Resources: Books Printed By Thomas Aris (fl. 1742-1761)

A Lyrick Poem, 1742.

1742.

The Good Shepherd, 1743 (10 pages).

A Miscellany of Mathematical Problems, 1743.

The Humours of the Fleet, c. 1745. 

A Treatise [...], 1746.

The Judgment of Whole Kingdoms and Nations, 1747.

The Polite Companion (volume 1), 1749.

The Polite Companion (volume 2), 1749.

Divine Harmony, 1752.

A Collection (music), 1753.

The Art of Pleasing at Court, 1754.

The Life of Miss Fanny Brown, 1760.

Street By Street: Berkley Street (c. 1830s-Present)


Berkley Street and surrounding area, including the canal, from the 1841 vista of Birmingham.
Held at Birmingham Archive.

Berkley Street still exists and is off Broad Street. 

Images above: The 1841 vista of Birmingham should not be taken as a literal representation of Birmingham, but it provides an impression of the town in the early years of Queen Victoria's reign. Berkley Street was drawn but not named on the 1839 map of Birmingham (see the bottom of the post), the first map on which it can be found. On this map were stone, coal, timber and brick wharfs along the canal basins. The open spaces, such as those by the Jewish Burial Ground (bottom left), were small gardens but these gardens were not to last much longer.

Images below: Looking south-west down Berkeley Street towards the wharfs of the Worcester & Birmingham Canal Company in 1874. Tupper and Company, galvanised iron merchants and manufacturers, had buildings on each side of Berkley Street, accessible by the canal basin which came under the street. This canal basin is visible in the image at the bottom left and right, and boats are moored loading up wares from Tupper & Comp. The premises of the galvanised iron works are also seen on the 1800s map.

Tupper and Company, 1874. Held at Birmingham Archive, MS 1342/351.

1880s map of Berkeley Street.

Snippet from Tupper and Company, 1874, showing the buildings and canal basin (and a dog).

Snippet form Tupper and Company, 1874.

Full image of Tupper and Company, 1874.


Maps

Berkley Street was not drawn on the 1819 map of Birmingham.

Snippet of 1839 map of Birmingham.

Snippet of 1851 map of Birmingham. Written Berkeley Street.

Snippet of 1880s map showing Berkeley Street.

Street By Street: A Short History of Ann Street


You can request this illustration with the numbers written underneath and a list of 1851 census entries for each of these numbers.

Birmingham was first surveyed in 1731 and a map of the town was drawn up (see map here). The line of Ann Street existed, but it was called New Hall Lane, and stretched more-or-less along the line that Colmore Row covers today. Ann Street is now, again, part of that whole road now named Colmore Row, but when houses were first built it was a seperately named road. Building work on the north side began in the late 1740s and the road was then called Bewdley Street (the first mention of it being named Ann Street was in 1777*). The houses, originally on the outskirts of Birmingham, would have been dwelling houses then later converted into shops as the town grew around. The south side was slower to develop as it was on the site of the gardens of Bennett's Hill House, though some building took place in the 1780s. It was probably due to its proximity to the Bennett's Hill gardens as the town grew up all around that it became affectionately known also as Mount Pleasant at the same time as being called Ann Street.


Ann Street (Mount Pleasant) in 1774.
Between 1794 to 1817 a hay market was held on Bennett’s Hill (the hill that was there before the street that took its name), till it moved to Smithfield Market.* In 1805 building work began on the new free church called Christ Church at the bottom corner of the gardens of Bennett's Hill House, where Ann Street met New Street. In 1818 the lease of Bennetts Hill House and its gardens expired and the land attached began to be sold off and built upon with two new roads cutting through it, Bennetts Hill and Waterloo Street. At this time many of the houses on the south side of Ann Street (which may have been more makeshift) began to be replaced.

In 1834 the Town Hall was built, but the bend in Ann Street meant that people walking down the road to the Town Hall from the St. Philip's area were deprived of a fine view of the new building. Almost immediately there were plans to remove all the buildings from the bottom end of the street and straighten the line so that there would be a much better framing of the Town Hall. Eventually, the council decided that a new set of public offices should be built on the land, and they had bought up all the leases, finally building the Council House on the site in 1873, which occupies the site today. There are no buildings from the Georgian or Regency periods surviving on the north side of Ann Street (now part of Colmore Row), but some later examples do survive on the south side.

At the time of the 1851 census most of the original houses from the 1740s and 1750s were still standing on the north side of the street, though the houses between number one and about number twelve had been replaced in the late 1820s or early 1830s as they had become quite delapidated, probably by Richard Blood who had built himself a slightly finer house at numbers seven and eight, though he had moved out by 1851 (see illustration of street below). Numbers 25 and 26 had also been rebuilt at a similar time, and may have been the site of a dilapidated property described in 1796, the premises of silversmiths Bishop and Waterhouse. The property was owned by Misses Mary and Elizabeth Steen and next door to Joseph Hepinstone (actually spelled Heptinstall), who ran a file manufactory that was still being run by his family till the building was demolished. The Misses Steen requested a number of renovations to their property including the ‘roof of [the] warehouse to be raised one storey [...] a new pair of Elm stairs out of the middle shop into the top shop, to take down the summer house in the garden and build a new necessary, New Door to the present Necessary, [...] New shutter with oak curb and Hinges to the cellar window [...] paint all the woodwork on the outside twice over with good oil and colour’, and all this ‘in a proper manner and with good Materials’.*

The summer house was a remnant of when all these premises had large gardens and is a reminder of a time before the area was built up with manufactories like Heptinstall’s, warehouses and courts of houses. The comment about the middle shop and the top shop is also interesting, the 'shops' would have been workshops rather than in the sense that we would use the term. The addition of the requirement of quality work suggests a propensity for shoddy building work. There is no follow up to whether the work was carried out as the two ladies wished, but considering that it was probably one of the two buildings that were demolished, it probably wasn't carried out as well as they may have hoped.

Using the 1851 census we can gauge how the street was being used at the time. The north side was mainly shops with the families running them living above; some families had a single servant and others had none. If you required something for dinner, there was a fishmonger and a game dealer, but also two confectioners who would also supply you with cakes as well as savoury dishes such as pies. There were three premises involved in making furniture and other general shops. Some of the premises weren't lived in and were being used as offices, such as the house agents and the new buildings at 25 and 26. The Register Office was at 15 Ann Street, run by the registrar, Henry Knight. The Knight family lived at the house, where they had lived for several years, and it was probably in the front room where marriages would take place and births and deaths could be registered. There were three pubs, all on the north side, the Town Hall Tavern, the Bell & Candlestick (briefly known as the Cole Hole) and the Old Bricklayer's Arms.

Behind the north side of the street were six courts, four of which were lived in. Some of the courts had names, such as court 5 which was called Humphrey's Court, probably after the builder. In 1845 a survey of 202 Birmingham courts was conducted, including the four in Ann Street; all the courts examined suffered from either disrepair or poor drainage or both, and one court was considered in the opinion of the surveyor to be ‘disgraceful’,* though which one it was is not mentioned. It is not useful to make generalisations about the state of the courts, all were different and some houses were more comfortable than others, though many did suffer neglect. The alley entrance to the left leads to court 6 which was the only one of Ann Street's courts to be photographed.

Before we move to the south side of the street, one building in particular is worth noting, and that is the crenellated house on the corner. In 1851 it was Bryan's pastry shop and confectioner's, but the town collectively seemed to remember one of its previous incarnations; that of Allin's Cabinet of Curiosities and his 'Multum in Parvo' shop. It was probably the Allin family that had originally commissioned the property and the three next to it back in the mid 1700s. Opposite the crenellated shop was Christ Church (see picture below), the wall and railings of which took up about a third of the south side of Ann Street.


Watercolour of part of the north side of Ann Street, with Christ Church in
the foreground. Painted in 1873 by A. E. Everitt.
















The majority of the houses on the south side were unoccupied, they were offices for solicitors, accountants, an architect (originally Thomas Rickman, but on his death by his partner Mr. Hussey), and metal merchants. Those living in the houses were clerks to the businesses or live-in housekeepers. The whole side of the street had been built from the early 1820s, probably because the lease of Bennett's Hill House had not allowed the building of permanent premises, so only when that lease expired could proper building work begin. The use of the two sides of the streets shows the beginnings of a change in how the buildings in the central parts of Birmingham were occupied, buildings were less and less becoming homes and being used as offices instead, with the previous occupants moving out to the suburbs. Another building on the south side of the street that had people living in it was the school which had been Birmingham's first infant school. The school had had a residence for the school master built attached to it, but on the 1851 census this is being lived in by one of the teachers and a housekeeper.

Overview for Ann Street
The houses on Ann Street were not quite as elegant as some of those on nearby streets for the well-to-do such as Paradise, but they were never-the-less built for and inhabited by the wealthy inhabitants of Birmingham, but those with slightly less money to spend. They would have all originally, most likely, been dwelling houses, and had large gardens at the rear, and there was originally a water source, possibly a stream, that ran through the gardens.* By the late 1700s we discover that some of the properties are being used as manufactories, such as Heptinstall's file manufactory and the silversmith's next door. At the same time as this, courts of new houses were being built behind the original ones, and new groups of poorer residents moved in. Although some of the courts behind were not well maintained, they were not the worst in the town. In the mid to late 1820s (possibly into the early 1830s) many of the more run down houses were replaced, and this period may have revamped some of the more tired parts of the street. The building of the Town Hall in 1834 would have helped to produce a thriving area around Ann Street and the other nearby streets. This can be seen on the 1851 census by the wide range of shops and trades that Ann Street supported.

Ann Street in Maps

On the 1731 map Ann Street was part of New Hall Lane, the grand house, New Hall, could be reached via the tree lined carriage-way (seen top right). Bennett's Hill House and its walled garden can be seen on the other side of New Hall Lane. *This map segment has been rotated 90 degrees anti-clockwise for ease of comparison.*
By 1750 the street was now called Bewdley Street, and was beginning to be built on (you can see an illustration that includes most of these buildings at the bottom of this post). The gardens of Bennett's Hill House have been extended with tree lined walks, and the road to New Hall is now being build upon.
By the time of the 1778 map the street is beginning to be called Ann Street, as well as its other name; Mount Pleasant. The south side is still to be built upon, but the north side is fully built up. The properties still have their large gardens, and you can see their position opposite Bennett's Hill which explains why the street was known as Mount Pleasant.







NOTES
* References available on request.
To find out more about Ann Street click on the label below.

1731 Map of Birmingham





















SCROLL DOWN TO SEE A LARGER IMAGE OF THE MAP
Colour adaption below and also found at Map Seeker
1731 Map of Birmingham by William Westley (probably junior)

It is thought that William Westley (senior) was the designer of much of the Priory Estate, which was an area in the north-west of the town built up in the early Georgian period; this is likely as a street within the area was named Westley Row (as seen on map). The Priory Estate was Birmingham’s first planned estate of houses, the centre-piece of which was a grand square (possible also by Westley), all of which would have displayed the new fashions in street and house building. Urban planning was new in the towns and this can be perceived as the usage of the houses in the Square was restricted, there was a certain amount of uniformity to the houses, and certain areas were built up as a coherent whole. It was probably a certain amount of family pride that encouraged the production of this, Birmingham’s first map; the Westley’s had had a hand in the changing landscape and preserved it through this and a number of prospects that Westley produced at a similar time.

Westley dedicated the map to Edward Digby and William Peyto (Esq.s) who were Members of Parliament for Warwickshire (this was long before Birmingham had any of its own MP’s). This plate is a later copy, as can be determined from the addition of the text ‘in the possession of Theoph. Richards in the year 1789. Nephew to Mr. Westley’. The man mentioned in Theophilus Richards, who is one of the notable Richards family that resided in High Street for many years and whose gun-making business still survives today. The map contains two written sections which read;
On the left: “In the Year 1700, Birmingham Contained 30 Streets, 100 Courts and Alleys, 2504 Houses, 15032 Inhabitants, one Church dedicated to St. Martin & a Chappel to St. John & a School founded by Edward 6th also 2 Dissenting Meeting Houses.”
On the right: “The Increase of this Town from 1700 to ye Year 1731~ is as follows: 25 Streets, 50 Courts and Alleys, 1215 Houses, 8254 Inhabitants, together with a new Church, Charity School, Market Cross, & 2 Meeting Houses. for a further account see [illeg.]”

The map depicts the relatively newly built St. Philip’s church still on the outskirts of the town; in the same area is the grand New Hall, and also off New Hall Lane (but unmarked) id Bennett’s Hill House and you can see the elegant gardens marked at the rear of the house. Much of the top end of what is now New Street is still being used as cherry orchards, as is much of the land (as Walker’s orchard) where Corporation Street now runs, and Corbett’s bowling green also sits adjacent to here. The original moats can be seen encircling the old parsonage of St. Martin’s and the buildings that were the seat of the De Birmingham’s. You can also find a number of industrial landmarks including Lloyd’s slitting mills and Kettle’s steel houses.

The 1731 map is unusual as it was drawn with west at the top, which makes it a little more difficult to compare this with later maps. For this blog I have turned the 1731 map 90° so that north is at the top and edited the street names so that they can be read the correct way up, but I have left all other landmarks as they were. I have also included the map in its original form for its own value.

Engravers: George Anderton (c. 1724-1775)

'Plan of the University and City of Oxford', surveyed by Isaac Taylor, engraved by George Anderton, this copy published by William Jackson, 1751.
Held by the Bodleian Library and digitised on Cabinet.

On 3rd February 1750 the following advertisement appeared in Aris's Birmingham Gazette:
This day is published, Price Five Shillings-- on two sheets of Imperial paper, A new plan of Oxford, from an accurate Survey taken in 1750 [...].*1*

George Anderton was a Birmingham engraver. Between about 1740 and 1750 he resided on a premises on Temple Street, not far from the junction with Temple Row.*1* 

It is also noted (without a source) that Anderton attempted type founding and, with the employment of Samuel Caslon (brother of the Cradley-born typefounder William Caslon), that he produced 'a little specimen of Great Primer - Roman and Italic - in 1753.*1a* 

Anderton apprenticed Robert Hancock in 1745 for £30,*2* Thomas Broomhall in 1756 for £21, and Matthew Darby in 1757 for £40.*3*



Notes
*1* Joseph Hill, The Book Makers of Old Birmingham (Birmingham: Cornish Brothers, 1907), p. 27.
*1a* Joseph Hill, The Book Makers of Old Birmingham (Birmingham: Cornish Brothers, 1907), p. 28.
*2* Apprenticeship of Robert son of John Hancock to George Anderton engraver of Birmingham £30, 28 January1745, National Archives, IR/1/17 fol. 184. 
*3* Birmingham print apprenticeships: https://bookhistory.blogspot.com/2013/01/warwickshire.html.

Ephemera: Irish State Lottery (1801) printed by Swinney & Hawkins

Irish State Lottery, 1801, printed in Birmingham by
Swinney and Hawkins.

Tour of Kings Norton & Northfield: Inside Middleton Hall - Robert Fox's Will

Robert Fox was a yeoman (gentleman farmer) working Middleton Hall Farm in the late 1600s. He was probably born in the early 1630s as he married Barbara Hasslock in 1655, and he died in 1698 being buried at St. Edburgha in Yardley on August 4th.

His will included an inventory listing all the rooms and goods at Middleton Hall, which gives an insight into what the Hall was like in the late seventeenth-century.

In the Hall
3 Table-boards, 2 jointed forms, 2 screens, 4 jointed stools, 1 brass candlestick. £2 - 0 - 0d

In the parlour
1 table-board and 2 forms, 1 side-table, 4 chairs, 1 bed, 1 press with cupboards, 1 grate, fire shovel & tongs, 2 looking-glasses. £7 - 1 - 6d

In the kitchen
1 table-board, 3 plain forms, 4 chairs, 1 clock, 1 jack, 1 grate, fire shovel & tongs, cobberts & spits, 2 dripping-pans, 10 pieces of tinware, 1 box of drawers. £5 - 4 - 9d
Brass & Pewter, meat in the roof, wheat in the house and barn. £34 - 16 - 6d

In the chamber over the buttery
3 bed, 1 jointed chair, 1 half-headed bed, 2 coffers. £4 - 3 - 6d

Over the dairy house
1 jointed beadstead & 2 others with all things belonging to them. £5 - 4 - 6d

Over the parlour & in the porch chamber
2 beds with furniture to them, 3 flaskets. £8 - 3 - 6d

Over the back house
1 bed, 2 little tables, 1 chest, 1 coffer, 1 chair. £11 - 0 - 0d

Over the kitchen
1 bed, 1 press with cupboards, 2 chests, 1 trunk, 1 chair, a stool, 1 grate, 1 closet of books. £9 - 2 - 4d

In the cheese chamber
The cheese & oats & pulse. £15 - 0 - 0d
All the linen with wool, bags and strike with other small measures. £8 - 9 - 6d
Cheese presses with other things belonging to the dairy. £3 - 2 - 6d

In the back house
1 furnace, 1 malt mill, with other things belonging to it. £2 - 0 - 0d

In the buttery
6 half-hogsheads. £1 - 11 - 6d

His wearing apparel and money in purse. £10 - 0 - 0d

£50 more in real money. £50 - 0 - 0d

Cattle and other things without doors
17 cows, 1 bull, 2 heffers, 2 weaning calves, 12 sheep. £66 - 0 - 0d
6 horses & colts, 3 hogs, 6 store pigs. £26 - 15 - 0d
The corn on the land & hay in the barn. £70 - 15 - 0d
2 waggons, 2 tumbrells, ploughs & harrows & other husbandry tools. £25 - 5 - 6d
Item for lumber & odd things forgotten & coals for the fire. £9 - 15 - 9

£375 - 11 - 4d

Witness our hands.
John Smith
Thomas Mucklow

KEY
Cobbert: ?
Coffer: a strongbox or small chest for holding valuables.
Malt mill: used in brewing.
Tumbrel: Two wheeled cart for a single horse or ox.

Tour of Kings Norton & Northfield: Middleton Hall and the Manor of Middleton

Middleton Hall stood on the corner of - what is now - Woodlands Park Road and Bunbury Road, its land being the site now taken up by Redmead Close. Middleton Hall Road was named after the hall, stretching from Pershore Road to the hall itself, but is a relatively modern addition, being constructed in about 1870. In 1871 about three families lived along it and it was called Middleton Hall Lane.

The area around the Hall, including the Tenants estate, was part of Northfield until the 1920s. The parish of Northfield was anciently divided into several parts; the manors of Northfield and Selly (or Selley), and later Weoley, as well as the sub-manor of Middleton (later Haye and Middleton), and Middleton Hall was the manor house of Middleton. Middleton was the youngest of these sub-manors, with both Northfield and Selly being mentioned in the Domesday Book, but Middleton was formed in the latter part of the twelfth-century. It is thought to have been named after its position half-way between the villages of Northfield and Kings Norton.

Within Middleton were several farms including Rowheath Farm and Hay Green Farm; barns of the former surviving off Selly Oak Road and converted into housing. Middleton Hall itself had a sizeable farm attached called Middleton Hall Farm, which stretched along - what is now - Woodlands Park Road, out along Northfield Road, and down Popes Lane behind the Bunbury Road.

The Sub-Manor of Middleton
Ralph Paynel was the first known holder of Middleton in the late 1100s, and gave 'the land of Middletune and lahaie' to Bernard Paynel. 'lahaie' was later recorded as 'Le Hay', and was probably the Hay Green area.

In the 1200s the owners of Middleton took their name from the lands. John de Middleton was first mentioned in 1273, and the Middleton family held the lands until about the mid-1400s. After this, Middleton passed through the hands of several families.

Throughout the early centuries of Middleton's history there is no mention of a hall, although there would have been some form of manor house on the lands, most likely on the Woodlands Park Road/Bunbury Road site, which was near the roads running between Northfield and Kings Norton. This would have been a prime position to take goods to market, and to move around the rest of the manor.

Middleton Hall
The first known mention of 'Middleton Hall' was as 'Middleton Hall Farm' in 1596, when it was occupied by Henry Cookes. This was probably the timber-framed building which survived until the early 1800s, and was possibly moated, as traces of a moat were discovered during its demolition, but no archaeological survey was conducted so any evidence is now lost.

One hundred years after Cookes, the interior of Middleton Hall is brought to life through an inventory drawn-up after the death of its then occupant, Robert Fox. Fox was described as a 'yeoman', a gentleman farmer, and occupied Middleton Hall from at least 1684 till 1698, although in 1684 he would have been about 50 years old so he, and his wife Barbara, had probably been living there for several decades previously.

Fox's inventory shows that Middleton Hall had six rooms downstairs and five upstairs. Downstairs was a hall, parlour, kitchen, cheese chamber, back house and buttery. The back house had a malt mill, so was used for brewing, and the other rooms are pretty self explanatory. The parlour contained '2 looking-glasses' and the hall a 'brass candlestick' which were expensive items for the time, showing the wealth of the family. The five rooms upstairs all had beds in them, but some would probably have been used for entertaining guests, especially the chamber over the kitchen, which would have been warmer as it had a fire (meaning it had a brick chimney, another expense). This room also contained a 'closet of books', again showing a family of wealth as well as literacy (see Fox's full inventory here).

Middleton Hall probably bore several similarities to Selly Manor, which was moved from its original location in Selly Oak to its present site in Bournville Village between 1914 and 1916. Like Middleton Hall, Selly Manor was originally a manor-house, both were timber-built, and both a similar size, although Middleton Hall was possibly a little larger (although both probably had several additions made to them over the centuries). But the best way to get a sense of what Middleton Hall was like at this time is to visit Selly Manor (visit details here).

In 1789, the occupant of Middleton Hall was William Henshaw, another yeoman running the farm as well as residing in the house. His diary for that year survives, and outlines the maintenance of the farm from winnowing grain and sowing peas, to helping 'Cherry' the cow give birth (other cows were called 'Kurley' and 'Prat'). His story will be added in the farm section, below.

Henshaw's diary suggests that he struggled financially, and in the 1790s Middleton Hall Farm was bought by George Attwood, a wealthy ironmonger, and grandfather of Birmingham's first Member of Parliament, Thomas Attwood (whose statue was at the rear of the Town Hall, presumably to be replaced after the current works are finished). Attwood cared less about farming, and more that the land contained mineral deposits. He still owned the Hall in 1840, which was tenanted out to Robert Thornley.

It was perhaps Attwood, or one of his tenants, who remodelled Middleton Hall sometime in the first half of the nineteenth-century. The historian Leonard Day states that the front was 'encased in brick, which gave the Hall the external appearance of a gentleman's residence in the Victorian style'. Because the old building was beneath, the brick encasement (see below) gives a sense of the shape of the timber-framed Hall.

Click to enlarge.
Photo: Sketch of Middleton Hall from a, now lost, photograph; showing the Victorian re-build from about the early 1800s.

The 1911 census noted that the Victorian Middleton Hall had twelve rooms (excluding workrooms, landing, hall, closets and bathrooms), so had been slightly extended from its 1690s predecessor.

The Hall was demolished in 1952.


MAPS OF MIDDLETON HALL
1880s, click to enlarge.

1900s, click to enlarge.

1910s, click to enlarge.

1930s, click to enlarge.

1960s, click to enlarge.