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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. Such names
almost demand of us that we ask questions of them. Why is Conybere Street
so called? Where is the Fashoda that is highlighted in a Stirchley road?
How did AB Row gain its name? For what reason are the Adderleys brought
to mind in Saltley? Did people wash themselves in Bath Row? Were cherries
once picked in Cherry Street? And where were Fisherman's Hut Lane, Noah's
Ark Passage, Devil's Tooth Hollow Yard and The Froggery.
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 One is his
21st 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.
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