Site logo
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Shop
  • Links
    • Books
    • Maps
    • Archaeology
    • Organisations
    • Photographs
    • Places of Interest
  • Galleries
    • A Flavour of Sutton Coldfield
    • SCLHRG Visits
    • Research
  • History Spot
  • Research
    • Transcriptions
    • Original Research
    • Proceedings
    • Maps
    • Research by Non-Members
    • Research Tools
  • Maps
  • Serendipity
    • Artifacts
    • Memories
    • Old Videos of Sutton
    • Pamphlets
    • Postcards
    • Remembering Roger Lea
    • Remembering Stephen Roberts
    • Sutton Coldfield Poetry
    • WWII
  • Join Us
    • Your Account
    • Member Login
  • Sign In

    Forgot your username?
    Forgot your password?

Sutton Coldfield Local History Research Group

Regular meeting, Tuesday - Sutton Coldfield Library (2.00pm to 4.30pm)
  • Home arrow
  • History Spot arrow
  • Articles 281-320
Title Published Date Author Hits
sdc10476-copy-copy_edited.png
Manor House 2

Manor House 2 [311]

In feudal times all the villagers were tenants of the lord of the manor, but the lord also retained some land and property for his own use, called the demesne. The extent of the demesne in Sutton Coldfield is given in the Domesday Book of 1086 as ...

  • Published: 14th May 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
14th May 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 180
sdc10392_edited.png
Moor Hall Farm

Moor Hall Farm [291]

Ralph Sponer lived at the stone house known as Moor Hall Farm in 1550. It was conveyed to him in that year by Bishop Vesey - Sponer had married Elizabeth, a relative of the Bishop. Sponer was not a farmer - hardly any land was conveyed with the ho...

  • Published: 2nd December 2013
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
2nd December 2013 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 202
sdc10766-copy-3.png
More And Ashfurlong

More And Ashfurlong [308]

More and Ashfurlong Quarter, or More et Asshforlong as it appears in the 1416 Court Roll, is shaped like a lamb chop. Whereas the other four Quarters include ancient settlements with open fields dating back to Saxon times, the houses and fields of...

  • Published: 20th April 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
20th April 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 189
knock.png
NHV E Brook

New Hall Valley E Brook Retting [301]

The E Brook flows in an artificial channel all the way from Upper Holland Road to Eachelhurst Road, where it crosses the old boundary of Sutton. In the Middle Ages, when the brook followed its natural course, there were no bridges over this stretc...

  • Published: 8th March 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
8th March 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 196
2014-01-16-2015-12_edited.png
Oughtons Mill

Oughton's Mill [294]

Oughtons Mill in Sutton Coldfield closed down about 150 years ago when Mr. John Jerome transferred its gun-barrel making business to his main factory in Birmingham’s Gun Quarter. The gun barrel mill had been built nearly 300 years ago by Jos...

  • Published: 5th January 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
5th January 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 228
paddling_pool.png
Park E Brook

Park E Brook [296]

Many parts of Sutton Park have a natural landscape untouched by the shaping hand of man, but in other parts the results of exploitation of the Park by our ancestors is plain to see. Mike Hodder, in his new book The Archaeology of Sutton Park, note...

  • Published: 29th January 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
29th January 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 188
2013-10-24-0830-13.png
Penns Lane Cottages

Penns Lane [282]

There was a water mill where Penns Hall Hotel now stands for nearly three hundred years. For many years it was a wire mill, owned by the Webster family - Joseph Webster I came in the 1740s, Joseph Webster II died in 1788, leaving his widow Phoebe ...

  • Published: 22nd October 2013
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
22nd October 2013 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 210
sdc10668_edited.png
Quarters

Quarters [287]

The Hearth Tax was introduced shortly after the Restoration of King Charles II in 1660 to raise money for the many debts and expenses of the new administration. It was levied on every hearth (also known as the chimney tax) as a fair means of ensur...

  • Published: 17th November 2013
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
17th November 2013 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 208
sdc10824_edited.png
Sacheverell Will 2

Sacheverell Will 2 [314]

George Sacheverell Esquire of New Hall Sutton Coldfield had no children, so the will of this wealthy man, made in 1715 at the age of 82, disposes of his wealth and property mainly among the rest of his family. He leaves New Hall to “his lovi...

  • Published: 4th June 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
4th June 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 195
sdc10829_edited-copy.png
Sacheverell's Will

Sacheverell Will Motto [313]

George Sacheverell Esquire of New Hall Sutton Coldfield made his last will and testament on May 5th 1715 at the age of 82. It is an unusual will, reflecting the strong views of this eccentric man. New Hall had been bought by George’s grandf...

  • Published: 22nd May 2014
  • History Spot
  • Articles 281-320
22nd May 2014 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 181

Page 3 of 4

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • Visitors:
  • MOD_JSVISIT_COUNTRY_RU49.4%Russian Federation
  • MOD_JSVISIT_COUNTRY_GB31.3%United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  • MOD_JSVISIT_COUNTRY_US19.0%United States of America

History Spot

  • Articles 1-40
  • Articles 41-80
  • Articles 81-120
  • Articles 121-160
  • Articles 161-200
  • Articles 201-240
  • Articles 241-280
  • Articles 281-320
  • Articles 321-360
  • Articles 361-400
  • Articles 401-440
  • Articles 441-480
  • Articles 481-500
Jonessoft
  • Privacy
  • Disclaimer
  • Support
  • Sitemap

Copyright © 2025 Sutton Coldfield Local History Research Group. All Rights Reserved.