guild of the Holy Cross." At the
time the charter was granted (Jan. 2, 1552) these lands were valued at
about £20 per annum, and so little was it imagined that
Birmingham would ever be more than the small hamlet it then was, that
a funny tale has come down to the effect that the good people of
King's Norton, when offered their choice of similar lands or a sum
equal thereto, wisely as they thought chose the "bird in
hand" and asked for the £20 per year for their school,
leaving the Brums to make what they could out of the bare fields once
belonging to the brotherhood of the Holy Cross. Like the majority of
so-called charity schools, this foundation was for many generations so
managed that the funds went into almost any channel except the purpose
for which it was designed—the free education of the
poor—and even now it would be an interesting question to find
out how many boys are receiving the advantages thereof whose parents
are well able to pay for their learning elsewhere. The property of the
charity is widely scattered over the town, here a piece and there a
piece, but it is rapidly increasing in value from the falling in of
leases the rentals, which in 1827 were about £3,000 per annum,
being in 1840 £8,400, in 1860 £12,600, and now
£25,000; by the expiration of this century it will be at least
£50,000. The earliest existing statutes are dated October 20,
1676, one of the most comical being that the assistant masters were
not to marry. The head master's salary in 1676 was fixed at
£68 15s., with a house and land; in 1738 he was allowed
£20 in lieu of the house, in 1788 the salary was increased to
£150; in 1726 to £200; in 1816 to £400; and now it
is about £1,200. The second master at first received £34
6s. 8d.; in 1874 he received £300. The first school was the old
Guildhall of the Holy Cross, which was pulled down at the commencement
of the 18th century, a new school being erected in 1707, and removed
in 1833, to make way for the present edifice, which was erected in
1840, from the designs of Mr. Barry, at a cost of £67,000. The
school has a frontage of 174 feet, with a depth of 125 feet, being 60
feet high. The "schoolroom" proper is 120 feet, by 30 feet
and 45 feet high. In the last century the governors "set up"
branch schools in Shut Lane, Dudley Street, Freeman Street, London
'Prentice Street, and other localities; and in 1838 elementary
schools were erected in Gem Street, Edward Street, and Meriden Street,
as preparatory adjuncts to the New Street School. Extensive changes
have lately been made in the government and management of the Grammar
School, which can no longer be called a "Free School."
Formerly the governors were self-elected, but by the new scheme, which
was approved by the Queen in Council, March 26, 1878, the number is
limited to twenty-one, eight of them being appointed by the Town
Council, one by the school teachers, one each by the Universities of
Oxford, Cambridge, and London, and the remaining nine to be chosen by
the Governors themselves. The first meeting of the new Board of
Governors was held May 15, 1878. The New Street School is divided into
a High School for boys, a High School for girls, and a Middle School,
the other schools being respectively called Grammar Schools. The fees
now payable at the Five Ways School (formerly the Proprietary School),
and at the new schools at Camp Hill and Albert Road, Aston are 2s. 6d.
on admission, and £3 annually; to the High Schools the entrance
fee is 10s., and the tuition fees £9 per annum; to the Middle
Schools, 5s., and £3 per annum. The number of children in all
the schools is about 2,000, and the fees amount to about £4,000
per annum. There are a number of foundation scholarships, which
entitle the successful competitors from the Grammar Schools to free
tuition at the High Schools, and ten exhibitions arising out of the
Milward's, and Joanna Leuch's Trusts, for the Universities,
besides yearly class prizes of considerable value.
Mason's Scientific College.—The foundation of this
College, situated in Edmund Street, opposite the Free Library, was
laid on the 23rd February, 1875, by Sir Josiah Mason, the founder, who
in that manner celebrated his 80th birthday; and it was opened October
1, 1880. The College, which is estimated to have cost £100,000,
was built entirely by the founder who also endowed it with an income
of about £3,700 per annum, with the intention of providing
instruction in mathematics, abstract and applied; physics,
mathematical and experimental; chemistry, theoretical, practical, and
applied; the natural sciences, geology, metallurgy and mineralogy;
botany, zoology and physiology; English, French and German, to which
have since been added Greek, Latin, English literature, civil and
mechanical engineering; the chemistry, geology, theory and practice of
coal mining, &c. The entire management is in the hands of eleven
trustees, five of whom are appointed by the Town Council, and there is
no restriction on their powers, save that they must be laymen and
Protestants. The students may be male or female of any creed, or of
any birthplace, though preference is given to candidates from
Mason's Orphanage, and to persons born in Birmingham or
Kdderminster, other things being equal. The site contains a little
over an acre of land, extending through from Edmund Street, with a
frontage of 149 feet, to Great Charles Street, with a frontage of 127
feet. About one half of the area is covered by the present buildings,
which were erected from the designs of Mr. J.A. Cossins, who chose the
13th century style, with elaborations of a French character, its stone
balconies, lofty gables, oriel and dormer windows, picturesque
turrets, and numberless architectural enrichments, forming a contour
quite unique in the Birmingham district, though much of its beauty is
lost through the narrowness of the thoroughfare. The College is built
in two blocks communicating by corridors, and contains several lecture
and other large rooms, laboratories, class-rooms, &c., so arranged
that the attendants on one department in no way interfere with others,
there being about 100 apartments altogether, in addition to library,
reading-rooms, private rooms, &c. The report for the year ending
Founder's Day, February 23, 1884, showed the number of students in
the day classes during the session to have been 366—viz., 229
male and 137 female students; while in the evening classes there were
118 male and 54 female students, 20 students attending some day as
well as evening classes. The number of individual students registered
during the session 1882-3, as attending day or evening classes, was
518, as against 462 in 1881-82, and 181 in 1880-81. The accounts
showed an expenditure for the year of £8,095 12s. 2d., of which
£4,258 7s. 9d. was in respect of the teaching staff. The
expenditure exceeded the income by £764 0s. 8d., principally on
account of additional buildings, repairs, &c. The trustees have
lately made provision for nine scholarships, including two entrance
scholarships of £30 each; one of £30, for students of one
year's standing; two of £30 each, for two years'
students; two of £20 each for honour students in the
examinations of the University of London; and two technical
scholarships of £30 each, one in the chemical and the other in
the engineering department. The two last are known as the Tangye,
Scholarships, having been given by Messrs. R. and G. Tangye, and funds
are being raised for several others.
Queen's College.—Originally established in 1828 as
the School of Medicine; being patronised afterwards by William IV., it
being known as The Royal School of Medicine and Surgery, under which
name it existed until incorporated by Royal Charter in 1843, when it
was rechristened as The Queen's College. The first building
erected for the use of the Royal School was located in Snow Hill, the
ceremony of laying the foundation stone of the present handsome Gothic
edifice in Paradise Street being performed August 18, 1843, the chapel
being consecrated in the following year. At first there was but a
medical department, but, at the incorporation, a theological
department was added, and for many years, principally through the
exertions of Dr. Warneford and Mr. W. Sands Cox, it was one of the
most thriving and popular Colleges in the kingdom, the courses of
study qualifying for degrees at the University of London, and for
diplomas of the Society of Apothecaries, and the Royal College of
Surgeons; while theological students, with the College certificate,
could go up for their B.A. degree, with only a twelve months'
residence at the University. A department in connection with the Arts,
Manufacture, and Commerce was opened in May, 1853, and a High School
of Trade and Commerce, for giving an education specially adapted for
youths intended for mercantile pursuits, was commenced in the autumn
of 1877. An attempt to extend the medical education to female students
was made at one time, but the ladies were refused permission to attend
the College June 27, 1873; they are still debarred from studying
surgery here, and none have as yet entered their names on the list of
theological students. In the other departments greater facilities have
been allowed the fair sex, a Central High School for girls being
opened at the College September 17, 1879, accommodation being provided
for eighty pupils. The Museum of Natural History formed at the College
soon after its opening, long one of the town attractions for visitors,
was presented to the Corporation, and formed the nucleus of the
heterogenous collection at Aston Hall. The medical students have the
advantage of an extensive Anatomical Museum, and there is, besides, a
library of about 6,000 volumes of the best works and books of
reference that could be obtained.
Oscott College.—The old Roman Catholic College of St.
Mary's, at Oscott, was first used as such in 1808. The present
building was commenced in 1835, and opened May 31, 1838, and is
considered one of the chief English seminaries for Catholic students
in theology. The chapel is 112 ft. long by 33 ft. wide, and is richly
decorated, having side chapels and several handsome memorial windows.
The College library is very extensive, and includes many very rare,
valuable, and ancient works, some choice MSS., and a number of
"old masters," the latter having been contributed by the
late Earl of Shrewsbury.
Saltley Training College, which covers nearly seven acres of
land, was instituted in 1847, and was opened at Easter, 1852, for the
education of future schoolmasters in connection with the Established
Church. The building cost nearly £18,000 and will accommodate
100 students who undergo a two years' training, the College being
under the inspection of the Committee of Council on Education.
Government grants amount to about two-thirds of the income, the
balance being raised by public subscription and from fees. In addition
to over fifty scholarships tenable by students who pass their
examination, there are four exhibitions arising from a sum of
£2,000 given in October, 1874, by the late Mr. Arthur Ryland
(for a donor who desired to be anonymous) to the governing body of
this College "to found a trust for promoting the teaching of
teachers the laws of health, and inducing teachers to make that
subject one of the things statedly taught in their own schools,"
and a further £1,000 for four exhibitions to students.
Severn Street First Day Adult School.—The name tells
pretty well that this school was commenced by some members of the
Society of Friends, though there is really nothing sectarian about it.
Established in 1815, in a simple way and with but few classes, there
is hardly an institution in the town that can be compared to it in the
matter of practical usefulness, and certainly none at which there has
been exhibited such an amount of unselfish devotedness on the part of
teachers and superintendents. The report to the end of 1883 stated
that during the year the progress of the school had been of an
encouraging character. The following statistics were given of the
total attendance at all the schools connected with the
movement:—Number of teachers, 57 males, 25 females—total,
82, average attendance, 51 males, 23 females—total 74.
Elementary teachers, 173 males, 21 females—total, 194; average
attendance, 152 males, 19 females—total, 171. Number of
scholars, 3,370 males, 653 females—total, 4,023; average
attendance, 2,510 males, 510 females—total 3,080. The total
number admitted since the men's school commenced in 1845, and the
women's in 1848, had been 40,350. In connection with the school
there are a number of organisations of great utility, such as sick
societies, building societies, savings' funds, libraries,
excursions clubs, &c. In the savings' fund the balance in hand
reached £14,000, while over £18,000 had been paid into the
building societies. There are a dozen other "adult schools"
in the town which have sprung from Severn Street.
Spring Hill College.—For the education and training of
Independent ministers, was first opened in 1838, in the mansion of Mr.
George Storer Mansfield, at Spring Hill, that gentleman giving certain
landed property towards its future support. The present edifice, near
Moseley, to which the old name was given, was opened in June, 1857,
the cost of the building, &c., nearly £18,000, being raised
by voluntary contributions. It has room for 36 students.
Sunday Schools.—Sunday classes for the teaching of the
Catechism, &c., date from a very early period of Church history,
but Sunday Schools as they are now known seem to have been locally
organised about a hundred years ago, the Sunday after Michaelmas Day
in 1784 being marked as a red-letter-day on account of there being
twenty-four schools then opened, though the course of instruction went
no further than teaching the children to read. In 1789 some young men
formed the "Sunday Society" as an addition thereto, the
object being to teach writing and arithmetic to boys and youths of the
artisan class. In 1796 the society was extended, other classes being
formed, lectures delivered, &c., and it was then called the
"Brotherly Society." Mr. James Luckcock and Mr. Thos.
Carpenter were the leaders, and this is claimed to have been the
origin of Mechanics' Institutes. The Unitarians date their Sunday
Schools from 1787: the Baptists and Methodists from 1795. Deritend
Sunday School was opened by Mr. Palmer in 1808, with but six scholars;
in a month they were so numerous that part had to be taught in the
street. The first prizes given to the children were new Boulton
pennies. On Emancipation Day (August 1, 1838) there was a procession
of over 3,000 scholars from the Baptist Sunday Schools. In 1812 the
Birmingham Sunday School Union was organised. The medallists of this
town sent out about 800,000 commemoration medals in 1880, when the
Sunday School Centenary was kept. Nearly 2,000 teachers attend the
Church schools and about 2,500 attend Dissenting and other schools,
the number of children on the books of Sunday Schools in Birmingham
being estimated at—
|
14 years and over
|
Under 14 years
|
Total.
|
Church of England schools
|
5,500
|
16,500
|
22,000
|
Sunday School Union
|
7,312
|
13,660
|
20,972
|
Wesleyan and others
|
2,745
|
6,627
|
9,372
|
Roman Catholic
|
1,200
|
1,950
|
3,150
|
Unitarian
|
692
|
1,359
|
1,961
|
Other schools
|
550
|
750
|
1,250
|
|
|
|
|
|
17,859
|
40,846
|
58,705
|
Wesleyan College.—The five memorial stones of a College
for training Wesleyan ministers, at the corner of Priory and College
Roads, Handsworth, were laid June 8, 1880. The site includes 17-1/2
acres, and cost over £7,000, the total cost of the College when
completed and furnished being estimated at £40,000. About fifty
students are accommodated at present, but there is room for thirty
more.
Scraps of Local History.—A foreign visitor here in the
reign of James II., wrote that our tradesmen were in the habit of
spending their evenings in public-houses, and were getting into lazy
habits, so that their shops were often not opened before 7 a.m.
Another intelligent foreigner (temp Charles II.) has left it on
record that not only was smoking common among women here, but that the
lads took a pipe and tobacco with them to school, instead of
breakfast, the schoolmaster teaching them at the proper hour how to
hold their pipes and puff genteelly.
Hutton believed that the scythe-blades attached to the wheels of Queen
Boadicea's war chariots (A.D. 61), as well as the Britons'
swords, were made in this neighbourhood.
When escaping from Boscobel, in the guise of Miss Lane's servant,
Charles II. had to appeal to a blacksmith at Erdington to re-shoe his
horse. The knight of the hammer was a republican, and his majesty
chimed in with the man's views so readily, that the latter
complimented his customer on "speaking like an honest man."
Miss Lane afterwards married Sir Clement Fisher, of Packington, and
her portrait may be still seen at the Hall.
During the battle of Waterloo, the Duke of Wellington saw a little
fellow in plain clothes riding about on a cob, and, beckoning him up,
told him he was in danger. The litlle man, however, said be had come
to see a fight, and meant to stop it out. Shortly after, the Duke
wanting a messenger, employed the rider of the cob to take a message
across the field, directing a certain regiment to charge the enemy.
This was done, and the Duke took his messenger's card and saw no
more of him at that time; but afterwards, finding that the little man
was the traveller to a Birmingham button maker, he appointed him to a
situation in the Mint, at £800 a year.
In 1766, it was necessary to have 25 constables ready to protect the
farmers coming to market with their corn, the times were so hard with
the poor. In the following year large quantities of rice were
purchased by subscription, and one gentleman, it is said, himself gave
away half-a-ton per day for ten days.
In 1853, a premium of £30 was offered for the best design of an
illuminated clock, to be erected on the open space in front of Christ
Church.
A Queen Anne's farthing of rare type was turned up in the Bull
Ring, in July, 1879.
The body of William Woodward was found (March 21, 1878) in the
branches of a tree in Little Green Lane, he having climbed up there
previous to death.
The giving of free breakfasts on a Sunday morning to the poor children
of the streets, was commenced July 4, 1875, at Park Street Ragged
Schools. A system of supplying school-children with penny dinners is
the latest philanthropic movement.
The hottest day recorded in our local history was June 23, 1868.
The Orsini bombs used in Paris, January 15, 1858, were made in this
town.
A hundred years back, meetings of the inhabitants were called by the
tolling of one of St. Martin's bells.
The declaration of war, or cessation thereof, used to be proclaimed in
the market by the High Bailiff.
The 7th Earl of Stirling officiated in this town as a Nonconformist
minister, simply styling himself the Rev. John Alexander; he died Dec.
29, 1765, and was buried in the Old Meeting grave-yards. His sister,
who became Countess in her own right, was married to a local
manufacturer, William Humphrys.
Sessions.—The first of the Borough Quarter Sessions was
held July 5, 1839, M.D. Bill, Esq., Recorder. On the 25th of November
following the magistrates began to sit daily at Petty Sessions.
Secular Club and Institute.—The members having bought the
remainder of lease (32 years) of No. 18, Crescent, for £340,
have fitted it up for the purposes of their club and on June 1, 1877,
the foundation-stone was laid of a lecture hall at the rear, 70ft.
long by 19ft. wide. St. George's Hall, Upper Dean Street, was
their former meeting place.
Sewerage and Sanitary Works.—The disposal of the sewage
of a large town away from the sea or tidal rivers has at all times
been a source of difficulty, and Birmingham forms no exception to the
rule. When it was in reality but the little "hardware
village" it has so often been called, the Rea was sufficient to
carry off the surface waters taken to its channel by the many little
rills and brooks of the neighbourhood, but as the town increased, and
house drainage defiled that limped stream, it became necessary to
construct culverts, so as to take the most offensive portion of the
sewage to a distance from inhabited houses. A great improvement was
looked for after the introduction of the Waterworks, allowing the use
of water-flushed closets in the better class of houses, instead of the
old style of accommodation usually provided at the end of the garden,
but even this system became a nuisance, especially to residents near
the river Tame, the receptacle of all liquid filth from our streets,
closets, middens, and manufactories, and legal as well as sanitary
reasons forced upon the Corporation the adoption of other plans. Our
present sanitary system comprises the exclusion, as far as possible,
of closet refuse and animal and vegetable matters from the sewers, and
secondly, the purification by filtration, &c., of the outpourings
of the sewers, after the partial separation therefrom of the more
solid constituents. In 1871, when the real sanitary work of the
borough may be said to have practically commenced, out of about 73,200
houses only 3,884 were provided with water-closets, the remainder
being served by middens, drained and undrained, the greater part
uncovered and polluting the atmosphere, while the soakage fouled the
earth and contaminated the wells. From these places in 1873 there were
removed 160,142 loads of ashes, &c., the number of men employed
being 146, and the cost, allowing for sales, over £20,000, or
£55 10s. per 1,000 of the Population. In the following year the
Council approved of "the Rochdale system," closet-pans and
ash-tubs taking the place of the old style with middens, the contents
being removed weekly instead of being left to accumulate for months.
At first the new system was far from perfect, and met with much
opposition, notwithstanding the certainty of its being a more healthy
plan than the old one; but improvements have been made, and it is now
generally confessed that the pans and tubs are the right things in the
right places. The number of pans in use in 1874 was 3,845; in 1875,
7,674; in 1876, 15,992; in 1877, 22,668; in 1883, 37,287, equal to a
collection of 1,900,000 pans per year. The sanitary force now numbers
622 men, who, in addition to the above, removed in 1883, from tubs,
middens, &c., 128,966 loads of ashes. The chief depot for this
accumulation of refuse and rubbish is at the Corporation's wharf,
in Montague Street, where over £52,000 has been laid out in
buildings and machinery for its due disposal. At first, nearly two
thirds of the mass had to be taken by canal into the country, where it
was "tipped," the expense being so heavy that it entailed a
loss of about 6s. 6d. per ton on the whole after allowing for that
part which could be sold as manure. Now, however, the case is
different. Extensive machinery has been introduced, and the contents
of the pans are dried to a powder, which finds a good market; the
ashes, &c., are used in the furnaces for the drying process, and
the residue therefrom, or clinkers, forms a valuable substance for
roadmaking or building purposes, &c., in the shape of concrete,
paving flags, mantelpieces, tabletops, and even sepulchral monuments
being constructed with it, so that in a short time the receipts will,
it is expected, more than balance the expenditure in this department
of local sanitary work. The pollution of the river Tame in past years
led to continuous litigation until the year 1877, when, as the result
of an exhaustive inquiry, it was determined to form a United Drainage
District Board, with powers to construct and maintain intercepting
sewers sufficient for carrying the drainage of the whole district,
comprising Aston, Aston Manor, Balsall Heath, Birmingham, Handsworth,
Harborne, King's Norton, Northfield, Perry Barr, Saltley, and
Smethwick. The first meeting of this Board was held December 6, 1877,
when it took over the sewage farm at Saltley belonging to the
Corporation (about 262 acres), the plant and stock, &c. Up to the
present time (end of 1884), nearly half a million sterling has been
spent by the Board, whose "farm" of 1,500 acres, extends
from Saltley to Tyburn, two and a half miles, and who have now to deal
with the sewage brought there from 188 miles of main sewers, extending
as far as King's Norton and Selly Oak, Harborne, Smethwick,
&c. The whole of the black and turgid stream of liquid filth
brought down by the sewers is utilised upon the farm, some 200 cubic
yards of mud being lifted daily from the settling tanks, to be dug in,
while the overflow is taken by carriers to the most distant parts, and
allowed to filtrate through the soil, until the resulting effluent is
as clear as crystal, while immense crops are gathered yearly from the
land so treated. An analysis made a little time back of a natural
deposit from the town sewerage, formed near the embouchure of several
sewers emptying into one of the great arterial mains, showed the
absence of all ammoniacal salts and a scarcity of phosphates,
particularly alkaline phosphates, and at the same time the presence of
a large quantity of protoxide of iron, also of zinc, copper, and other
metals in the state of oxides and sulphurets. These metallic salts
absorb the sulphuretted hydrogen and ammonia generated by decaying
vegetable, and animal matter, and doubtless so contributes to promote
the health of the town, but nevertheless every precaution should be
taken against the possible admission to the house of "sewer
gas," which at all times is injurious to health. The analysed
deposit contained when dried only 1.4 per cent. of nitrogen (not as
ammonia) and 3.5 of earthy phosphates; but about 11.7 of protoxide of
iron, besides zinc, copper, and other metals to the extent of 2 or 3
per cent. The latter-named proportions may in some measure account for
"what becomes of the pins?" as in the deposit named (which
was nearly solid) those useful little articles were exceedingly
conspicuous.
Shambles.—The name given to the meat market in Jamaica
Row. In the map of 1731, "The Shambles" are marked as a long
block of buildings, a little higher than opposite the end of Bell
Street, and in 1765 they still remained there, forming a kind of
"middle row," among the incongruous collection of tenements,
stallages, &c., that encumbered our Bull Ring, down to the gates
of the church itself.
Ship Inn.—The old Ship Inn, at Camp Hill, where Prince
Rupert had his headquarters in 1643, was pulled down in 1867; the
present Ship Hotel being opened February 6, 1868. It was sold in July,
1882, for £12,050.
Shirley.—Situated in the parish of Solihull, though but a
village with some half hundred cottages, has of late become a favorite
spot for those fond of a Sunday drive.
Shoeblacks.—An attempt was made in 1875 to form a
shoeblack brigade, but only ten gentlemen attended the meeting (called
June 21), and the business was left to the irregulars.
Smallbrook Street.—A small stream, formerly ran its
course along part of this site, proceeding by way of Smithfield
Passage to the moat, and thence through the mill-pool, back of
Bradford Street, to the Rea. The ancient family of the Smallbrokes
held considerable lands in the neighbourhood, but whether the
street's name came from the small brook or the Smallbrokes is a
matter of doubt.
Smallpox.—From the opening of the Smallpox Hospital in
May, 1882, to July 10, 1884, the duration of the late epidemic, there
were 1,591 cases admitted. Among the 1,384 patients who had been
vaccinated there occurred 59 deaths; among the 207 unvaccinated, 90
deaths. No re-vaccinated person died.
Snow Hill.—There is a difference of 60ft. between the top
level next Bull Street and the Bottom of Snow Hill.
Soho.—Prior to 1756 the country on the Handsworth side of
Birmingham was little better than barren heath, the home of conies and
a few beggarly squatters, until Mr. Edward Ruston leased from the Lord
of the Manor the whole of the piece of common that lay between Nineveh
and Hockley on the left of the West Bromwich Road. He deepened the
channel of Hockley brook, and built a small mill by its side, which
being purchased from him in 1764 by Matthew Boulton (who soon acquired
the freehold also) formed the site of the once world-renowned Soho
Works. In 1774, according to "Swinney's Birmingham
Directory," these works consisted of four squares of buildings,
with workshops, &e., for more than a thousand workmen. Many more
than that number, however, were afterwards employed on the grounds,
and for long years Soho House, as Boulton's residence was called,
was the resort of lords and ladies, princes and philosophers, savants
and students, to a far greater extent than many of the European
courts. Of this home of the steam engine, and the birthplace of
inventions too numerous to count, there is now no vestige left, the
foundry being removed to Smethwick in 1848, the celebrated Mint, with
the warehouses and shopping, being cleared out early in 1850, and the
walls razed to the ground in 1853.
Soho Hill.—The top is 177ft. higher than at Hockley
Bridge, the foot of the hill.
Soho Pool was formed by the make of an embankment (1756-60)
impounding the waters of Hockley brook, and for some years after the
demolition of the Soho Works it was a favourite place for boating,
&c.. The pool was drained in 1866, and, having been filled up, its
site will ere long be covered with streets of houses.
Solihull.—This very pleasant village, but a few miles
distant, could boast of a Free School for its children at a very early
date, for we read of the buildings being repaired in 1573. In 1882 the
School was rebuilt, at a cost of about £5,700, and its
endowments, some of which were given in the reign of Richard II., are
yearly becoming of greater value as building progresses. The present
population is nearly 6,000, the rateable value of property being
£45,202, from an area of 12,000 acres. The parishes in the Union
comprise Baddesley, Balsall, Barston, Bushwood, Elmdon, Knowle,
Lapworth, Nuthurst, Packwood, Solihull, Tanworth, and Yardley,
including an area of 46,302 acres, a population of 21,000, with a
rateable value amounting to £157,000.
Spanish Armada.—The nobility and gentry of this and
adjoining counties, at the time of the threatened invasion by the
Spaniards, contributed sums of money sufficient to hire and equip no
less than 43 ships of war. Among the names we note the following local
subscribers of £25 each:—William Kinge and William Collmer
(Colmore), of Burmingham; Richard Middlemore, Edgbaston; Mrs.
Margarett Knowlys, Nuneton; Gabriell Powltney, Knowle; Richard
Corbett, Meryden, &c.
Speaking Stile Walk.—In a footpath leading from Holloway
Head to Edgbaston Church, there was a stile at a spot from which an
exceedingly clear echo, could be raised, and the footpath being partly
thrown into a lane the latter became "Speaking Stile Lane."
The short street or road at present existing preserves the name, but
that is all, the echo, the stile, and the footpath having vanished
long, long ago.
Spelling Bee.—The first "Spelling Bee" held in
Birmingham took place January 17th, 1876. Like many other Yankee
notions, it did not thrive here, and the humming of those bees soon
ceased.
Springs.—In Hutton's time there was, "a short
distance from Birmingham, in the manor of Duddeston, and joining the
turnpike road to Coleshill," a chalybeate spring of which he
speaks very highly, though even then it was neglected and thought but
little of. In 1849 Mr. Robert Rawlinson making inquiries, was told by
the Town Clerk that "the chalybeate spring in Duddeston was
turned into a culvert by the railway people when the Birmingham and
Liverpool Railway was constructed," to the great regret of the
inhabitants of the neighbourhood who spoke strongly of the virtues of
the water in diseases of the eye. It was suggested in 1862 that an
attempt should be made to reopen the spring for public use, but as it
was nobody's business nobody did it. There was (sixty years ago) a
spring a little below Saturday Bridge opposite Charlotte Street, which
always give forth a constant stream of beautifully clear soft water.
Another in Coventry Road, where 25 years or so ago an old man stooping
to quench his thirst fell head foremost, and not being able to recover
his equilibrium, was drowned, leading to the spring being covered up.
Several mineralised springs existed in Gooch Street, and thereabouts,
and there was one that sprung out close to where Kent Street Baths are
now. The spring which gives name to Spring Street and Spring Vale, and
which has been turned so that its waters run into the sewers, is
estimated to discharge 20,000 gallons of pure limpid water per hour.
The little stream arising from this spring constituted part of the
boundary line between the Birmingham and Edgbaston parishes and at far
less cost than it has taken to waste its water it could have been
utilised for the above-named Baths, less than a thousand yards off,
and with a natural fall of 6ft. or 8ft. Spring Hill takes its name
from a spring now non-existent, but which was once a favourite with
the cottagers who lived near to it.
Sporting Notes.—It is not for a moment
to be admitted that the men of Birmingham in past years were one whit
more brutal in their "sports" than others of their
countrymen, but it must be confessed they somehow managed to acquire a
shocking bad name to that effect. This of course must be laid to the
credit of the local supporters of "the noble art of
self-defence," the Brummagem bruisers. Bullbaiting and
cockfighting were no more peculiar to this neighbourhood than
parson-pelting or woman ducking at Coventry, where the pillory and
ducking-stool were in use long after they had been put aside in
Birmingham.
Archery at one period of history was so little of a sporting
nature that laws were passed for the erection of shooting-butts, the
provision of bows and arrows, and the enforcement of constant practice
by all young men and apprentices. The monk's mixture of brimstone,
charcoal, and salt-petre, however, in course of time left the old
English clothyard shaft with its grey goose feather and the
accompanying six-foot bow of yew to be playthings only, or but fit to
use in shooting squirrels or other small deer. The "Woodmen of
Arden" is the oldest society (in this county) of toxopholites as
the modern drawers of the long bow are called, which society was
"revived" in 1785, the Earl of Aylesford giving a silver
bugle horn and his lady a silver arrow as first and second prizes. The
members of a local society may in summer months be sometimes seen
pacing their measured rounds on an allotted portion of the Edgbaston
Botanical Gardens.
Athletics—The Birmingham Athletic Club opened the
Gymnasium in King Alfred's Place, in Aug 1866, and hold their
annual display and assault-at-arms in the Town Hall in the month of
March. Certain hours are allotted to the ladies' classes, and
special terms are made for young men and schoolboys.
Bowling Greens and Quoit Grounds were once favourite places of
amusement, many even of the town taverns having them attached. There
was one at the Salutation, bottom of Snow Hill, in 1778, and at an
earlier date at the Hen and Chickens, in High Street. In 1825 a
bowling green was laid out at the corner of Highfield Road and
Harborne Road, for "a very select party" of Edgbastonians.
There was also one at the Plough and Harrow, and several may stil be
found in the neighbourhood.
Chess, aristocratic game as it is, is far from being unknown
here, a Chess Club having been established half-a-century back, which
has nearly a hundred members. Its present headquarters are at the
Restaurant, 1, Lower Temple Street.
Cock-fighting.—Early numbers of Aris's Gazette
frequently contained notices of "mains" fought at Duddeston
Hall.
Cricket.—There was a Cricket Club in existence here in
1745, and it has been chronicled that a match was being played on the
same day on which the battle of Culloden was fought. Of modern clubs,
whose name is Legion, the oldest is the Birmingham C.C., started in
1819, the members including the young élite of the town,
who had their field opposite the Monument at Ladywood. The Birchfield
C.C. was organised in 1840. Among the noteworthy matches of late years
are those of the All England Eleven against a local twenty-two, at the
Lower Grounds, June 5, 1871, the visitors winning; the Australian
Eleven v. Pickwick and District Twenty-two, at Bournbrook, June
24 to 26, 1878, the game not being finished, the first innings showing
105 runs for the Eleven, against 123; the Australians v. Eleven
of England, at Lower Grounds, May 26, 1884, when the Colonials put
together 76 against 82 in the first innings, the second innings of 33
against England's 26 being won with five players left to bat.
Croquet was introduced in 1867; the first code of laws being
published in October, 1869.
Cycling, though quite the rage at the present time, is by no
mems a modern amusement, as running a race with
"dandy-horses" was considered good sport in the days of the
fourth Royal George. These vehicles consisted of two wheels united
tandem fashion, the bar being fitted with saddle-shaped seat as in the
first bicycles, but the motive power was applied through the contact
of the riders' feet with the ground.—The "track"
at the Lower Grounds measures 501 yards.
Football is a game as old as the hills, and there are hundreds
of clubs in the town and district, the best meadow for the purpose (at
the Lower Grounds) being about 125 yards long by 75 yards broad. The
Aston Villa is the chief club.
Hare and Hounds.—Every suburb and district has its club
of Harriers or Hare and Hounds, an annual cross-country amateur
championship contest being started in 1879. At the last (Feb. 9, 1884)
the Birchfield Harriers scored their fourth victory against the
Moseley Harriers twice.
Hunting.—Time was when the sight of scarlet coats and
hounds was no novelty in Birmingham, but those who would now join in
the old English sport of hunting must go farther afield, the nearest
kennels being at Atherstone. The announcements of the meets in this
and adjoining counties appear regularly in the Midland
Counties' Herald.
Jumping.—At the Lower Grounds in July, 1881, Mr. P.
Davine, of Belfast, jumped 6ft. 3in. the highest previous record
having been 6ft. 2-1/2in., the performance of Mr. M.J. Brookes,
(Oxford U.A.C.) at Lillie Bridge, March, 1874.
Lacrosse, a popular Canadian game, was introduced here June 23,
1883, by a team of Canadian Amateurs and Iroquois Indians, who
exhibited their prowess at the Lower Grounds.
Lawn Tennis, at first known as Lawn Racquet, was the invention
of the late Major Gem, who played the first game in 1865 with his
friend Mr. Perera. of Great Charles Street.
Pedestrianism.—Among the earlist noted achievements of
local peds. is that of George Guest, who having wagered to walk 1,000
miles in 28 days finished his task Feb. 1, 1758, with five hours to
spare, doing six miles in the last hour he footed it.—Mr. E.P.
Weston, the walker par excellence, was at Bingley Hall in
April, 1876, and at the Lower Grounds in Jan., 1884, when on his walk
of 5,000 miles in 100 days.—A six days "go-as-you
please" match came off at Bingley Hall in Sept., 1882, and a
ridiculous exhibition of a similar nature occurred in the following
year, when women were induced to walk for the sport of gaping idiots.
Pigeon-flying has been for several generations the favourite
amusement of numbers of our workers, and the flyers have a club of
their own, which dates from August, 1875.
Pigeon-shooting is a cruel sport, not much favoured in this
locality, and now that a cheap clay pigeon has been invented for use
in this game, instead of the live birds, it is to be hoped that the
disgraceful practice will be confined to the Hurlingham boys.
Prize-fighting was long the popular sport of high and low life
blackguards, and Birmingham added many a redoubtable name to the long
list of famous prize-fighters, whose deeds are recorded in
"Fistiana" and other chronicles of the ring. Among the most
conspicuous of these men of might, were Harry Preston, Davy Davis,
Phil Sampson, Topper Brown, Johnny and Harry Broome, Ben Caunt, Sam
Simmonds, Bob Brettle, Tass Parker, Joe Nolan, Peter Morris, Hammer
Lane, and his brothers, with a host of other upholders of fisticuffs,
the record of whose battles will not be handed down to
posterity in the pages of Showell's Dictionary of
Birmingham, though, as a matter of history, it may be noted that
the earliest account we have of a local prize-fight is of that which
took place in Oct. 1782, for 100 guineas a side, between Jemmy
Sargent, a professional, and Isaac Perrins, one of the Soho workmen.
Jemmy knuckled under after being knocked down thirteen times, in as
many rounds, by the knock-kneed hammerman fiom Soho, whose mates, it
is said, won £1,500 in bets through his prowess. Attempts have
lately been made to revive the old sport, but the sooner the would-be
adepts learn that their occupation is gone the better it will be for
them, and all men.
Racing and Steeplechasing was not, unknown to the Brums of the
18th century, as the Gentleman's Magazine makes note of the
races at Birmingham, May 27 to 29, 1740, but where the old racecourse
was situated it is impossible to tell. Indeed it is doubtful whether
any special course has ever long been in existence, as at various
dates we read of races being held at Aston, Bordesley, Deritend,
Walmer Lane, and other places. The Four Oaks Park, adjoining Sutton
Park, formerly the property of a private gentleman, was bought by a
company in June, 1879, for the purpose of laying out a racecourse in
this neighbourhood, of a similar nature to that of Ascot, and other
great racing centres. In addition to the Hall, the buildings comprise
a grand stand (the memorial stone of which was laid June 2, 1880), and
a club stand, each 70ft. by 66ft., with two galleries of seats
refreshment, private, and other rooms. Also a second stand for the
general public, 62ft. by 31ft. and a press and jockey stand, 53ft. by
31ft. The "paddock" occupies nearly three acres, while an
area of 115ft. by 72ft. is devoted to "the Ring." The cost
of these various buildings and their necessary adjuncts is estimated
at about £12,000, the structures themselves, which are built of
red brick with stone facings, accommodating 3,000 persons. The course
is about a mile and a half in circumference, and the
"straight" about five furlongs in length. The Park includes
an area of 130 acres, and the first race was run March 1,
1881.—No steeplechases have been run on the old Wolverhampton
course since 1855, and no flat races since Aug. 1877.
Running Records.—Mr. W.G. George, of the Moseley
Harriers, won a two mile handicap at Stamford Bridge, April 24, 1884,
in 9 min. 17 2-5 secs. On May 17, same year, he ran four miles, in 19
min. 39 4-5 secs. On July 28 following, he covered, in the hour, 11
miles, 932 yds., 9 in., being 37 yds. 2 ft. 3 in. less than the
hitherto unsurpassed hour record of the celebrated Deerfoot in 1862.
Another of George's feats took place May 1, 1882, when he ran ten
miles in 52 min. 56-1/2 secs.
Skating Rinks were opened at the Lower Grounds May 1, 1875; at
Bingley Hall, Oct. 2, 1875; at Moseley, Dec. 6, 1876; and at
Handsworth, Oct. 8, 1877; and, for a time, the amusement was
exceedingly popular, more than one fortune accruing from the
manufacture of patent and other roller skates. One of the most
noteworthy feats on the slippery rinks was the skating of 200 miles in
24 hours by a Mr. F. Betteridge at Bingley Hall, Aug. 20, 1878.
Swimming.—The Birmingham Leander Club commenced their
aquatic brotherhood in June, 1877, and the members do themselves
honour by gratuitously attending the public baths in the summer months
to teach the art of swimming to School Board youngsters. [See
"Baths,"] The
celebrated swimmer, Captain Webb, who was drowned at Niagara, July 24,
1883, visited this town several times, and the Athletic Club presented
him with a gold medal and purse December 4, 1875.
Statues, Busts, and Memorials.—For
many years it was sneeringly said that Birmingham could afford but one
statue, that of Nelson, in the Bull Ring, but, as the following list
will show, the reproach can no longer be flung at us. Rather, perhaps,
it may soon be said we are likely to be over-burdened with these
public ornaments, though to strangers who know not the peculiarities
of our fellow-townsmen it may appear curious that certain local
worthies of the past have not been honoured in marble or bronze.
Attwood.—The figure of Thomas Attwood, in Stephenson
Place, New Street, is the work of Mr. John Thomas, who did much of the
carving at the Grammar School. The cost was about £900, and the
statue was unveiled June 6, 1859.
Blue Coat Children.—The stone figures of a Blue Coat boy
and girl over the entrance to the School in St. Phillip's
Churchyard, were sculptured by Mr. Edward Grubb, in 1770, and Hutton
thought they were executed "with a degree of excellence that a
Roman statuary would not blush to own." In 1881 the appearance of
the figures was improved by their being painted in correct
colours.
Bright.—At the time of the Bright Celebration in 1883,
the Birmingham Liberal Association commissioned Mr. A. Bruce Joy to
execute for them a marble statue of Mr. Bright, which the Association
intend placing in the new Art Gallery. The statue itself is expected
to be finished in 1885, but Mr. Bright has expressed his satisfaction
with the model, which represents him standing erect in an attitude of
dignified tranquility, easy and natural with his left hand in the
breast of his coat, while the other hangs down by his side, emblematic
of the Christian charity so characteristic of our distinguished
representative.
Boulton.—There is a fine bust of Matthew Bolton in
Handsworth, and as the owner of the great Soho Works certainly did
much to advance the manufactures of this town, foreigners have often
expressed surprise that no statue has been erected to his
memory.
Buddha.—The bronze statue of Buddha, now in Aston Hall,
is supposed to be 2,500 years old, and was found buried among the
ruins of a temple at Soottan, on the Ganges, Dec 6, 1862. It was
presented to this town in 1864 by Mr. Samuel Thornton.
Chamberlain, J.—The memorial at the rear of the Town Hall
bears the following inscription:—
"This memorial is created in gratitude for public service
given to this town by Joseph Chamberlain, who was elected town
councillor in November, 1869, Mayor in 1873, and resigned that
office in June, 1876, on being returned as one of the
representatives of the borough of Birmingham in Parliament, and
during whose mayoralty many great works were notably advanced, and
mainly by whose ability and devotion the gas and water undertakings
were acquired for the town, to the great and lasting benefit of the
inhabitants."
The memorial was desisigned by Mr. J.H. Chamberlain, of the firm of
Martin and Chamberlain, and was presented to the town October 26,
1880, during the mayoralty of Mr. Richard Chamberlain. The medallion
of the right hon. gentleman is the work of Mr. Thomas Woolner, R.A.
Chamberlain, J.H.—The sum of £2,744 13s. 6d. raised
by subscription for the founding of a memorial of the late Mr. John
Henry Chamberlain, was given to the Midland Institute, with which the
lamented gentleman was so intimately connected.
Dawson.—A public meeting was held Jan. 3, 1877, to decide
on a memorial of George Dawson, and the sum of £2,287 13s. 9d.
was subscribed for a statue to be erected at the rear of the Town
Hall, but it was esteemed so poor a portrait that after a little while
it was removed, in favour of the present statue. A very pleasing bust,
which is a very striking likeness and really characteristic portrait
was unveiled at the Church of the Saviour, Aug. 8, 1882. It bears the
following inscription:—
IN LOVING MEMORY OF
GEORGE DAWSON, M.A.
Coming to this town in the year 1844, he gathered round him a band
of followers, who found in his teaching a fervent religious spirit,
and a fearless trust in God as our Heavenly Father, in union with
an earnest search after truth. To perpetuate such union they built
this Church, which he opened August 8. 1847, and in which he
ministered until his death. Not in this Church only, but throughout
the land did he everywhere teach to nations: that they are exalted
by righteousness alone—to men: "To do justly, love
mercy, and walk humbly with God."
He was born February 24. 1821, and died November 10, 1876.
"I HAVE FOUGHT THE GOOD FIGHT."
Mr. T.J. Williamson, who executed this bust was entrusted with the
order for the new statue.
George IV.—The first bronze statue ever cast in
Birmingham was that of George IV., the work of Sir Edward Thomason, in
1823. Sir Edward employed the best of talent and spared no pains to
turn out a splendid work of art, but he never found a customer for it.
The statue is 6ft. high, weighing 2-1/2 tons, and costing over
£1,500, but was sold in November, 1880, to a gentleman in the
neighborhood for £150, little more than the value of the metal.
Goldsmith.—The statue of Goldsmith, in the hall of the
Reference Library, is a plaster cast of the bronze statue manufactured
by Messrs. Elkington for the City of Dublin. Hill.—The
sum of £1,500 was raised by public subscription, for the purpose
of erecting a statue of Sir Rowland Hill. The work was executed in
marble by Mr. P. Hollins, and pending the erection of the new Post
Office buildings, the charge of the statue was accepted by the
Exchange Buildings Committee, September 12, 1870 and remained in the
Birmingham Exchange until the year 1874, when it was removed to the
position in which it at present stands, in the corner of the principal
room of the Post Office, Paradise Street.
Hill, M.D.—A very fine bust of Matthew Davenport Hill,
the first Recorder for the borough, is placed in the Art Gallery at
the Reference Library.
James.—A bust of the Rev. Angell James may be seen at
Aston Hall.
King Edward VI.—When the old Grammar School was taken
down the statue of the King, which had stood in its niche in the front
of the old building for generations, was broken to pieces on account
of so many gentlemen (including governors) wanting it; as all could
not have it, it was destroyed!
Mason.—The erection of a statue in his honour as proposed
in 1870 not meeting with the approval of Sir Josiah Mason (then Mr.),
the Town Council paid Mr. E.G. Papworth, the chosen sculptor, a
solatium or honorarium of 150 guineas. The worthy knight not being now
alive to veto the project, a figure of him has been placed opposite
the College in Edmund Street.
Murdoch.—There is a bust of William Murdoch, the
introducer of coal-gas as an illuminant, in Handsworth Church. Another
would not be out of place in the new Gas Office.
Nelson—The bronze statue of Lord Nelson in the Bull Ring
was executed by Westmacott, and uncovered June 6, 1809. The artist
received £2,500, but the total cost (raised by subscription)
with the pedestal, lamps, and palisading, was nearly £3,000. The
corner posts are old cannon from the Admiral's ship the Victory.
Peel.—The statue of Sir Robert Peel, near the Town Hall,
cost £2,000, and was unveiled August 27, 1855. He faced towards
Christ Church at first, and was protected from Tories and
Protectionists by iron railings, until March, 1878, when his bonds
were loosed, and he was allowed to look down New Street.
Priestley.—The statue of the discoverer of oxygen, near
the Town Hall, was uncovered August 1, 1884. The amount subscribed as
a Priestley memorial fund was £1,820, of which £972 went
for the philosopher's stone effigy, about £10 for a tablet
on the site of his house at Fair Hill, and £653 to the Midland
Institute to found a scholarship in chemistry.
Prince Albert and the Queen.—In 1862, after the death of
the Prince Consort, a Memorial Committee was formed and a fund raised
for a statue, the execution of which was entrusted to Mr. Foley, and
it is said to be one of his finest productions. It was placed in the
old Art Gallery, and uncovered August 27, 1863. It was in the
reading-room at the time of the fire, but fortunately escaped injury.
The balance of the fund was deemed sufficient for a companion statue
of Her Majesty, and Mr. Foley received the commission for it in 1871.
At his death the order was given to Mr. Woolner, who handed over his
work to the town in May, 1884, the ceremony of unveiling taking place
on the 9th of that month. According to the Athanæum it is
"one of the finest portrait statues of the English School,
combining a severe yet elegant design with execution of the highest
kind, every element being thoroughly artistic." Thousands have
seen it alongside the Prince's statue in the hall of the Reference
Library, but few indeed have been heard to say they like it. Both
statues are ultimately intended to be placed in the Council House.
Rogers.—A memorial bust of John Rogers, a native of
Deritend, and one of the first martyrs of the Reformation, was
unveiled in St. John's, October 29, 1883.
Scholefield.—A bust of William Scholefield, M.P., for the
borough, is at Aston Hall.
Sturge.—The statue, and most appropriate memorial of
Edmund Sturge, at the Five Ways, which cost about £1,000, was
undraped June 4, 1862. Messrs. Bright and Scholefield, M.P.'s,
being present.
With a true sorrow that rebuked all feigning,
By lone Edgbaston's side
Stood a great city in the sky's sad reigning
Bareheaded and wet-eyed.
Silent for once the restless hive of labour,
Save the low funeral tread,
Or voice of craftsman whispering to his neighbour
The good deeds of the dead.
Timmins.—An almost life-speaking marble bust of Mr. Sam.
Timmins was placed in the Reference Library, April 26, 1876. It was
destroyed in the fire, but has been replaced, and few could tell the
present bust is not the original one.
Tyndale.—The Londoners have honoured themselves by
erecting on the Thames Embankment a statue to the memory of the
Reformer Tyndale, whom we have partly to thank for the English version
of the Bible. To help pay for their ornament it was decided that the
names of all towns subscribing £100 or more should be inscribed
on the pedestal, and the Bible-lovers of Birmingham scraped together
£86 15s. 3d. for the purpose, leaving the Mayor (Mr. Wm. White)
to dip into his own pocket for the remaining £13 4s. 9d.
Unett.—The granite obelisk in St. Philip's
churchyard, opposite Temple Street, was erected to the memory of
Lieut. Colonel Unett, who fell at the storming of Sebastopol. It was
uncovered June 19, 1857.
Watt.—One of the finest productions of Francis Chantrey,
the sculptor, is generally acknowledged to be the monument in
Handsworth Church to James Watt, which was placed there in September,
1827. The figure is said to bear a very remarkable resemblance to Mr.
Watt, who is represented seated in a Grecian chair, with compasses and
open book, as though tracing on the open page. On the front of the
pedestal is inscribed:—
JAMES WATT,
BORN
19 JANVARY,
1736.
DIED
23 AVGVST,
1819,
PATRI OPTIME MERITO.
E.M.P.
The statue in Ratcliffe Place was subscribed for in 1867, and the
figure is very like the portrait of Watt. It was unveiled Oct. 2,
1868.
Whateley.—A marble bust (by Peter Rollins) of J.W.
Whateley, Esq., M.D., was placed in the Board Room of the General
Hospital, June 1, 1877.
Wright.—Mr. John Bright, June 15, 1883, uncovered the
statue erected in memory of Mr. J.S. Wright, in front of the Council
House. The inscription upon it is as follows:—
"John Skirrow Wright, born February 2, 1822, died April 13,
1880. In memory of the simplicity, kindliness, and integrity of his
life and of his unselfish, untiring, and patriotic devotion as a
public man, this monument is erected by the united gifts of all
classes in the town he loved and for which he laboured."
Steam Engines.—The first steam engine (then called a fire
engine) used for the purpose of pumping water from coal mines was put
up in 1712 by Newcomen and Calley, at a colliery near Wolverhampton,
owned by Mr. Back, the ironwork, &c., being made in Birmingham,
and taken hence to the pit-head. The first of Watt's engines made
at Soho, was to "blow the bellows" at John Wilkinson's
ironworks at Broseley, in 1776. Watt's first pumping engine was
started at Bloomfield Colliery, March 8, 1776. Having overcome the
rotary motion difficulties, Watt applied steam to tilt hammers and
rolling mills in 1781, and to corn-grinding mills in 1782; taking out
patents in 1784 for the "governor," "parallel
motion," &c., including also specifications for a travelling
engine, though it was William Murdoch who first made a practical
working model of a locomotive. The first engine worked by steam in
this town that we have record of was put up at same works in Water
Street, in 1760.
Steamships.—If we do not build steamships in Birmingham,
it was James Watt who proposed the use of screw propellers (in 1770);
Wm. Murdoch, who invented the oscillating cylinder (in 1785); Watt and
Boulton, who furnished engines (in 1807) for the first regular steam
picket in America; and James Watt, jun., who made the first steam
voyage on the sea (October 14, 1817), crossing the Channel in the
Caledonia, and taking that vessel up the Rhine.
Stirchley Street, about a mile and a quarter north-east of
King's Norton, has a Post Office, a Police Station, a Board
School, and a Railway Station. Notwithstanding these signs of modern
civilisation, and the near proximity of Cadbury's Cocoa
Manufactory, Stirchley Street is, as it has been for many a
generation, a favourite country outing place for weary Brums having a
chance hour to spend on change of scene.
Stocks.—Putting people in the stocks appears to have been
a very ancient mode of punishment, for the Bible tells us that
Jeremiah, the prophet, was put in the stocks by Pashur, and the gaoler
who had charge of Paul and Silas at Philippi made fast their feet in a
similar way. Whether Shakespeare feared the stocks when he refused to
go back to "drunken Bidford," after sleeping off the effects
of one carouse with the "Sipper's Club" there, is not
chronicled, but that the stocks were not unknown to him is evident by
their being introduced on the stage in "King Lear." The
Worcester Journal of Jan. 19, 1863, informs us that "this
old mode of punishment was revived at Stratford-on-Avon, for
drunkenness, and a passer-by asking a fellow who was doing penance how
he liked it, the reply was—'I beant the first mon as ever
were in the stocks, so I don't care a fardin about it."
Stocks used to be kept at the Welsh Cross, as well as a pillory; and
when the Corporation closed the old prison in High Street, Bordesley,
they took over the stocks which formerly stood alongside the
whipping-post, on the bank in front of the present G.W.R. Station. The
last date of this punishment being inflicted in this town is 1844,
when the stocks were in the yard of the Public Office in Moor Street.
Storms and Tempests.—A great storm
arose on Wednesday, November 24, 1703, which lasted three days,
increasing in force. The damage, all over the kingdom, was immense;
and at no period of English history has it been equalled. 15,000 sheep
were drowned in one part of Gloucestershire. We have no record of the
immediately local loss.—In a storm on March 9, 1778, the
windmill at Holloway Head was struck by lightning, the miller was
hurt, and the sails shattered.—January 1, 1779, there was a
violent gale, which, while it wrecked over 300 vessels on our coasts
did great damage as far inland as Birmingham—Snowstorms were so
heavy on January 23 and 24, 1814, that all communication between here
and London was stopped for five days.—There was a strong gale
September 26, 1853, during which some damage was done to St.
Mary's Church, to the alarm of the congregation therein
assembled.—A very heavy storm occurred June 15, 1858, the day
after the Queen's visit, lasting for nearly three hours, during
which time three inches of rain fell, one half in twenty
minutes.—Some property in Lombard Street was destroyed by
lightning, June 23, 1861; and parts of Aston, Digbeth, and the Parade
were flooded same time.—There was a terrific thunderstorm,
August 26, 1867; the rainfall being estimated at seventy-two tons per
acre.—During a heavy thunderstorm, June 17, 1875, the lightning
set fire to a workshop in Great Charles Street: killed a women in
Deritend, and fourteen sheep and lambs at Small Heath.—In a
heavy gale, January 30, 1877, a chimney stack was blown down in
Jennen's Row, killing two men; and a wall was levelled in Harborne
Road, on February 20, another poor fellow losing his
life.—During the night of August 2 and 3, 1879 (when many parts
of the outskirts were flooded in comparatively the shortest time in
memory), the residence of W.E. Chance, Esq., Augustus Road, was struck
by lightning, and considerable damage done; but no personal injuries
were reported.—During the storm of October 14, 1881, much local
damage was done, while round Coventry and Tamworth districts many
hundreds of trees were broken or uprooted. In Windsor Park, 960 trees
were blown down and more than a thousand damaged; 146 shipwrecks
occurred on the coasts.—During a gale December 11, 1883, a large
stained glass window of St. Philip's Church was shattered; part of
a house in Charles Henry Street was blown down, two persons being
killed; a child was killed at Erdington, by chimney falling through
roof, several persons had limbs fractured, and there was generally a
great injury to property.—On Sunday, June 15, 1884, St.
Augustine's Church, Hagley Road, and the Congregational Chapel,
Francis Road, were struck by lightning during a tempest, and the
Chapel was somewhat injured.
Streets.—It is not every street that is a street in
Birmingham, for, according to the Post Office Street List, besides a
dozen or so to which distinctive names have been given, like
Cheapside, Deritend, Digbeth, Highgate, Islington, &c., and 726
streets called Streets, there are in the borough 178 Roads, 86 Lanes,
69 Rows, 19 Squares, 11 Crescents, 2 Quadrants, 5 Arcades, 1
Colonnade, 5 Parades, 484 Terraces, 1,572 Places, 26 Passages, 20
Yards, 47 Courts (named, and twenty times that number numbered), 16
Mounts (twelve of them Pleasant), 24 Hills, 5 Vales, 2 Valleys, 23
Groves, 4 Retreats, 11 Villas, 14 Cottages, 2 Five-Dwelling, 179
Buildings, 14 Chambers, 12 Walks, 4 Drives, 3 Avenues, 5 Gullets, 1
Alley (and that is Needless), 1 Five-Ways, 1 Six-Ways, 6 Greens, 2
Banks, 2 Villages, 3 Heaths, 3 Ends, and 1 No Thoroughfare.
Sultan Divan.—Formerly a questionable place of amusement
in Needless Alley, but which was bought for £7,500, and opened
by the Young Men's Christian Association, January 7, 1875.
Sunday in Birmingham.—Sunday dogfights have been
heard of in this town, but it was sixty years ago, when brutal sports
of all kinds were more rife than now. Prior to that, however, many
attempts were made to keep the Sabbath holy, for we read that in 1797
the heavy wagons then in use for transport of goods were not allowed
to pass through the town, the authorities fining all offenders who
were so wicked as to use their vehicles on the Lord's Day. The
churchwardens were then supported by the inhabitants, who held several
public meetings to enforce the proper observance of the day, but there
have been many changes since. In January, 1856, a Sunday League, for
opening museums, libraries, &c., on the Sabbath, was started here.
In the last session of Parliament in 1870, there were eighteen
separate petitions presented from this town against opening the
British Museum on Sundays. The Reference Library and Art Gallery
commenced to be opened on Sundays, April 28, 1872, and they are well
frequented. Sunday labour in the local Post Offices was stopped Aug.
10, 1873. In 1879 a society was formed for the purpose of delivering
lectures, readings, and addresses of an interesting nature, on the
Sunday evenings of the winter season, the Town Hall, Board Schools,
and other public buildings being utilised for the purpose (the first
being held in the Bristol Street Schools, Oct. 19, 1879), and very
popular have they been, gentlemen of all sects and parties taking
part, in the belief that
A Sabbath well spent
Brings a week of content.
In 1883, during an inquiry as to the extent of drunkenness on the
Sabbath, it was shown that the county of Warwick (including
Birmingham) was remarkably clear, as out of a population of 737,188
there had only been 348 convictions during 1882. For Staffordshire,
with a population of 980,385, the convictions were 581.
Northumberland, 687 convictions out of 434,074. Durham, 1,015 out of
867,586. Liverpool 1,741 out of 552,425. Manchester, 1,429 out of
341,508.
Sutton Coldfield, on the road to Lichfield, is celebrated even
more for its park than its antiquity. The former was left to the town
by the Bishop of Exeter (John Harman), otherwise known as Bishop
Vesey, who was a native of Sutton, and whose monument is still to be
seen in the old Church. He procured a charter of incorporation in
1528, and also founded the Grammar School, and other endowed
charities, such as the Almshouses, the Poor Maidens' Portions,
&c., dying in 1555, in his 103rd year. Thirty years' back, the
park contained an area of 2,300 acres, but a small part was sold, and
the railways have taken portions, the present extent, park and pools,
being estimated at 2,034 acres, the mean level of which is 410 feet
above the sea level. A good length of Icknielde Street, or the Old
Roman Road, is distinctly traceable across a portion of the park. King
John visited Sutton manor-house in April, 1208. On the 18th of
October, 1642, Charles I. reviewed his Staffordshire troops here,
prior to the battle of Edgehill, the spot being long known as
"The King's Standing." The mill-dams at Sutton burst
their banks July 24, 1668, and many houses were swept away. The
population is about 8,000, and the rateable value is put at
£50,000, but as, through the attraction of the park, the town is
a very popular resort, and is rapidly increasing, it may ultimately
become a place of importance, worthy of municipal honours, which are
even now being sought. The number of visitors to the park in the
Whit-week of 1882, was 19,549; same week in 1883, it was 11,378; in
1884, it was 17,486; of whom 14,000 went on the Monday.