Hercules Cycle
& Motors in Aston, Birmingham were the largest cycle
manufacturers in the world by 1939, having constructed 6 million
bicycles.
The inspiration for Thomas the Tank Engine came from Kings Norton
Station in Birmingham.
At one time Birmingham Corporation owned and developed the village of
Canwell, near Tamworth, they even owned the public house now called The
Bassett!
All the paintings and artefacts from BMAG were stored in Elford Hall in
Elford near Tamworth during the second world war. The hall and
surrounding land and many houses were bequeathed to Birmingham in the 30s.
The first commemorative statue in this country to Admiral Nelson was
erected in the old Birmingham Bull Ring Centre.
The first electric kettle to be fitted with a totally immersed heating
element, thereby doubling its efficiency, was made by Bulpitt and Sons
Ltd., Birmingham, in 1921 The company later adopted the brand name,
Swan.
John Wright, of Birmingham, England, discovered
that potassium cyanide was a suitable electrolyte for gold and silver
electroplating, he first showed that items could be electroplated by
immersing them in a tank of silver held in solution, through which an
electric current was passed."
Cadbury's were the first chocolate manufacturer's
to put pictures on chocolate boxes
In 1861 Richard Cadbury
created the first known heart-shaped candy box for Valentine's Day.
One of the best known glass makers in the world in
the 19th century was the Birmingham firm of F & C Osler,
founded in 1807.
Osler made the giant crystal fountain, over eight
metres high containing four tons of crystal, for the 1851 Great
Exhibition in Hyde Park.
Birmingham means home (ham) of the people of
Beormingas (people of Beroma).
There have been a 144 recorded different ways of
spelling Birmingham.
The population of Birmingham today is nearly 1
million people.
Birmingham people are known as Brummies and the
city is known as Brum or Brumagem
The first safe grenade was the Mills Bomb, an
infantry issue hand grenade developed by William Mills of Birmingham in
1915.
Joseph Lucas of Birmingham made what was probably
the first rechargeable accumulator powered cycle lamp in February 1888.
Fredrick Lanchester and his brother built the first petrol car in
Birmingham in 1896, a single cylinder 5hp internal combustion engine
with chain drive. He also invented the accelerator pedal, detachable
wire wheels, stamped steel pistons, piston rings, hollow connecting
rods, the torsional vibration damper, and the harmonic balancer.
Baskerville typeface, which was the first clear typeface, is still used
by printers throughout the world and is named after its inventor John
Baskerville, who lived and is buried in Birmingham.
The first pneumatic tyre factory in the world was
Dunlop's in Birmingham
The X-ray was invented in Birmingham.
After electricity was discovered no one could find
a use for it! Two Birmingham brothers found a use for it that changed
Birmingham and the world, they patented electroplating. Their names
were Elkington.
Brylcreem was invented in Birmingham in 1929 by
County Chemicals who also manufactured the abrasive cleaner, 'Chemico'.
County Chemicals are still in business in Shirley.
Birmingham manufacturer Henry Clay patented the
making of papier mache which was originally cloth and glue. Many
durable objects such as furniture were made from papier mache.
During the American Civil War Birmingham exported
733,403 guns to America.
In 1876 Nettlefold & Chamberlain had 2000
machines in their factory producing half a million screws every week.
In 1872 D.F. Tayler & Co had 60 pin making
machines making 12 million pins per day.
Birmingham company, Horsfall & Batchelor,
made the first transatlantic telephone cable in 1865. While it was
being laid the end was lost, so they made another one in 1866!
In 1900 the BSA was making 2500 rifles per week.
By 1914 Birmingham was supplying the world with 28
million pen knibs per week.
In Birmingham in 1849 the first building to be put
up solely for the exhibition of manufactured goods was built for an
exhibition of the British Society. It had a 10,000 square feet area,
and together with Bingley House, in the gardens of which it was
erected, 12,800 square feet of exhibition space was available.
There are the remains of a Roman fort (Metchley)
close to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Selly Oak
Ryknield Street, a Roman road, ran from Kings Norton to Sutton
Coldfield (through Sutton Park) and onto Wall, the present day A38
roughly follows its line.
Cotton wool was invented in Birmingham.
Sir Edmund Crane, the co- founder and managing
director of Hercules Cycles, is said to have pioneered the British
export trade
James Webster patented Aluminum in 1881 and opened
the first aluminum factory in Solihull Lodge in 1887.
Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter employs around
6,000 people in the jewellery and related metal trades and is still the
main center for gold-jewellery production in the UK, at its peak it
employed more than 50,000 people. One third of all Jewellery made in
the UK is made in Birmingham.
Baking powder and eggless custard powder were
invented in Birmingham by Alfred Bird.
The first manufacturer of the Robertson's Jam
Golly badge was R.E.V. Gomm, who are still making badges in Birmingham
today.
John Cadbury began in business in 1924 selling tea
& coffee in a shop in Bull Street, next to his parents drapery
shop. He started making chocolate in his own factory in Bridge Street
in 1831.
If all the pallets in Cadbury's Minworth storage
warehouse were lined up they would stretch from Birmingham to
Nottingham.
Birmingham toolmaker Joseph Hudson invented the football referees
whistles which was first used in a game held at Nottingham Forest in
1878. Hudson also made the first Policeman's whistle. .Hudson's also
produced all the whistles used on the Titanic's lifeboats, some of
which have been recovered from the wreck site. One of those whistles
was used by Kate Winslett in the film Titanic. It is estimated that
around a 1000 million whistles have been made in the Jewellery Quarter
since 1870. Hudsons are still in business making whistles today in the
Jewellery Quarter.
During the war the Spitfire and Hurricane fighter
were built in Birmingham as were the Lancaster & Stirling
bomber. The Castle Bromwich factory of Morris Motors built more
Spitfires during the war than all other UK factories combined.
Tolkien, the author of "The Lord of the Rings" and "The Hobbit" grew up
near Sarehole Mill.
Matthew Boulton established his first business at
Sarehole Mill in Birmingham.
Birmingham was the first UK city to have a
motorway route into its centre. (A38M)
The first railway to be opened after the Liverpool
to Manchester railway was the London Birmingham railway, the engineer
was George Stephenson.
The traffic lights at the junction at Salford
Bridge had the most complicated light sequence in the world when it was
opened and delegates even came from Russia to see it. It is now totally
re-modeled and below Spaghetti Junction.
One scheme suggested for the rebuilding of New
Street station in the 60s was to have a heliport on the roof.
British European Airways once operated a regular
helicopter shuttle service from Hay Mills park to Elmdon Airport.
In 1940 the BSA factory in Small Heath suffered a
direct hit from a German bomb, 53 people, mostly night shift workers,
were killed but the council has always declined to erect any sort of
monument.
BSA manufactured half of all the armanants used
during the Second World War.
The City of Birmingham was said to have been
partly destroyed by German bombing during the war but completely
destroyed by council concrete re-development in the sixties!
Prince Charles once described the Birmingham
Library as a building which looked more suitable for burning books than
reading them!
The first performances of both Elgar's Dream of
Gerontius and Walton's Belshazzar's Feast were held in the Birmingham
Town Hall.
The Birmingham town Hall was designed by John
Hansom who designed the Hansom Cab.
Samson Lloyd in partnership with John Taylor a
button maker, opened one of the first banks in Birmingham in 1765, it
was known as Lloyds Bank.
The famous ODEON chain of cinemas was first opened
in Birmingham in 1930 by Oscar Deutsch, the son of a Birmingham metal
dealer. Deutsch lived in Augustus Road, Edgbaston.
Michael Balcon was born in Birmingham and founded Gainsborough
Pictures, his first actor was an unknown called Alfred Hitchcock.
Birmingham still has more mileage of canals than
any other city in the world including Venice.
In 1878 Joseph Lucas invented his famous King of
the Road bicycle lamp. Because so many were stolen he then introduced
The Lucas Missing Lamp Scheme. A £5 reward was offered for
the successful conviction of the thief!
Hercules, in Aston, were the largest bicycle
manufacturers in the world when bicycle manufacture was at its peak.
In 1907 in Birmingham a number of button makers
came together to form the company Buttons Ltd., it became the largest
button manufacturer in the world.
Mr Rolls and Mr Royce first met in a Birmingham
hotel. (this may have been Manchester in fact ! )
Birmingham's assay office, established in 1773, is
the largest and busiest in the world, testing between 40,000 and 80,000
items per day.
Birmingham is further from the sea than any other UK city but the assay
mark for jewellery made in Birmingham is the anchor.
Birmingham at one time was the brass bedstead
making centre of the world.
In the jewelery quarter the workshop floor was
often sold separately from the premises because of the accumulated gold
dust. Sometimes the complete floors would be replaced, the new owner
still being in profit from the reclaimed gold!
In 1899, even though railways are firmly
established, the Birmingham Canal Navigation carries 8.5 million tons
of cargo per year, 20% of Britains total.
The game of lawn tennis was first originated and played in Edgbaston in
1865.
There are 30 other Birmingham's around the world and one crater on the
moon called Birmingham.
The last public hanging in Britain took place at Snow Hill, Birmingham
in 1806.
In 1877 Frederick Wolsey took out the first patent
for sheep shearing machine. The Wolsey sheep Shearing Machine Company
was set up in Birmingham in 1889.The company later began making cars.
The Wolsey Sheep Shearing Machine Company made the
turbine blades for the first jet engine designed by Frank Whittle.
There are suburbs in Birmingham called California,
Hollywood and Broadway.
The Birmingham gun industry came about because of
the decline in the use of swords. Birmingham was a major manufacturer
of swords, supplying around 15,000 for Oliver Cromwells army..
Birmingham was responsible for bringing cheaper jewellery to the masses
with advances made in electroplating in the Jewelery quarter.
In Victorian times Birmingham was known as the pen
shop of the world due to its large pen making industry. Birmingham also
pioneered cheap mass production of pen nibs, at its peak supplying
around 1,500 million nibs per year.
The Birmingham company of Thomas Fattorini in
Hockley designed the FA cup and is still in business and continues to
make the Lonsdale & Commonwealth boxing belts.
Plastic, or more correctly Celluloid, was invented
in Birmingham by Alexander Parkes, while he was working at Elkingtons
and initially called Parkesine.
In July 1924 Birmingham held a street procession
and civic reception for the Norton & New Imperial motor cycle
companies, who between them had won 4 TT races.
The Balti Indian curry dish was first introduced
in Birmingham in the 70s and has spawned a multitude of Balti
restaurants throughout the UK.
Glass containing lime was first made in Birmingham.
Smethwick has never been part of Birmingham but
many Smethwick companies shewed their addresses as Smethwick,
Birmingham.
A sandstone ridge runs directly across Birmingham
from the south west to the north east and roughly follows the line of
the present A38.