“There was no room at the Inn, for the Named and Shamed.” I have classified this story as unfit for under 18’s and anyone with a weak constitution as it contains scenes of Graphic Horror. Binge drinking and anti-social behaviour never seem to be out of the news, with politicians […]
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Wolverhampton: A Love Story
One of the most personal decisions in a person’s life is the nature of what happens to them once they shuffle from this mortal coil. In present times, many people choose cremation over burial, partly due to its more cost-effective nature, but also for the freedom it offers. Rather than […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road Part – Eleven
A FEELING OF TRANQUILITY A further look at Steen & Blackets Map of 1871 – recalling No.5 Jennings undertakers, No 6 St James Vicarage, No.7, St James’s Church, No.8 , The Shakespeare Inn and No.9 Horseley Fields Tavern. THEN & NOW Today’s picture of the […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part ten
“WHERE HAS ALL THE FLOUR GONE” Continuing with places of interest A further look at Steen & Blackets Map of 1871 – throwing a little light on No.2, “The Union Mill””, No.3, Gas Yard, No.4, The Union Tap Inn”. THEN & NOW Many times in my childhood and […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part nine
MORE HORSELEY FIELDS NOSTALGIA A further look at Steen & Blackets Map of 1871. Throwing a little light on – No.5, “The Star Vaults”, No.6, Mount Zion, Methodist New Connection, and No.7, Albion Wharf. No.7 on the map is Albion Wharf. Over which part of this Wharfage, James Bradshaw […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Eight
SOMETIMES THE PAST SIMPLY DISAPPEARS This late 1960’s panorama of the shops and businesses on the north side of Horseley fields, were wiped from the map to make way for the bus station and ring-road. On the far right of the group is Corn Hill. The main focus of of […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Seven
“HORSELEY FIELDS ” – a bagful of Nostalgia. Today as I wait for my bus at Pipers Row, Bus Station, I gaze through the glass windows across the ring-road at St Davids Court and the “Novotel”, and my thoughts instantly return to a time when life around there was so different. My mind conjures up lost […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Six
Billposters were a feature in Wolverhampton in my youth, they fronted almost any bits of waste ground, adorned many gable ends and they appeared in the most unlikely places. This one in particular was in St Georges Parade which was incidentally the address of The Wolverhampton Billposting Company. Now […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Five
Introduction: On land leased to the council by The Duke of Cleveland in 1881, on the west side of town,which up to then had been the site of a former Racecourse a magnificent Public Park 50 acres in extent opened. it is now known as West Park. Because of […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Four
Continuing with Worralls and introducing the Stevens – it is now 1894 Introduction – In 1894 John Henry Stevens had travelled from his home In Tipton Staffordshire, to work in Wolverhampton, as there were still many jobs to be found on the numerous canal wharves around Horseley fields and he […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Three
My Mothers family were the Worrall’s and the Stevens. I want to share a few episodes of their life and times with you , see as they saw, and bear with them in their sorrows and happiness in Horseley Fields. Three years after the battle of Waterloo my forebears were building […]
Read moreSpecks On A Dusty Road – Part Two
How often do we hear the remark, Oh I wished I’d asked. I would have loved to have known a little about the history of my forebear’s. And after all what more interesting way is there to trace local town or boroughs history than through ones own relatives. Well over […]
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