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 41-80
Title Published Date Author Hits
coal_wagon.png
Fuel

Fuel [64]

Our Medieval ancestors needed a constant supply of wood to keep their fires going, heating their houses and cooking their food. In Sutton there was no shortage of wood, and the Lord of the Manor allowed all the inhabitants “to have the dead ...

  • Published: 5th July 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
5th July 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 245
chester_road_station.png
Green Lanes School

Green Lanes School [66]

A plan of the proposed route for the railway line to Sutton from Aston was produced in 1858. The line passed mostly through fields, and no houses would need to be demolished when the line was built, but even so there were some awkward spots. The l...

  • Published: 28th July 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
28th July 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 193
four_oaks_hall_stone_edited.png
Hartopps

Hartopps [46]

“Verily there are snobs of every degree” - so wrote Richard Holbeche in 1892. He was remembering the 1860s, when the Hartopp family of Four Oaks Hall always arrived late at church, and made a great display of going to their seats with ...

  • Published: 8th March 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
8th March 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 199
parade.png
Hayward's Terrace

Hayward's Terrace [79]

Starter Homes 1830 style.Thomas Hayward, who started out as a wheelwright, went into property development, and was Sutton’s first speculative builder. The population of Sutton was increasing rapidly in 1830, leading to a demand for new housing - s...

  • Published: 1st November 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
1st November 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 186
hill_village_road_edited.png
Hill

Hill [42]

Two hundred years ago the road to Lichfield crossed Ley Hill Common to Mere Green and then followed the twisty lane which is now Hill Village Road. There were houses on either side of Hill Village Road, and lanes leading off to left and right. The...

  • Published: 16th November 2008
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
16th November 2008 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 246
bickley_stone.png
Hill Hook

Hill Hook [68]

The little medieval settlement of Hill Hook did not amount to much - a few cottages, a farmhouse and some fields surrounded on all sides by open common land. The origin of the name is obscure, although Hill Village was not far away, on the other s...

  • Published: 28th July 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
28th July 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 179
2009-02-06-1340-51_edited.png
John Elly

John Elly [41]

The Schoolmaster of Bishop Vesey’s Grammar School from 1647 to 1659 was John Elly. This was the period of the Civil War and Commonwealth, when literacy was seen as very desirable – perhaps Mr Elly was giving lessons to local children a...

  • Published: 3rd February 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
3rd February 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 179
ashfurlong_hall-1.png
Joseph Powell

Joseph Powell [63]

The Clarenceux King of Arms, the Chester Herald, and Rouge Dragon Pursuivant conducted a visitation of the County of Warwick in 1682. They were officers of the College of Arms, and their business was to ensure that families with coats of arms were...

  • Published: 5th July 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
5th July 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 180
pudsey_memorial.png
The Pudseys Of Langley Hall

Langley Hall [77]

Langley Hall, which stood in Ox Leys Road, was pulled down in the 1820s; at one time it was the richest and most splendid house in Sutton. In the Middle Ages it belonged to the powerful De Bereford family of Wishaw, passing by inheritance to Gilbe...

  • Published: 18th October 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
18th October 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 176
ley_hill_cottages.png
Ley Hill

Ley Hill [74]

“Peace!!” wrote Sarah Holbeche under the heading June 14th 1814 in her diary, “Great rejoicings, ox roasted at Ley Hill (then all open common), bread let down in heaps from carts, my first parasol, alas! Proving how heavy the storm by its green dy...

  • Published: 28th September 2009
  • History Spot
  • Articles 41-80
28th September 2009 Roger Lea (SCLHRG) Hits: 192

Page 2 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.