Queslett
Template:Use dmy dates Queslett is an area of Great Barr, on the border of Birmingham, and Aldridge, England.
The name (originally Quieslade) has been in use since the 16th century. The first part, from "Queest", means a wood pigeon,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> the second comes from the Anglo-Saxon "slade", for a small valley.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Another old spelling, Queeslet, appears on Victorian maps and postcards.
The area was in Staffordshire, until part was absorbed into Birmingham, then in Warwickshire, in 1928; the Aldridge side became part of Walsall Metropolitan Borough in 1974, when Walsall and Birmingham also became part of the West Midlands county.
In 1810, in A Complete History of the Druids, T G Lomax described the area:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
(the later being a reference to Robert Plot's Natural History of Staffordshire).
The area was mostly developed with private housing from the 1930s onwards, and is centred on the A4041 Queslett Road between West Bromwich and Sutton Coldfield, overlooked by Barr Beacon. A former sand quarry, on the site of William Booth's farm, was subsequently used for landfill. One half of the site is now Queslett Nature Reserve. The Moonstones, an artwork commemorating The Lunar Society, who met at nearby Great Barr Hall, stands in the grounds of a supermarket, on the site of the quarry's former office.
See also
- The Moonstones