Mainly For Brummies But All Are Welcome To Join In The Birmingham Fun & Chat |
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Pam
I hope you don't mind but I turned your photos around the correct way and made the size slightly more manageable. Sometime later I might move some of your posts to the Nechells thread.
hi ya pam...what wonderful family pics you have there..there are so many folk who have none at all...thanks for sharing them with us and i note that the first one was taken in longacre..do you know what number the house was...of course its changed a bit now and my sister lives on the corner of longacre and holborn hill...there could be some old pic on the nechells thread for you to look at if not i do have a few here myself...
lyn
Posts: | 15.017 |
Date registered | 02.24.2010 |
Quote: Pam Keeling wrote in post #194
I loved the picture of Betholem Row with the kids outside. I was born there in march 1956. Ther were 3 house and mine was number 11. I think it may be me my brother and some of ths williams kids who in the end house by the yard. There were 11 of them as i remeber in a very small house. Cellar living/kitchen room 1bedroom 1st floor and the attic room . Our loo was the last one along and my moms wash house was on the opposite corner of the yard. Every Monday the midden man came and cleaned out the loos through a metal door in the wall in the the street. Good times.
Posts: | 15.017 |
Date registered | 02.24.2010 |
Thank you Phil. Not very good with the pics lol .
Hi lyn. All i can remember is that my Nans house was at the top end of longacre close to the corner with Charles Arthur street. . I know she had a yard out the back and a bit of garden behind which is where one of my pics was taken.
Posts: | 181 |
Date registered | 04.13.2013 |
hi pam...click on the link below it will take you to carl chinns site and 5 pages of pics of charles arthur st you can also use the search box to search for other roads and streets...should keep you happy for a while lol..
http://lives.bgfl.org/carlchinn/search.c...&k8=&startrow=1
Posts: | 15.017 |
Date registered | 02.24.2010 |
Pam
Take a look at the Nechells thread I've posted some photos.
Quote: phil wrote in post #186
While we are in the area, another couple of cut throughs. Cleve Terrace that ran from Wheeleys Rd to Owen Street and Betholem Row that ran from Bath Row to Lee Bank.
Posts: | 181 |
Date registered | 04.13.2013 |
Sorry Phil called you Mike. Brain not engaging in the correct gear today Pam
Posts: | 181 |
Date registered | 04.13.2013 |
Quote: Pam Keeling wrote in post #218
Sorry Phil called you Mike. Brain not engaging in the correct gear today Pam
I started out with nothing and I've still got most of it left.
http://brummiestalking.org.uk/
Posts: | 43.994 |
Date registered | 12.22.2009 |
Pam
As far as I am concerned you can copy any photo I have posted on here just remember to repeat any acknowledgements that I may give to the photographer or owner if you post them elsewhere. If I don't give any still don't assume that someone doesn't hold the copyright somewhere. it just means none was given when I sourced the photo in the first place.
Thank you Phil. It wont be posted anywhere but added to my own personal collection. Pam
Posts: | 181 |
Date registered | 04.13.2013 |
Another photo of Cleve terrace taken from about halfway along it. In this photo it shows the Queens Hospital at the end of the terrace, later to be renamed the Accident hospital. You can also see the back entrance to what was once King Edwards Grammar School for girls at a time when this area was once known as Edgbaston before it became Lee Bank because it wasn't posh enough to be associated with the former.
Hi pam just went on the jewish synergy for Birmingham and it does mention a jewish graveyard also says the jewish first came in the 1700
BIRMINGHAM, West Midlands: PDF Print E-mail
International Jewish Cemetery Project - England
For Community Information, see Birmingham on JCR-UK.
"The first synagogue of which there is any record was in The Froggery in 1780. But there was a Jewish cemetery in the same neighborhood in 1730." [Jewish Year Book, 2005.] "...since which time three subsequent cemeteries have been consecrated - one in Granville street, near the Canal, another between Bath and Islington rows, in a thoroughfare which has consequently come to be known as Betholom row, and the present cemetery at Witton, which was consecrated on February 14th, 1871." [Jewish Year Book, 1910.]
Posts: | 42 |
Date registered | 02.06.2010 |