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Bookbot

John Buxton

    A History of Birmingham
    The Norfolk Cranes' Story
    Elizabethan Taste
    The Birmingham Parish Workhouse, 1730-1840
    Back to Backs, Birmingham
    Living Back-to-Back
    • Back-to-backs were once the commonest form of housing in England, home to the majority of working people in Victorian cities, but they have now almost entirely vanished from our urban townscape. The survival of Court 15 in Birmingham is the starting point of this book. A mixture of documentary evidence and oral history tells the story of those who lived there, each unique - a glass eye maker from Birmingham, a Jewish watch-maker from Poland and a little girl who used to sleep in the entry. Each contributes fascinating evidence about 19th- and 20th-century Britain, from the boom years of Victorian expansion to the Hungry Thirties. Dr Upton explores such practical matters as: What was it like to live in a house with one bedroom and no running water? How did eleven families share two toilets? This book also looks at issues of where we live and why. The rise and fall of the back-to-back is a sobering tale of how our nation houses its people, and illuminates the story of the development of urban housing.

      Living Back-to-Back
    • The Birmingham Parish Workhouse, 1730-1840

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      This book is the first attempt to write a history of the workhouse and the ancillary welfare provision for Birmingham, frequently referred to as the `Old Poor Law'. It reveals some surprising facts which fly in the face of the scholarly consensus that the old system was incompetently administered and inadequately organised.

      The Birmingham Parish Workhouse, 1730-1840
    • The Norfolk Cranes' Story

      • 133pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      An account of the arrival and first breeding of Comma Cranes at Horses in Norfolk and their subsequent breeding success and spread. Also a chapter on the status of Cranes in Europe. Illustrated with 65 colour photos and 12 line drawings.

      The Norfolk Cranes' Story
    • Birmingham was a village worth only one pound in the Domesday Survey, yet it rose to become the second city of the British Empire with a population that passed a million. In this text, the author looks at why Birmingham grew and what it has become

      A History of Birmingham
    • . 2011 SIGNED BOTH AUTHORS, bright clean copy, with dustjacket, no markings, Professional booksellers since 1981

      NORFOLK CRANE STORY