Aston History


 Entrance to Aston Park

Aston Hall Today

 The Drive
Aston Park

History of Aston
During the Old English period, as the population in a village grew then some folk left to make clearings in forests, woods and heathland and start new settlements. Aston was one such place. In the Doomsday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Estone, meaning the east farmstead, village, manor or estate. It is debatable as to which main settlement Aston was to the east of. There is little likelihood that it was Birmingham for that manor was to the south and anyway was smaller than Aston in that period. In his history of Aston, J. Newton Friend felt that the manor was east of Wednesbury which he felt had been a major Old English fortified stronghold (burh) during was so called because it was east of the Icknield Street (also known as the Ryknield Street) - the Roman road which ran through Birmingham and Sutton Coldfield (see Stirchley).
In 1066, Aston was one of the many manors held by Earl Edwin. He did not fight at the battle of Hastings and was allowed to keep his lands by the victorious William the Conqueror. These possessions were lost when Edwin fled England in 1071 after becoming associated with Anglo- Saxon rebellions. Eighteen years later, the Domesday Book recorded that Aston was held by Godmund, a Saxon, from William FitzAnsculf, a great lord based at Dudley who in addition controlled the manors of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Erdington, Witton, Handsworth, Perry and Little Barr. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries his successors were also overlords of the manors of Bordesley, Little Bromwich, Saltley, Nechells and Duddeston. Like other powerful lords, William held his land from the king in return for military service. Similarly, this feudal system meant that Godmund owed William military service.
The Domesday Book indicated that Aston had a church, a mill, a wood which was three miles long and half a mile broad, and eight hides. A hide was an area which could support a family and its dependants and varied in size between 60 and 120 acres. The population was made up of 30 villeins, twelve bordars and one serf - and their families. The term villein was introduced by the Normans and it referred to someone who held a virgate of land, between 25 and 30 acres, which was scattered between the open fields of a manor. Villeins were able to support themselves but had to work on the lord's demesne (his home farm), pay rent for their and, and serve the lord in other ways. Bordars were smallholders who farmed plots which had been cleared from woodland and wasteland and which usually were on the edge of a manor. With less land they found it hard to be self supporting. Both bordars and villeins were unfree peasants but unlike serfs, they had houses and some land. The manor itself was worth one hundred shillings and had a population of about 200. This was about five times as many people as Birmingham which did not boast either a mill or a church and was valued at only twenty shillings.
During the thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, Aston Manor in Warwickshire passed to the de Erdingtons (see Erdington) and then the Grimsarwes - the male line of which died out middle of the I400s. The heiress of the family, Maude, married a wool merchant called John atte Holte - meaning John at the wood. Maude passed on Aston Manor to their son and it stayed in the hands of the Holtes for over four hundred years. This family was 'on the up' and soon they also came into possession of both Duddeston and Nechells. During the reign of King Henry Vlll they further increased their wealth through the actions of Thomas Holte. A lawyer, he benefited from this position as a local commissioner for the dissolution of the monasteries- process which occurred after the king abandoned the Catholic faith and set up the Church of England. Throughout the land, commissioners and others were able to buy cheaply the prime lands which had belonged to religious houses. Thomas was no exception and he lived in splendour at Duddeston Hall. His grandson left this mansion after he built the magnificent Aston Hall between 1618 and 1635. Sited on a hilI, the great house allowed Sir Thomas Holte to look down and over his wide lands.
During the eighteenth century, Aston Manor and other properties passed to Sir Lister Holte who bought streches of Small Heath (then part of Bordsely). He died in 1770 and his will was a strange thing. He left his real estate to his brother, Charles, and his male heirs. However, if Charles had no sons then the Holte lands were to go to Heneage Legge, a nephew of Sir Lister's first wife; and if he had no successors then everything would be passed on to another cousin, Lewis Bagot, Bishop of Saint Asaph.if Bagot's line failed, the properties were to be given to Wriothesley Digby of Meriden and his heirs. Finally, if he had no issue then the Holte estates would revert to Mary, the daughter of Charles and the wife of Abraham Bracebridge of Atherstone. All three men mentioned in the will had no heirs general and on the security of Mary gaining her inheritance, Abraham Bracebridge raised mortgages on the properties. Because of his business failures he was unable to discharge his loans and in 1818, to meet the demands of
His creditors, he had to obtain an act of Parliament allowing the partion of the Holte lands.  In this way, the Legge family came to own a great part of Aston, Ashted, Duddeston, Nechells and the Gosta Green neighbourhood, whilst the Digbys took over large swathes of Small Heath in Bordesley (see Small Heath). With a small village based around the parish church, Aston Manor itself remained largely rural! Until 1848 when much of 327 acres of parkland of Aston Hall was sold off. According to Tomlinson's Plan of 1758 this was just over a third of the total area of Aston Manor (943 acres). Within a few years, new roads had been cut in the pentagonish-looking area bounded by Park Lane, High Street (Aston), Witton Road, Frederick Road/Sycamore Road, Church Road, and the Lichfield Road. This led to the disappearance of Potter's Farm, the house of which had been sited in what became Bevington Road. South west of the former parkland, Aston New Town had emerged by 1860. Bounded by Alma Street on the west, its limit with Birmingham was below Phillips Street and Inkerman Street. The eastern extent of Aston New Town was provided by Sutton Street and The Retreat, beyond which lay the district of Aston Brook. lts focus was Aston Cross, and it stretched along the Lichfield Road towards Church Road. The final neighbourhood within Aston Manor (excluding Lozells) was that to the south of Salford Reservoir and was focused on Waterworks Street- By the early 1890s Aston had a population of almost 54,000 and building was ongoing. The Staffordshire Pool had been filled and the Nelson Road locality was apparent, whilst Holte Road and others had filled in the space beside Witton Lane. Both neighbourhoods had well- built and terraced houses for the lower middle class. In his novel! Eve's Ransom (1895), George Gissing explained that such properties 'represented a step or two upwards in the gradation which, at Birmingham, begins with the numbered court and culminates in the mansions Edgbaston'. Within Aston the prosperous middle class lived in the Park district, but most the rest of the town was filled largely with back-to-backs From I869, the whole district and Lozells was under the authority of the Aston Manor Local Board of Health. Fifteen years later, the district had its own Member of Parliament and in 1903 it was incorporated as a borough with council offices at the present Albert Road Library. By this date roads had been cut through the last part of Aston's open land, lying between Frederick Road and Trinity Road and between Aston Park and Witton Road. In 1911, Aston Manor lost its independence and became part of Birmingham. The back-to-back parts of Aston were knocked down in the 1950s and 1960s. New council houses and flats were constructed in the Newtown and Waterworks Street neighbourhoods, although Aston Cross has few people and is dominated now by businesses. Like Small Heath, the area is best known for its football team, in this case Aston Villa. ' Importantly, Aston Manor (including the modern Aston and Lozells) was much smaller than Aston Parish which included Bordesley (embracing Small Heath and much of Sparkbrook and Bordesley Green); Castle Bromwich (including Bromford, Buckland End, Hodge Hill and Shard End); Deritend (including Highgate); Duddeston (including Ashted, much of Gosta Green and Vauxhall); Erdington (including Short Heath and Stockland Green); Little Bromwich (including much of Alum Rock and all of Ward End); Nechells; Saltley (including Washwood Heath and part of Alum Rock); Water Orton; and Witton. Bar for Water Orton and part of Castle Bromwich all these places are now in Birmingham. For registration purposes, however, they remained within Aston.


 RAILWAYS

The Aston Viaduct

In 1837 the Grand Junction Railway from Liverpool came through Aston. The route, surveyed by George Stephenson, took advantage of the Tame valley's slight gradient, although this involved several crossings of the meandering river - including two across the great bend near Aston Church. A ten-arched viaduct was built over the two arms and the meadow between. James Watt Junior's objections to the railway may partly explain its route: even so he lost the east end of his prized chestnut avenue from Aston Hall. Within the next decade a cut was made to join the two arms of the river loop on the Witton side. There were low bridges over Witton and Aston Lanes and Lichfield Road, canal and brook: therefrom the great curve of the rails swept down through Nechells and Duddeston to a temporary halt at Vauxhall, thence to Curzon Street terminus in the Rea valley.
Astonians wishing to travel on the new-fangled trains to Liverpool or London had to make their way to Curzon Street: from 1842 they could go to Derby and the north-east from Lawley Street terminus. Ten years later Navigation Street (New Street) Station opened in the centre of Birmingham.
In 1854 Aston Station gave local access to the Grand Junction line and New Street: not until 1880 was there a loop line from Aston to Stechford on the London line. Witton Station opened in 1876. Meanwhile Hockley Station (1852) had provided an access point for the Black Country and Oxford lines, and Saltley Station (1854) for the Midland lines to north-east and south-west.
In 1862 the Sutton Coldfield line (later extended to Lichfield) left the Grand Junction south of Aston Hall Road. Both these lines helped to accelerate development of east Aston and south Erdington, as there were sufficient stopping trains to provide a commuters' service. Until the advent of electric tramcars the railways were much used for travel to Aston Hall and Lower Grounds, and to Sutton Park for some decades longer. There were no sidings or railway facilities in the manor, chiefly because the lines were carried on embankments above the Tame floods. 'Aston' Goods Yards were in Duddeston, and those near Witton Station were in Handsworth.



Dedicated To Preserving The History Of Aston

LOZELLS

Victoria Road

This road stretched from Lichfield road to Six Ways at one end Victoria road police station which used to be the Aston Manor law courts, Victoria Playhouse, the swimming baths were they used to use for treating people with impetigo, which was a chemical bath of a white solution. nasty but necessary during those days. Opposite the baths a delicious faggot and peas shop, selling tripe chicklings and all types of cooked foods,just ideal after a session in the swimming baths.





THE TEASMADE

It is reputed that the inventor of the Teasmade, the machine for making you a hot cup of tea as you awakened from your slumbers, probably the first automatic tea making machine was a device patented by gunsmith Frank Clarke, and manufactured by the Automatic Water Boiler Company in Birmingham. I have been trying to find more information about Frank Clarke, but with little success. In the 1886 Census only one likely candidate has come to light.


The house above is still standing and occupied the windows have been modified the  basic structure of the house is the same

It seems quite likely that young Frank would have followed his father and eldest brother into the gun making trade. Chris Upton, Senior Lecturer in History at Newman College of Higher Education in Birmingham, confirms that Frank Clarke's gun manufacturing business appears in several Birmingham trade directories. He was based in Snow Hill during 1902 and for some years afterwards, and he turns up at various other addresses until the late 1930's.The Automatic Water Boiler Company enjoyed London offices at 31 George Street, Hanover Square, and also at 26a Corporation Street, Birmingham (this site has since been redeveloped and the new property is to be occupied by Beatties department stores). Maria Twist from Birmingham Local Studies  Library tells me that there is no mention of the Automatic Water BoilerCompany or number 26a in Kelly's directories for 1903 or 1910. Number 26 is referred to as Midland Chambers. There was an outfitters called Thomas Donne Ltd. at street level, and several different firms in the floors above, including The Wholesale Traders' Association for the Hardware, Furnishing & Metal Industries Limited, and George A. Heyes & Co., business agents. It is therefore unlikely that the teasmades were actually made in Corporation Street which was, after all, in the middle of the shopping and businessdistrict.
Research and Thanks to Sheridan.
contact www.Teasmade.com



Early map of Aston after 1758







Buttons

The Mother-of-pearl which is cut into buttons is of various kinds, and some of great value. The white-edged Maccassar shells are fished almost entirely from the seas round Maccassar, in the East Indies. these shells, the "mothers'' of the orient pearls so coveted by beauty, are the finest in size and the purest in grain of any the  world. Their. value in this town varies from £140 to £160 per ton. The yellow-edged Manilla shells are similar in size and character, but have a yellow tinge on their border, which diminishes their. value, and, moreover, they are more brittle in turning. They are used chiefly in the Sheffield trade for knife handles ; their value is from £100 to £120 per ton .  
The Bombay and Alexandria shells, smaller in size and a less delicate in tint and clearness, are found in the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea.
the Black shell is from the Archipelago of the Pacific ocean, this is a beautiful coloured shell and polishes to a very dark shade, but giving out all the colours of the rainbow with exquisite blends.
The least valued pearl shells are the Panama variety been of a size akin to oyster's,these only allow a small percentage the shell to be used commercially this was the main reason for there low tonnage price.
Most of the button trade was carried out in small family run concerns , which was a cottage industry in the premises were they lived. The outlay required to carry out these tasks was a small nominal expense, labour was the main criteria many hands working for small wages.
There were no idle hands every one had a job to perform in dirty squalid conditions, from sorting the shells, then the experienced man of the house would work out the best cuts from the shells, for the blanks, these would be collected for the driller to put the holes in the blanks, next the polishing and sorting in to sizes and quality ready for the carders to sew the finished buttons on to the cardboard  ready for the sale. usually this would be the owner of a large button making business.




Dr David Holmes
Friend of
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Dr David Holmes
Born in Malta 1855.  Attended Edinburgh University qualified as a doctor 1877.
Qualifications LIC. R. Coll. Surgeon. M.B.Universitity of Edinburgh.
Practised in Aston Manor at the Birmingham General Dispensary in Thimblemill Lane.
He resided at 33 Lichfield road Aston Manor; he attended the death of Robert Houghton in Catherine Street Aston.
This was my great great granddad; he also attended the inquest at the Victoria Inn Lichfield road on the 5 of April 1888, the verdict been death from Syncope caused by exposure too cold.
The coroner Daniel R Wynter admonished the witness William Bowker after the jury where dissatisfied with Bowkers evidence and he therefore refused him expenses and called a most unreliable witness.
The above Dr David Holmes was reputed to be a friend of Sir Arthur Conan Dolye he also was a doctor out of Edinburgh University were he had qualified as a master surgeon registered 1881. And was in residence at No 63 Aston road north at the surgery of Dr Reginald Ratcliffe Hoare a surgeon. He was paid £2 per month for his services, also Dr Arthur C Doyle was at this address from 1878 to 1881 according to the Birmingham Civic Society.
The 1881 census of Scotland listed Arthur C Doyle living with his mother Mary T Doyle born Ireland, at 15 Lonsdale Street Cuthberts Edingburgh.
Both Holmes and Doyle where practising and residing in Aston at the same time and only living a few hundred yards from one another, so it's possible they where friends and they both trained at Edingburgh University.