The Streets of Brum - Part Two
Carl Chinn
- Price: £13.95
- Publisher: Brewin Books
- ISBN: 9781858582627
- Availability: In Stock
Birmingham's streets, roads and lanes are
an absorbing aspect of our history. They call out to us about long dead
landowners, notable figures from the history of England, Brummies long
forgotten, farms that have been swept away by the outpouring of our city,
remarkable physical features, distant battles, intriguing foreign places and
mysterious happenings.
Questions as to their origins leap out from
a multitude of Birmingham’s street names. Why was Fawdry Street first called
Noah’s Ark Passage? Was treasure to be found in Golden Hillock Road? How did
Foulemoreslone become Formans Road? Did Gate Street have a gate? What has
Franchise Street got to do with the battle for working-class rights? Where was
The Froggery? What connection is there between creatures of mythology and Hob
Moor Road? And why should the Holte, Gooch and Gough families have so many
streets and roads named after them?
In this deeply researched book, Carl Chinn
looks at scores of street names, bringing to life their meaning and those people
who belonged to them. Carl Chinn MBE is Director of the BirminghamLives
multimedia project at South Birmingham College, Professor of Community History
at The University of Birmingham, a broadcaster with BBC WM and a columnist with
the Birmingham Evening Mail. The Streets of Brum: Part Two is his 23rd book.
Carl Chinn MBE is well known as an academic, broadcaster and author. A passionate Brummie, he is Community Historian at The University of Birmingham, a regular columnist for The Birmingham Evening Mail, and a presenter of his own local history radio show from BBC Pebble Mill. He is the author of many books on Birmingham's history.
Details | |
Format | Paperback |
Pages | 142 |
Dimensions | 240mm x 170mm |
Illustrations | 57 black & white |