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A TALE OF ONE CITY:
THE NEW BIRMINGHAM.
_Papers Reprinted from the "Midland Counties Herald"_,
BY
THOMAS ANDERTON.
Birmingham: "MIDLAND COUNTIES HERALD" OFFICE.
TO BE HAD FROM CORNISH BROTHERS, NEW STREET; MIDLAND EDUCATIONAL CO., CORPORATION STREET.
1900
I.
PROLOGUE.
The present century has seen the rise and development of many towns in various parts of the country, and among them Birmingham is entitled to take a front place. If Thomas Attwood or George Frederick Muntz could now revisit the town they once represented in Parliament they would probably stare with amazement at the changes that have taken place in Birmingham, and would require a guide to show them their way about the town--now a city--they once knew so well. The material history of Birmingham was for a series of years a story of steady progress and prosperity, but of late years the city has in a political, social, and municipal sense advanced by leaps and bounds. It is no longer "Brummagem" or the "Hardware Village," it is now recognised as the centre of activity and influence in Mid-England; it is the Mecca of surrounding populous districts, that attracts an increasing number of pilgrims who love life, pleasure, and shopping.
Birmingham, indeed, has recently been styled "the best governed city in the world"--a title that is, perhaps, a trifle too full and panegyrical to find ready and general acceptance. If, however, by this very lofty and eulogistic description is meant a city that has been exceptionally prosperous, is well looked after, that has among its inhabitants many energetic, public-spirited men, that has a good solid debt on its books, also that has municipal officials of high capabilities with fairly high salaries to match--then Birmingham is not altogether undeserving of the high-sounding appellation. Many of those who only know Birmingham from an outside point of view, and who have only lately begun to notice its external developments, doubtless attribute all the improvements to Mr. Chamberlain's great scheme, and the adoption of the Artisans' Dwellings Act in 1878. The utilisation of this Act has certainly resulted in the making of one fine street, a fine large debt, and the erection of a handful of artisans' dwellings. The changes, however, that culminated in Mr. Chamberlain's great project began years before the Artisans' Dwellings Act became law.
The construction of the London and North Western Railway station--which, with the Midland Railway adjunct, now covers some thirteen acres of land--cleared away a large area of slums that were scarcely fit for those who lived in them--which is saying very much. A region sacred to squalor and low drinking shops, a paradise of marine store dealers, a hotbed of filthy courts tenanted by a low and degraded class, was swept away to make room for the large station now used by the London and North Western and Midland Railway Companies.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Tale of One City: the New Birmingham by Anderton
- 2: Then the suburbs of Birmingham
- 3: Sanitary reforms were required
- 4: Not being a resident in Birmingham
- 5: The gas companies practically L1
- 6: The discontent and disaffection which Mr
- 7: Yet when these traders are disturbed or disestablished
- 8: The manufactures of Birmingham are
- 9: And came to Birmingham in 1854
- 10: Chamberlain was never easily disconcerted
- 11: Chamberlain making such a fiasco
- 12: Chamberlain was Mayor of Birmingham
- 13: Chamberlain a delightfully pleasant host
- 14: Chamberlain was born to be a much pictured man
- 15: He had set afloat great local schemes
- 16: Birmingham grows and prospers all will be well
- 17: Chamberlain has had his troubles
- 18: Chamberlain pere in such prosperity
- 19: Richard Chamberlain took the most prominent position
- 20: Kenrick was Mayor of Birmingham in 1877
- 21: Collings was not long in following him
- 22: Powell Williams seems to have been made
- 23: Schnadhorst in the course of the evening
- 24: The property of the Calthorpes
- 25: Handsome Gothic houses in Edgbaston
- 26: Dealing with unearned increment being an impracticability
- 27: And once I tasted the famous comet wine
- 28: I am forcibly reminded of what Birmingham was some years ago
- 29: Vaughton was tragically concerned
- 30: And it is pretty much the same at Handsworth
- 31: In the important new thoroughfare
- 32: Feeney and Jaffray had put their hands to the plough
- 33: Jennings went over to another local evening paper
- 34: I allude to the Birmingham Town Crier
- 35: John Henry Chamberlain joined the staff
- 36: Even when I was writing for the Town Crier
- 37: The name of the Elkington firm has a world wide fame
- 38: Other makers of good steel pens in Birmingham
- 39: In a word they produced different varieties of jewellery
- 40: In speaking of the jewellery trade in Birmingham
- 41: The gold and gilt jewellery trades
- 42: Unostentatious satisfaction which quite contents him
- 43: Although my undergraduate friend was
- 44: And I now get tea full of delicious fragrance and flavour
- 45: And can think of few belfries whose contents surpass St
- 46: Unostentatious looking tobacconist's shop
- 47: Others who prefer a more pushing
- 48: I remember seeing Thackeray in Birmingham
- 49: Meeting Professor Tyndall at Mr
- 50: Jaffray who was rather an early man became weary before Mr
- 51: Winfield lived at the Hawthorns
- 52: The establishment of Rabone Bros
- 53: But Kenilworth fell very flat
- 54: That the oratorio is unequal may be admitted
- 55: A trio of my composition a setting of Tennyson's Break
- 56: And skill that mark musical conductorship of the present day
- 57: There was a new Requiem by Stanford
- 58: Herbert 72 Chamberlain
- 59: Each and you own CHAMBERS'S ENCYCLOPAEDIA
- 60: The Articles in Chambers's Encyclopaedia
- 61: Publishers the midland counties herald
