Boldmere

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Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox UK place

Boldmere is a suburb and residential area of Sutton Coldfield, City of Birmingham, England. It is bordered by New Oscott, Sutton Park, Wylde Green and Erdington, and is in the ward of Sutton Vesey.<ref name="ONS">Template:Cite web</ref>

History

Toponymy

"Boldmere" is a corruption of the word "Baldmoor", coming from the Middle English bald (meaning "a white patch") and the Anglo-Saxon moor (meaning "boggy land"). Therefore, Boldmere literally means a "bald moor"; a treeless patch. Bald (meaning "bold") was also a personal name used by the Anglo-Saxons.<ref name="dargue" />

Name history

At the time of John Speed's 1610 atlas The Theatre of the Empire of Great Britaine, Boldmere was known as Cofield Wast.<ref name="suttoncoldfieldatoz">Template:Cite web</ref> The area was described as "an open, wild and windy expanse, covered with gorse".<ref name="williams">Template:Cite book</ref>

The United Kingdom Census of 1841 refers to the area as Baldmoor Lake, which was once a body of water south of the Chester Road. The lake has also been known as Bowen Pool, Baldmoor, and Bolemore Lake,<ref name="dargue" /> though no lake is shown on Speed's map of 1610 (nor on other later maps). The census did, however, list a dwelling on the Chester Road as "Lake House".<ref name="suttoncoldfieldatoz" /> There is, however, a Lakehouse Road and Baldmoor Lake Road in the area.<ref name="stnic_boundaries">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="baldmoorlakeroad">Template:Cite web</ref>

By 1856, the area had become known as The Coldfield, a name which lasted at least until the introduction of the railway.<ref name="higgins">Template:Cite web</ref>

Expansion

On introduction of the 1825 inclosure act,Template:Which the area saw little expansion due to common land becoming privately owned.<ref name="suttoncoldfieldatoz" /> The 1841 census listed eight families in the area, including agricultural workers, a painter, an Irish carrier, and a wire drawer.<ref name="dargue" /> It is likely that the latter worked at Penns Mill,<ref name="dargue" /> a nearby wire mill run by the Webster family (with Baron Dickinson Webster's business involvements including the transatlantic telegraph cable).

Boldmere did expand, however, upon the introduction of the London and North Western Railway. Two stations opened in the region at Wylde Green and Chester Road, in 1862 and 1863 respectively.<ref name="rab_wg">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="rab_cr">Template:Cite web</ref>

A second housing boom occurred in the 1930s, with both private and council housing being built.

Administration

In 1857, Boldmere was designated as an ecclesiastical parish, formed from the parish of St Michael's in Sutton Coldfield.<ref name="hemlingford">Template:Cite book</ref> When Sutton Coldfield was reorganised in 1885 (under the Municipal Corporations Act 1882), Boldmere was created as a ward, before being divided into Boldmere West and Boldmere East in 1935.<ref name="hemlingford" />

Boldmere is now part of the Royal Sutton Coldfield Town Council,<ref>Royal Sutton Coldfield Town Council https://www.suttoncoldfieldtowncouncil.gov.uk/the-council/</ref> which was formed following a consultative ballot in 2015. The role of this organisation is the same as a parish council. Boldmere is in the Sutton Vesey electoral ward.<ref name="ONS" />

Geography

File:BoldmereGate.jpg
Boldmere Gate, providing access to Sutton Park on the north boundary of Boldmere

Boldmere is triangular in shape and roughly bounded on the north by Sutton Park, on the east by the Cross-City railway line and on the south-west by Chester Road. Boldmere Gate provides access to Sutton Park.

The main shopping centre of Boldmere is at the northern end of Boldmere Road, which runs north-south through the centre of Boldmere. The collection of shops at the southern end of Boldmere Road is known locally as Little Boldmere.<ref name="dargue" />

Gibbet Hill, in the north-west of the area, is named after the gibbet from which Edward Allport was hanged for the murder of London silk dyer John Johnson in the area on 28 March 1729.<ref name="higgins" /> Although this site is no longer referred to as Gibbet Hill, and was undeveloped until (at least) 1906,<ref name="higgins" /> the toponymy has survived in the name of Gibbet Hill Wood; an area which Birmingham City Council have identified as "an area of potential archaeological importance" due to "surviving archaeological remains".<ref name="veseyward">Template:Cite web</ref>

Location in context

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Economy

Boldmere is well-served with shops, hairdressers, pubs and restaurants. There are also a post office<ref name="postoffice">Template:Cite web</ref> and a public library.<ref name="library">Template:Cite web</ref> All banks in Boldmere have now closed with the nearest branches being in Erdington or Sutton Town Centre.

Industry

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File:Powell's Pool, Boldmere.jpg
A view of the north-east end of Powells Pool – the slipway is visible in the foreground

In the 18th century, Powell's Pool (then known as New Forge Pool) near Boldmere Gate was the site of the mill used by John Wyatt to experiment with mechanised cotton spinning.<ref name="dargue">Template:Cite web</ref> Along with Lewis Paul, he developed the roller spinning machine and the flyer-and-bobbin system (Paul patented the former on 24 June 1738). In 1750, the mill was used by William Powell to manufacture spades (using locally-grown ash wood for the handles). It is believed that the first steel garden fork was manufactured at the mill.<ref name="dargue" /> The building was later used to produce steel for the production of pen nibs.<ref name="dargue" /> The Ordnance Survey's First Series map (1834) identifies a forge in this area,<ref name="ord1834">Template:Cite map</ref> of which John Willets (a forgeman), John Page (a spade maker), and John Harris (a saw maker) have all been identified as proprietors.<ref name="higgins" />

The mill was demolished some time after 1936, after lying unused and dilapidated for a number of years. Although none of the building's structure remains, a waterfall (providing a spillway to Powell's Pool) is now sited where the millrace was located.<ref name="dargue" />

Transport

Boldmere's main roads are Jockey Road (A453), Chester Road (A452) and Boldmere Road (B4142). Boldmere is served by Wylde Green and Chester Road railway stations, both on the Cross-City railway line, which runs between Lichfield Trent Valley and Redditch (via Birmingham New Street).

Boldmere is served by a number of National Express West Midlands bus services, including routes 5, 66, 77 and 907.

Places of worship

File:StMichaelsBoldmere.jpg
St Michael's Church

The churches in the area are St Michael's (Church of England),<ref name="stmichaels">Template:Cite web</ref> St Nicholas's (Roman Catholic),<ref name="stnicholas">Template:Cite web</ref> Chester Road Baptist Church,<ref name="chester road">Template:Cite web</ref> Boldmere Methodist Church,<ref name="boldmeremeth">Template:Cite web</ref> and Wylde Green United Reformed Church.<ref name="wyldegreenurc">Template:Cite web</ref> St Nicholas's Church was preceded by a chapel that was designed by Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and which opened in 1841.<ref name="nicholas_history">Template:Cite web</ref> These churches take their name from Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman.<ref name="nicholas_history" />

The ring of bells at St Michael's church are noted as being one of the few rings in Birmingham still in existence that were produced before the introduction of scientific bell tuning in the 1890s (John Taylor & Co installed Birmingham's first harmonic ring at St. Barnabas' Church, Erdington in 1906). The bells' 18th–19th century tonal quality is rare as most pre-scientific bells in Birmingham have been recast by the Taylor or Whitechapel foundries.<ref name="dargue" />

In 1964, St Michael's church was partially destroyed by fire, with only the tower and south aisle surviving. The building's reconstruction was not without controversy, particularly due to the unconventional use of Staffordshire blue brick.<ref name="dargue" />

Education

Educational facilities in the area include Boldmere Infant and Nursery School,<ref name="bins">Template:Cite web</ref> Boldmere Junior School,<ref name="bjs">Template:Cite web</ref> St Nicholas Catholic Primary School,<ref name="stncps">Template:Cite web</ref> and Boldmere Adult Education Centre.<ref name="baec">Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1848, Reverend W. K. Riland Bedford worked towards opening Boldmere National School for Girls and Infants. The building served as Boldmere's Anglican church until the opening of St Michael's in 1857, and is now a health clinic.<ref name="dargue" />

Leisure

Culture

Boldmere is home to Highbury Theatre Centre,<ref name="Highbury Little Theatre">Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref> a community theatre organisation.<ref name="theatre">Template:Cite web</ref> The theatre has been in its current location since it was built by its original members in 1942.

Sport

Boldmere Wanderers FC who were founded in 2018, play their home games at Rectory Park, Sutton Coldfield.

Boldmere Golf Course is located on the northern edge of Boldmere, and hosts Europe's longest-running pro-am golfing competition.<ref name="golf">Template:Cite web</ref> The annual Great Midlands Fun Run uses Boldmere Gate as the entrance to Sutton Park.<ref name="funrun">Template:Cite web</ref>

Boldmere St. Michael's Football Club is a football club based in Boldmere, Sutton Coldfield, England. They are currently members of the Midland League Premier Division and play at the Trevor Brown Memorial Ground.

Famous residents

Hazel Court, a British actress known for her appearances in horror films of the 1950s and 60s, lived in the area and attended Boldmere School and Highclare College.<ref name="court">Template:Cite web</ref>

Emma Willis, née Griffiths, who was born in 1976 lived on Boldmere Road during her childhood and attended Wylde Green Primary School.Template:Citation needed

References

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Further reading

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