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Smethwick

Smethwick (/ˈsmɛðɪk/) is an industrial town in Sandwell, West Midlands, England. It lies 4 miles (6 km) west of Birmingham city centre. Historically it was in Staffordshire and then Worcestershire before being placed into then West Midlands county.

Smethwick
Waterloo Road, Smethwick
Smethwick
Location within the West Midlands
Population53,653 (2019 est, built-up-area subdivision)[1]
15,246 (Ward)[2]
OS grid referenceSP0287
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Areas of the town
List
Post townSMETHWICK
Postcode districtB66, B67
Dialling code0121
PoliceWest Midlands
FireWest Midlands
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
West Midlands
52°29′35″N 01°58′07″W / 52.49306°N 1.96861°W / 52.49306; -1.96861

In 2019, the ward of Smethwick had an estimated population of 15,246,[2] while the wider built-up area subdivision has a population of 53,653.[1]

Smethwick Jamia Masjid Mosque
Smethwick Holy Trinity Church
Smethwick Guru Nanak Gurdwara

History edit

 
Street nameplate on Rutland Road, Smethwick in April 2007, showing painted out "County Borough" lettering, and the former postal district 17

It was suggested that the name Smethwick meant "smiths' place of work", but a more recent interpretation has suggested the name means "the settlement on the smooth land".[3] Smethwick was recorded in the Domesday Book as Smedeuuich, the d in this spelling being the Anglo-Saxon letter eth.[3] Until the end of the 18th century it was an outlying hamlet of the south Staffordshire village of Harborne. Harborne became part of the county borough of Birmingham and thus transferred from Staffordshire to Warwickshire in 1891, leaving Smethwick in the County of Staffordshire.[citation needed]

The world's oldest working engine, the Smethwick Engine, made by Boulton & Watt, originally stood near Bridge Street, Smethwick. It is now at Thinktank, the new science museum in Birmingham.[citation needed]

One notable company was The London Works, manufacturing base of the Fox Henderson Company which made the cast-iron framework for the Crystal Palace. This was founded by Charles Fox, whose inventions included the first patented railway points. His notable employees included William Siemens, the notable mechanical and electrical engineer. The company was bankrupted in 1855 by the failure of an overseas railway to pay for work done. The site was later used by the GKN company. In 2015 the site was being cleared to build the new Midland Metropolitan University Hospital which aims to combine the Sandwell General Hospital at West Bromwich and City Hospital, Dudley Road. Work at the site later came to a standstill because of a crisis in the construction industry.[4]

 
Cigarette card issued in 1906 by Wills's Cigarettes, depicting the Borough of Smethwick's "seal used in place of arms". The seal carries the Latin motto "Orbis Terrarum Officina" ("The Workshop of the World") and depicts a James Watt engine, a lighthouse (representing Chance Brothers glass works), a gasometer and a blacksmith working at his anvil.

Other former industry included railway rolling stock manufacture, at the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company factory; screws and other fastenings from Guest, Keen and Nettlefolds (GKN); engines from Tangye; tubing from Evered's; steel pen nibs from British Pens; and various products from Chance Brothers' glassworks, including lighthouse lenses and the glazing for the Crystal Palace (the London works, in North Smethwick, manufactured its metalwork). Phillips Cycles, once one of the largest bicycle manufacturers in the world, was based in Bridge Street, Smethwick. Nearby, in Downing Street, is the famous bicycle saddle maker, Brooks Saddles. The important metalworking factory of Henry Hope & Sons Ltd was based at Halford's Lane where the company manufactured steel window systems, roof glazing, gearings and metalwork.[citation needed]

Council housing began in Smethwick after 1920 on land previously belonging to the Downing family, whose family home became Holly Lodge High School for Girls in 1922. The mass council house building of the 1920s and 1930s also involved Smethwick's boundaries being extended into part of neighbouring Oldbury in 1928.[5]

The Ruskin Pottery Studio, named in honour of the artist John Ruskin, was in Oldbury Road. Many English churches have stained glass windows made by Hardman Studios in Lightwoods House, or, before that, by the Camm family.[citation needed]

During the Second World War, Smethwick was bombed on a number of occasions by the German Luftwaffe. A total of 80 people died as a result of these air raids.[6]

After the First World War about 50+ Sikh families settled in Smethwick beginning in 1917, with a majority of the men being veterans of the war.[7] After the Second World War, Smethwick attracted a large number of immigrants from Commonwealth countries beginning in 1945, the largest ethnic group being Sikhs from the Punjab in India, the majority of whom had served in that War.[8] The ethnic minority communities were initially unpopular with the white British population of Smethwick, prompting the election of Conservative Party Member of Parliament (MP) Peter Griffiths at the 1964 general election. In the election, the Labour Party MP was unseated following the use of the campaign slogan, "If you want a nigger for a neighbour, vote Labour" allegedly being used by supporters of the winning candidate.[9] This came two years after race riots had hit the town in 1962;[10] it was also set against a background of factory closures and a growing waiting list for local council accommodation.[citation needed]

In 1961, the Sikh community purchased the Congregational Church on the High Street in Smethwick. Soon after, this was converted into a gurdwara today known as the [Guru Nanak Gurdwara Smethwick].

Bearwood Primary School appointed Tony O'Connor as head teacher in 1967. He was the first black head teacher in the UK, having been born in Jamaica and moved to Britain with the RAF in 1943. This bought Smethwick more unwanted publicity when, the day after the announcement of his appointment, racist slogans and swastikas were daubed around the school. However, O'Connor was well liked by both parents and children; he retired in 1983.[11]

In the mid- to late 1960s, a large council estate in the west of Smethwick was built. It was officially known as the West Smethwick Estate, but as all of the homes were constructed from concrete the estate was known locally as the "concrete jungle".[12] The homes, mostly three or four storey townhouses, were prone to damp and other faults. By the 1980s, levels of crime and unemployment on the estate were high, and by the early 1990s, Sandwell Council had decided to demolish it. Between 1993 and 1997, the estate was redeveloped with modern low-rise housing and renamed Galton Village. Another housing estate called the Windmill Lane Estate, located near Cape Hill, met a similar fate.[citation needed]

There is a collection of red brick turn-of-20th century terrace, 1930s semi-detached, newly built modern housing and a number of high rise blocks of flats. Other estates and areas include Black Patch, Cape Hill, Uplands, Albion Estate, Bearwood, Londonderry and Rood End.[citation needed]

In July 2013, a major fire occurred at the Jayplas plastics and paper recycling plant on Dartmouth Road.[13]

Architecture edit

 
The old Toll House

The oldest surviving building in Smethwick is the Old Church[14] which stands on the corner of Church Road and the Uplands. This was consecrated in 1732 as a Chapel of Ease in the parish of St Peter, Harborne. The building was originally known as "Parkes' Chapel" in honour of Mistress Dorothy Parkes who bequeathed the money for the church and also for a local school. The chapel was later known as the "Old Chapel", and the public house next to it is still called this. In the church there are several fine memorials, including one to Dorothy Parkes.

The Grade I listed Galton Bridge spans the New Line canal and railway. When built in 1829 by Thomas Telford, it was the highest single-span bridge in the world.[citation needed] Its name commemorates Samuel Galton, a local landowner and industrialist. It is identical to Telford's bridge at Holt Fleet over the River Severn built in 1828 and opened in 1830.

 
The public library by Yeoville Thomason

The public library in the High Street was originally built as the Public Hall in 1866–67 and is designed by Yeoville Thomason.[15]

Matthew Boulton and James Watt opened their Soho Foundry in the north of Smethwick (not to be confused with the Soho Manufactory in nearby Soho) in the late 18th century. In 1802, William Murdoch illuminated the foundry with gas lighting of his own invention. The foundry was later home to weighing scale makers W & T Avery Ltd.

Rolfe Street public baths were among the first public swimming baths in the country when opened north of the town centre in 1888. The baths remained open for nearly a century before closing. In the late 1980s, the Black Country Museum expressed interest in transferring the building to its site in Dudley and so the transfer of the building began in 1989. It was finally opened to visitors at the museum in 1999, housing the museum's exhibition gallery and archive resource centre.[16]

Thimblemill Library is a Grade II listed building built in brick in the Moderne style.[17]

Political history edit

The town has often enjoyed a somewhat turbulent political history: Smethwick was created as a separate parliamentary constituency in 1918, having previously been part of the Handsworth constituency. At that year's general election, Christabel Pankhurst, standing as a Women's Party candidate, narrowly failed to become one of Britain's first woman Members of Parliament. She lost to the Labour candidate by 775 votes in a straight fight.[18]

Labour held the seat until 1931: from 1926, the MP was Sir Oswald Mosley, future founder of the British Union of Fascists. Mosley resigned the Labour whip in March 1931, but continued to represent the constituency until it was taken by the Conservatives at that year's general election. Labour won in the UK general election of 1945, held on 26 July that year. However, the victorious MP, Alfred Dobbs, was killed in a car crash the very next day. He is thus the shortest-serving Member of Parliament (MP) in British history, if one discounts a few cases of people being elected posthumously. In the resulting by-election, Patrick Gordon Walker won for Labour.

In the 1964 general election, Gordon Walker, who was Shadow Foreign Secretary, was defeated in controversial circumstances in the constituency by the openly anti-immigration Conservative candidate Peter Griffiths. Labour's victory at the general election would inevitably have seen him appointed as Foreign Secretary in the government led by Harold Wilson; however, Smethwick had attracted immigration from the Commonwealth in the economic and industrial growth of the years following the Second World War and Griffiths ran a campaign critical of the government's policy. There were rumours that his supporters had circulated the slogan "If you want a nigger for a neighbour, vote Liberal or Labour."[19] Griffiths refused to condemn the slogan.[20] Colin Jordan, a British Neo-Nazi and leader of the British Movement, claimed that members of his group had produced the initial slogan as well as spread the publicised poster and sticker campaign which contained it; Jordan's group in the past had also campaigned on other slogans, such as: "Don't vote - a vote for Tory, Labour or Liberal is a vote for more Blacks!".[21] Jordan would also use similar campaign tactics against Gordon Walker in the 1965 Leyton by-election. The election of Griffith led to Smethwick becoming famous worldwide as 'Britain's most racist town'.[20]

Historian Rachel Yemm argues that the anti-immigration sentiment in the town was the result of a housing shortage, which local newspapers, such as The Smethwick Telephone, blamed on migrants. Griffith not only drew on these fears, but also raised concerns about 'miscegenation' and argued for the repatriation of migrants.[20] At the beginning of 1965 Smethwick Council was planning "to purchase all available houses on Marshall Street to prevent their sale to immigrants". This made national headlines, and the plan was later stopped by the government.[20][22] In February 1965, American black activist Malcolm X visited Marshall Street just days before his assassination. Earlier in his career he had advocated the complete separation of African Americans from whites, but he now showed his opposition to racial segregation,[23][24] telling the press:

I have come here because I am disturbed by reports that coloured people in Smethwick are being treated badly. I have heard they are being treated as the Jews under Hitler. I would not wait for the fascist element in Smethwick to erect gas ovens.

Malcolm X's visit to Smethwick had been organised by a BBC News journalist with a view to X having a debate with Griffiths outside a council house in Smethwick. Griffiths declined at late notice, and so an interview with X was conducted on the streets of Smethwick. This was to be X's last TV interview before his assassination nine days later. It was never aired.[23]

Labour candidate and actor Andrew Faulds defeated Griffiths in the 1966 general election, remaining as an MP until his retirement at the 1997 general election, 23 years after Smethwick became part of the Warley East constituency. Griffiths subsequently moved away from the area and served as Conservative MP for Portsmouth North.[25]

Civic history edit

 
The local government structure within North Worcestershire and South Staffordshire – Prior to the West Midlands Order 1965 reorganisation
 
Smethwick Council House

Originally a hamlet within the parish of Harborne, Staffordshire, Smethwick was made into an urban district in 1894, and later incorporated as a municipal borough in 1899, and county borough within Staffordshire in 1907 with its base at Smethwick Council House.[26] In 1966, Smethwick was merged with the boroughs of Oldbury and Rowley Regis to form the new County Borough of Warley, and was transferred into the county of Worcestershire. This in turn was merged with West Bromwich in 1974 to form the Sandwell Metropolitan Borough, which was incorporated into the new West Midlands county.[27]

In 1888, there had been plans for Smethwick to be incorporated into the city of Birmingham, but the urban district council voted against these plans by a single vote.[28]

The archives for the Borough of Smethwick are held at Sandwell Community History and Archives Service.

Transport history edit

Canals edit

Smethwick has a long association with canals, which were the town's first major transport links from a time before decent roads and of course railways. The Birmingham Canal Navigation Old and New Main Line Canals run through the industrial areas and right past the High Street, running parallel to the Stour Valley Line: all three end up in Wolverhampton. James Brindley was the engineer charged with building the canal, a man who gives his name to the busy district in the centre of Birmingham near the International Convention Centre, National Indoor Arena and Broad Street.

 
Galton Bridge viewed from the Galton Tunnel

The old main line was completed through Smethwick by 1769. It required 12 locks to climb over the hill through the town; Brindley had found the earth too soft to dig a cutting through at the time. Water was supplied by two steam engines. One of them was located on the Engine Arm which led to the Smethwick Engine on Rabone Lane and the other was near Spon Lane. New Smethwick Pumping Station next to Brasshouse Lane was added later in 1892. Because of the locks, the canal through Smethwick became a bottleneck and Thomas Telford was commissioned in 1824 to look at alternatives.

The new main line through Smethwick was completed by 1829 and completely bypassed all six remaining locks of the summit with a deep cutting. The Engine Arm and Stewarts aqueducts were built to carry their respective canals over the new mainline. The cutting was built through the land of the local businessman Samuel Galton and thus this cutting created the Galton Valley and Galton Bridge was named in his honour. The bridge was the longest single-span iron bridge in the world at the time. The canals of the new and old main line diverged at one end at Smethwick Junction near Bridge Street and rejoined at Bromford Junction near Bromford Road in Oldbury.

Today Galton Valley is a nature area and of more historical interest than commercial, and used mainly for leisure rather than transporting commercial goods.

Railways edit

The LNWR was the first to construct a railway through Smethwick in 1852 from New Street towards Wolverhampton and the North West, Rolfe Street and Spon Lane opened that year followed by Soho in 1853. In 1867 the Stourbridge Railway opened a link between the Great Western Birmingham, Wolverhampton & Dudley Railway (of 1852) near the current Hawthorns and Stourbridge with a station at Smethwick West and a link to the Stour Valley line towards New Street called Smethwick Junction, the Stourbridge Railway was merged into the Great Western in 1870. Not until 1931 was a railway station was constructed at the Hawthorns, although it was a 'halt' primarily for the football ground; this station closed in 1967.

 
British Rail Class 33 at Swanage, built by the Birmingham Railway Carriage & Wagon Company

From 1854 the Birmingham Railway Carriage & Wagon Company was based in Smethwick until its closure in 1963. The company not only built trains, but also London Underground stock, buses and a military equipment.

Soho railway station closed in 1949, followed by Spon Lane station in 1968. In 1972 the section of line between Smethwick West and Birmingham Moor Street, as well as the Birmingham, Wolverhampton and Dudley railway, was closed, with the exception of a single line between Smethwick West and Coopers Scrap Metal in Handsworth; and all Stourbridge services were diverted into Birmingham New Street. In 1995 the line between Birmingham Snow Hill and Smethwick West was restored and a new station called Smethwick Galton Bridge was constructed over both the Snow Hill and Stour Valley lines to provide an interchange. Smethwick West was due to close when Galton Bridge opened, but due to a legal error British Railways had to maintain a parliamentary train service to the station. Most local trains from Stourbridge to Birmingham were diverted into Snow Hill although it was not until 2004 that the last regular service used the route into Birmingham New Street via Smethwick Junction.

Soho TMD is located next to Soho rail junction; road access is just off Wellington Street. It is the principal train depot for West Midlands Trains' Class 323 train fleet, which are often seen providing local train services in the area.

Buses and trams edit

 
A Midland Red D9 in 2002

The town of Smethwick has a long association with buses. From 1914 the famous Birmingham & Midland Motor Omnibus Company (BMMO or Midland Red) was based on Bearwood Road on the site of the current Bearwood Shopping Centre until 1974. The garage later saw use as an indoor market until it was demolished in 1979.[29] Smethwick never had its own Corporation Transport Department, like West Bromwich or Birmingham. Most bus services until the earlier 1970s were provided by the Midland Red, West Bromwich and Birmingham. In the early 1970s, all local bus transport was taken over by the WMPTE until deregulation in the 1980s. Since then, National Express West Midlands has been the primary operator in the West Midlands.

Steam trams started through Smethwick in 1885 operated by Birmingham and Midland Tramways. These were replaced by electric trams in 1904 and then merged into the Birmingham Corporation Tramways in 1906 and trams eventually ran from both the Dudley Road and Hagley Road direction. Dudley Road trams operated to Cape Hill and then diverged to either take the route towards Dudley (Route 87) via the High Street or towards Bearwood (Route 29) via Waterloo Road, terminating near the site of current Bearwood Bus Station and Kings Head public house. Route 34 from Birmingham to Bearwood along the Hagley Road and terminated at the top of Bearwood Road next to the route from Cape Hill, despite terminating so close to each other there was no physical link between route 29 and 34 in Bearwood.[30] Route 34 was the first route in Smethwick to disappear, in 1930; the last tram route was closed in 1939 and replaced by motor buses. Both the current National Express West Midlands routes 82 and 87 are former tram routes and the 87 in fact uses the same number.

 
The Hawthorns railway station and metro stop

The West Midlands Metro, opened in 1999, is more of a light railway than a tramway. It follows the former Great Western Railway track bed from Birmingham Snow Hill station to the former Wolverhampton Low Level via West Bromwich until Priestfield in Wolverhampton. After that, it becomes a tramway proper and runs along the Bilston Road into Wolverhampton city centre. From late 2015 the service was extended from its former terminus at Snow Hill through the city centre to Grand Central.[31] The metro can be caught at the Hawthorns railway station.

Geography edit

Smethwick borders West Bromwich and Oldbury to the north and west, and the Birmingham districts of Handsworth, Winson Green, Harborne, Edgbaston and Quinton to the south and east.

Demographics edit

At the 2011 census, there were 48,765 residents in Smethwick in 18,381 households, and the median age of Smethwick residents was 32.[32]

In terms of ethnicity:[32]

In terms of religion, 39.5% of Smethwick residents identified as Christian, 21.8% were Muslim, 15.7% were Sikh, 14.0% said they had no religion, 5.8% did not state any religion, 2.3% were Hindu, 0.3% were Buddhists, and 0.6% were from another religion.[32]

Industry and commerce edit

Until the end of the 18th century, Smethwick was largely rural, with farming as the main industry. A water mill named Briddismylne is recorded in 1499 as belonging to Halesowen Abbey, thought to be on the more recent Thimblemill site.[33] In 1659, a mill in the Hockley Brook is recorded as belonging to a Mr. Lane.[33] The mill which led to the street name "Windmill Lane" was built on land bought in 1803 by William Croxall, a miller. The last part of the windmill building was demolished in 1949.[33]

 
Soho Foundry main gate

The Soho Foundry, opened in 1796 by James Watt and Matthew Boulton, trading as Boulton, Watt & Sons, was built to produce complete steam engines to Watt's designs. Waste dumped from the foundry gave rise to the name Black Patch to the field to the east. The Soho Foundry is now the headquarters of the Avery Company.

The route of the canal, passing through the valley of the Hockley Brook, the boundary with Handsworth on the north side of Smethwick, resulted in most of the heavy industry being located there.[34] The railway was opened in 1852.

One of Smethwick's significant industrial enterprises of the 19th century was the Fox, Henderson Company, formerly Brannah, Fox and Co.,[35] which built the steel structure for the Crystal Palace in 1851. At its peak this employed about 2,000 people at the London Works. The bankruptcy and closure of the firm in 1856 had a devastating effect on the local economy. The site of the London Works was later acquired by Chamberlain and Nettlefold, and in 2014 was cleared to build the new Midland Metropolitan University Hospital, amalgamating the Sandwell General Hospital at West Bromwich with the City Hospital, Dudley Road.

Richard Tangye was a notable builder of steam engines in the late 19th century. His designs, in a characteristic green colour, have a distinctive elegance of form. He demolished Smethwick Hall, on the border with Handsworth, and built his factory, the Cornwall Works, on the site.

Mitchells & Butlers opened a brewery on Cape Hill in 1879. It was a local landmark in Smethwick and provided employment in the town for 123 years. However, following a decline in sales and revenue, American owners Coors closed the brewery on 6 December 2002. It was demolished two years later and a 650-home private housing estate was developed on its site.[36]

Charles Carr opened a bell-foundry in the town in 1891, which cast bells for many churches including John's Lane (Dublin),[37] Castle Bromwich Church, Stoke Bliss and Astley, Worcestershire.[38]

Teale & Yates Ltd (Inc. 29 November 1962) was a fish, game and poultry shop which also sold fruit and vegetables. It was on the High Street for many years during the 1960s and 1970s providing good quality fresh food for many local people. The shop was owned by Arthur Teale and his wife Joan, with their eldest son joining the family business in the early 1970s.

The courier company Interlink Express established its head office and national distribution hub in the town in the early 2000s, and is a major employer in the area.

 
Smethwick Heritage Centre

The Smethwick Heritage Centre museum was opened on 15 September 2004 by Professor Carl Chinn. It maintains a collection of material on Smethwick's industrial and social heritage.[39]

Education edit

  • Abbey Junior and Infants (two sites), Abbey Road, Bearwood
  • Annie Lennard Infant School, The Oval, Thimblemill
  • Bearwood Primary School, Bearwood Road, Bearwood
    • In 1967, Tony O'Connor was appointed headmaster at what was then Bearwood Junior and Infants School[40]
  • Cape Hill Primary School, Cape Hill
  • Crocketts Primary School, Coopers Lane, Cape Hill
  • Devonshire Primary School, Auckland Road, Uplands
  • Galton Valley Primary school
  • George Betts Primary School, West End Avenue
  • Holly Lodge High School, Holly Lane, West Smethwick
  • Ruskin House Pupil Ref. Unit, Holly Lane, West Smethwick
  • St Gregory's Roman Catholic Primary School, Park Road
  • St Mathew's Church of England School, Windmill Lane
  • St Phillip's Catholic Primary, Messenger Road
  • Sandwell Academy, Halfords Lane, West Bromwich (built on the sites of Sandwell Secondary Modern and Albion Junior schools)
  • Shireland Collegiate Academy, Waterloo Road, Cape Hill
  • Shireland Hall Infant and Junior School, Edith Road, Cape Hill
  • Smethwick College (part of Sandwell College, now in a new purpose-built building in West Bromwich town centre), Crocketts Lane
  • Uplands Manor Primary School, Addenbrooke Road, Uplands
  • Victoria Park Primary School, Ballot Street

Transport edit

Major roads The M5 runs along the western edge of Smethwick, passing over the two canals and a railway near Spon Lane. M5 Junction 1 is accessible at West Bromwich using the A41 road Soho Road. M5 Junction 2 is accessible at Oldbury on the A4123 Wolverhampton Road (Harborne to Wolverhampton) at Birchley Island. Another major road passing through Smethwick is the A456 (Hagley Road) from Birmingham to Halesowen, Kidderminster and Ludlow, which passes through Bearwood, along Lightwoods Park.

Public transport Local bus service is provided primarily by National Express West Midlands, as well as other operators. Smethwick is on both the Hagley Road (Birmingham, Dudley, Merry Hill, Halesowen and Stourbridge) and Dudley Road (Birmingham, Smethwick, Oldbury and Dudley) bus corridors and the famous Number 11 Birmingham Outer Circle bus routes. There are also direct regular bus services to West Bromwich, Wolverhampton, Oldbury, Blackheath, Harborne, Birmingham University and Dudley.[41] Dudley Road corridor buses provide a bus link to the nearby City Hospital in Winson Green.

Smethwick has three operational railway stations providing regular local and some long-distance services. All of the stations are currently managed by West Midlands Trains who provide most of the train services. The closest 'intercity' railway stations are either Birmingham New Street or Sandwell & Dudley.

 
Rolfe Street railway station in Smethwick

Airports The closest airport to Smethwick is Birmingham, which is around 20 mi (30 km) east at the other side of Birmingham city centre. National Express do provide some long-distance coach services to some London Airports from Bearwood.[42]

  • By road the fastest routes are either via the M5, M6 and M42 motorways, or via Birmingham city centre and the A45.
  • For travellers by rail there are direct train services from Galton Bridge or from Rolfe Street railway station changing at Birmingham New Street.
  • There are no direct bus services from Smethwick to the airport. Passengers would have to travel to Birmingham and change buses. The principal bus service to the airport is the National Express West Midlands 'Limited Stop' express service X1 (Birmingham to Coventry).

Public services and government edit

Government Smethwick is represented at Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council by 12 councillors, covering the four wards of Soho & Victoria, St Pauls (which covers up to the Hawthorns ground), Smethwick and Abbey. It is represented in the House of Commons as part of the Warley constituency. It also included Bristnall ward until 2004, when that was transferred to Oldbury 'town'.

Library services There are two public libraries in Smethwick; the larger main library is located on the High Street[43] and a smaller one is located on Thimblemill Road.[44]

Smethwick Swimming Centre

 
Smethwick Baths

Formerly known as 'Thimblemill Baths', it is a public swimming pool which opened in 1933, located on Thimblemill Road between Gladys Road and Reginald Road in Bearwood. It is a Grade II listed building. There are two pools (a 1933 main pool and a 1968 small pool), gym, dance studio, sauna and steam facilities.[45]

During the Second World War the basement was used as an air raid shelter and a supply depot for the US Air Force who were stationed in Smethwick. The main pool was capable of being covered for the purpose of public events; concerts, galas and exhibitions took place there until the late 1960s. Famous acts including Tommy Cooper, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Who, the Small Faces and the Kinks played at the baths.[46]

Emergency services Policing in Smethwick is provided by the West Midlands Police, who have a police station on Piddock Road just off the High Street. West Midlands Fire Service is responsible for fire and rescue. A fire station is located on Stony Lane a short distance from the High Street. Emergency medical care is provided by the West Midlands Ambulance Service.

Healthcare Smethwick is part of Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust. The closest hospital is City Hospital (previously known as Dudley Road Hospital) located in Winson Green. Other local hospitals include Sandwell General Hospital in West Bromwich and Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Selly Oak.

Sport edit

The town has a semi-professional association football club, Smethwick Rangers. Nicknamed "SR1", the club competes in the 2020–21 season in the West Midlands (Regional) League Premier Division, the 9th tier of the English football league system. Despite representing the town, the team play their home games in Tividale. The Sandwell Aquatics Centre, used in the 2022 Commonwealth Games, is in the Londonderry area.

Smethwick Cricket Club, a founder member of the Birmingham League, is an amateur cricket club in the town.

The Hawthorns, home of West Bromwich Albion FC is also partially within Smethwick.

Districts edit

See: Districts of Smethwick

Notable residents edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Smethwick in West Midlands (West Midlands) Built-up Area Subdivision". City Population. from the original on 5 March 2021. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Smethwick Ward in West Midlands". City Population. from the original on 10 November 2020. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b Inskip, K.W. (1966). Smethwick, from hamlet to county borough. Smethwick: Corporation of Smethwick. p. 3.
  4. ^ "Midland Metropolitan Hospital: £107m funding withdrawn by banks". BBC News. 7 June 2018. from the original on 29 May 2019. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Smethwick: Other estates | British History Online". British-history.ac.uk. from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  6. ^ "Cemetery Details". Cwgc.org. from the original on 24 January 2023. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  7. ^ Maddison, John (2000). Smethwick in old photographs. Gloucester: Budding. ISBN 1840151552.
  8. ^ Bhanot, Kavita (2018). The book of Birmingham : a city in short fiction. [Manchester]: Comma Press. ISBN 9781910974377.
  9. ^ Edwards, Kathryn (18 April 2008). "UK | England | West Midlands | Powell's 'rivers of blood' legacy". BBC News. from the original on 1 March 2009. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  10. ^ Sean McLoughlin; William Gould; Ananya Jahanara Kabir; Emma Tomalin (11 July 2014). Writing the City in British Asian Diasporas. p. 45. ISBN 9781317679677. from the original on 24 January 2023. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  11. ^ "Campaign launched to chart life of 'first black headmaster'". www.expressandstar.com. from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 29 March 2019.
  12. ^ "Concrete Jungle | Up The Oss Road". Uptheossroad.wordpress.com. 8 July 2014. from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  13. ^ "Bosses speak out over "tragic accident" as Chinese lantern sparks region's biggest fire". Express & Star. from the original on 3 July 2013. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
  14. ^ "History". Smethwick Old Church. from the original on 20 July 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  15. ^ The Buildings of England: Worcestershire, Nikolaus Pevsner, 1968 Penguin. p81
  16. ^ "Rolfe Street Baths - Black Country Living Museum". Bclm.co.uk. from the original on 29 July 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  17. ^ British Listed Buildings. "Warley Branch Library, Smethwick". British Listed Buildings. from the original on 4 March 2018. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
  18. ^ Hallam, David J.A. Taking on the Men: the first women parliamentary candidates 1918 29 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Studley, 2018 Chap 2 "Christabel Pankhurst in Smethwick"
  19. ^ Peter H. S. Griffiths A Question of Colour? (1966); See pp. 154, 166, 171.
  20. ^ a b c d Yemm, Rachel (2019). "Immigration, Race and Local Media: Smethwick and the 1964 General Election". Contemporary British History. 33: 106–109. doi:10.1080/13619462.2018.1535973. S2CID 150219506.
  21. ^ Jackson, Paul (2016). Colin Jordan and Britain's Neo-Nazi Movement: Hitler's Echo. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 129. ISBN 978-1472509314.
  22. ^ "Not everything is black and white - Marshall Street: Then and now". 2013. from the original on 17 April 2022. Retrieved 3 April 2022.
  23. ^ a b "Malcolm X's visit to Smethwick remembered in pictures". BBC News. 12 February 2015. from the original on 19 June 2020. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  24. ^ Natives: Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire. Two Roads. 21 March 2019. p. 271. ISBN 9781473661233.
  25. ^ "Peter Griffiths - obituary". Telegraph. Archived from the original on 20 June 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  26. ^ Historic England. "Council House (1342665)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 12 May 2021.
  27. ^ "Smethwick CB/MB/UD through time". Vision of Britain. Archived from the original on 24 December 2012. Retrieved 25 June 2012.
  28. ^ Country, Black (17 July 2008). "When a single vote saved Smethwick from Brummagem". Black Country Bugle. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  30. ^ "Smethwick: Public services | British History Online". British-history.ac.uk. from the original on 25 September 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  31. ^ "Construction phases - Construction phases". Centro.org.uk. 17 June 2016. from the original on 13 March 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  32. ^ a b c UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Smethwick Built-up area (E35000380)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  33. ^ a b c Greenslade, Baggs, Baugh & Johnston, op. cit.
  34. ^ Greenslade, Baggs, Baugh & Johnston, A History of the County of Stafford, Volume 17 (Offlow Hundred) 10 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 1976
  35. ^ "Fox, Henderson and Co - Graces Guide". www.gracesguide.co.uk. from the original on 18 February 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  36. ^ "M&B Cape Hill Brewery – Smethwick". Birmingham Roundabout. from the original on 10 September 2011. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  37. ^ "Dove Details. [online]". Dove.cccbr.org.uk. 2018. from the original on 15 August 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  38. ^ "Church Bells in Worcestershire". www.ringing.demon.co.uk. from the original on 27 January 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  39. ^ "Smethwick Heritage Centre". from the original on 6 April 2018. Retrieved 12 May 2018.
  40. ^ "England's pioneering black head teachers". BBC News. 11 May 2018. from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 30 November 2020.
  41. ^ "Buses | National Express West Midlands". Nxbus.co.uk. GB-BIR. 29 June 2016. from the original on 2 March 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  42. ^ "UK Stop finder // National Express Coach". Coach.nationalexpress.com. from the original on 7 February 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  43. ^ "Smethwick Library | Sandwell Council". Sandwell.gov.uk. 6 October 2010. from the original on 11 September 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  44. ^ "Thimblemill Library | Sandwell Council". Sandwell.gov.uk. 30 September 2010. from the original on 3 September 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  45. ^ "Smethwick Swimming Centre". Slt-leisure.co.uk. from the original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  46. ^ "History of Smethwick Swimming Centre" (PDF). Slt-leisure.co.uk. (PDF) from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  47. ^ "Friends of West Smethwick Park - SCVO". sandwellvcs.info. from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2020.

External links edit

  • Sandwell Council
  • Smethwick Local History Society
  • Smethwick: Economic history, A History of the County of Staffordshire: Volume XVII: Offlow hundred (part) (1976), pp.107–18
  • Smethwick Borough Archive Catalogue
  • Smethwick Heritage Centre

smethwick, former, parliamentary, constituency, parliament, constituency, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, february, 2022, industr. For the former parliamentary constituency see Smethwick UK Parliament constituency This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article February 2022 Smethwick ˈ s m ɛ d ɪ k is an industrial town in Sandwell West Midlands England It lies 4 miles 6 km west of Birmingham city centre Historically it was in Staffordshire and then Worcestershire before being placed into then West Midlands county SmethwickWaterloo Road SmethwickSmethwickLocation within the West MidlandsPopulation53 653 2019 est built up area subdivision 1 15 246 Ward 2 OS grid referenceSP0287Metropolitan boroughSandwellMetropolitan countyWest MidlandsRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomAreas of the townList BearwoodCape HillFrench WallsLondonderry part Rood EndSmethwick WestWarley Part Warley Woods Part Post townSMETHWICKPostcode districtB66 B67Dialling code0121PoliceWest MidlandsFireWest MidlandsAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentWarleyList of places UK England West Midlands 52 29 35 N 01 58 07 W 52 49306 N 1 96861 W 52 49306 1 96861In 2019 the ward of Smethwick had an estimated population of 15 246 2 while the wider built up area subdivision has a population of 53 653 1 Smethwick Jamia Masjid MosqueSmethwick Holy Trinity ChurchSmethwick Guru Nanak GurdwaraContents 1 History 1 1 Architecture 1 2 Political history 1 3 Civic history 1 4 Transport history 1 4 1 Canals 1 4 2 Railways 1 4 3 Buses and trams 2 Geography 3 Demographics 4 Industry and commerce 5 Education 6 Transport 7 Public services and government 8 Sport 9 Districts 10 Notable residents 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Street nameplate on Rutland Road Smethwick in April 2007 showing painted out County Borough lettering and the former postal district 17It was suggested that the name Smethwick meant smiths place of work but a more recent interpretation has suggested the name means the settlement on the smooth land 3 Smethwick was recorded in the Domesday Book as Smedeuuich the d in this spelling being the Anglo Saxon letter eth 3 Until the end of the 18th century it was an outlying hamlet of the south Staffordshire village of Harborne Harborne became part of the county borough of Birmingham and thus transferred from Staffordshire to Warwickshire in 1891 leaving Smethwick in the County of Staffordshire citation needed The world s oldest working engine the Smethwick Engine made by Boulton amp Watt originally stood near Bridge Street Smethwick It is now at Thinktank the new science museum in Birmingham citation needed One notable company was The London Works manufacturing base of the Fox Henderson Company which made the cast iron framework for the Crystal Palace This was founded by Charles Fox whose inventions included the first patented railway points His notable employees included William Siemens the notable mechanical and electrical engineer The company was bankrupted in 1855 by the failure of an overseas railway to pay for work done The site was later used by the GKN company In 2015 the site was being cleared to build the new Midland Metropolitan University Hospital which aims to combine the Sandwell General Hospital at West Bromwich and City Hospital Dudley Road Work at the site later came to a standstill because of a crisis in the construction industry 4 nbsp Cigarette card issued in 1906 by Wills s Cigarettes depicting the Borough of Smethwick s seal used in place of arms The seal carries the Latin motto Orbis Terrarum Officina The Workshop of the World and depicts a James Watt engine a lighthouse representing Chance Brothers glass works a gasometer and a blacksmith working at his anvil Other former industry included railway rolling stock manufacture at the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company factory screws and other fastenings from Guest Keen and Nettlefolds GKN engines from Tangye tubing from Evered s steel pen nibs from British Pens and various products from Chance Brothers glassworks including lighthouse lenses and the glazing for the Crystal Palace the London works in North Smethwick manufactured its metalwork Phillips Cycles once one of the largest bicycle manufacturers in the world was based in Bridge Street Smethwick Nearby in Downing Street is the famous bicycle saddle maker Brooks Saddles The important metalworking factory of Henry Hope amp Sons Ltd was based at Halford s Lane where the company manufactured steel window systems roof glazing gearings and metalwork citation needed Council housing began in Smethwick after 1920 on land previously belonging to the Downing family whose family home became Holly Lodge High School for Girls in 1922 The mass council house building of the 1920s and 1930s also involved Smethwick s boundaries being extended into part of neighbouring Oldbury in 1928 5 The Ruskin Pottery Studio named in honour of the artist John Ruskin was in Oldbury Road Many English churches have stained glass windows made by Hardman Studios in Lightwoods House or before that by the Camm family citation needed During the Second World War Smethwick was bombed on a number of occasions by the German Luftwaffe A total of 80 people died as a result of these air raids 6 After the First World War about 50 Sikh families settled in Smethwick beginning in 1917 with a majority of the men being veterans of the war 7 After the Second World War Smethwick attracted a large number of immigrants from Commonwealth countries beginning in 1945 the largest ethnic group being Sikhs from the Punjab in India the majority of whom had served in that War 8 The ethnic minority communities were initially unpopular with the white British population of Smethwick prompting the election of Conservative Party Member of Parliament MP Peter Griffiths at the 1964 general election In the election the Labour Party MP was unseated following the use of the campaign slogan If you want a nigger for a neighbour vote Labour allegedly being used by supporters of the winning candidate 9 This came two years after race riots had hit the town in 1962 10 it was also set against a background of factory closures and a growing waiting list for local council accommodation citation needed In 1961 the Sikh community purchased the Congregational Church on the High Street in Smethwick Soon after this was converted into a gurdwara today known as the Guru Nanak Gurdwara Smethwick Bearwood Primary School appointed Tony O Connor as head teacher in 1967 He was the first black head teacher in the UK having been born in Jamaica and moved to Britain with the RAF in 1943 This bought Smethwick more unwanted publicity when the day after the announcement of his appointment racist slogans and swastikas were daubed around the school However O Connor was well liked by both parents and children he retired in 1983 11 In the mid to late 1960s a large council estate in the west of Smethwick was built It was officially known as the West Smethwick Estate but as all of the homes were constructed from concrete the estate was known locally as the concrete jungle 12 The homes mostly three or four storey townhouses were prone to damp and other faults By the 1980s levels of crime and unemployment on the estate were high and by the early 1990s Sandwell Council had decided to demolish it Between 1993 and 1997 the estate was redeveloped with modern low rise housing and renamed Galton Village Another housing estate called the Windmill Lane Estate located near Cape Hill met a similar fate citation needed There is a collection of red brick turn of 20th century terrace 1930s semi detached newly built modern housing and a number of high rise blocks of flats Other estates and areas include Black Patch Cape Hill Uplands Albion Estate Bearwood Londonderry and Rood End citation needed In July 2013 a major fire occurred at the Jayplas plastics and paper recycling plant on Dartmouth Road 13 Architecture edit nbsp The old Toll HouseThe oldest surviving building in Smethwick is the Old Church 14 which stands on the corner of Church Road and the Uplands This was consecrated in 1732 as a Chapel of Ease in the parish of St Peter Harborne The building was originally known as Parkes Chapel in honour of Mistress Dorothy Parkes who bequeathed the money for the church and also for a local school The chapel was later known as the Old Chapel and the public house next to it is still called this In the church there are several fine memorials including one to Dorothy Parkes The Grade I listed Galton Bridge spans the New Line canal and railway When built in 1829 by Thomas Telford it was the highest single span bridge in the world citation needed Its name commemorates Samuel Galton a local landowner and industrialist It is identical to Telford s bridge at Holt Fleet over the River Severn built in 1828 and opened in 1830 nbsp The public library by Yeoville ThomasonThe public library in the High Street was originally built as the Public Hall in 1866 67 and is designed by Yeoville Thomason 15 Matthew Boulton and James Watt opened their Soho Foundry in the north of Smethwick not to be confused with the Soho Manufactory in nearby Soho in the late 18th century In 1802 William Murdoch illuminated the foundry with gas lighting of his own invention The foundry was later home to weighing scale makers W amp T Avery Ltd Rolfe Street public baths were among the first public swimming baths in the country when opened north of the town centre in 1888 The baths remained open for nearly a century before closing In the late 1980s the Black Country Museum expressed interest in transferring the building to its site in Dudley and so the transfer of the building began in 1989 It was finally opened to visitors at the museum in 1999 housing the museum s exhibition gallery and archive resource centre 16 Thimblemill Library is a Grade II listed building built in brick in the Moderne style 17 Political history edit Main article Smethwick UK Parliament constituency The town has often enjoyed a somewhat turbulent political history Smethwick was created as a separate parliamentary constituency in 1918 having previously been part of the Handsworth constituency At that year s general election Christabel Pankhurst standing as a Women s Party candidate narrowly failed to become one of Britain s first woman Members of Parliament She lost to the Labour candidate by 775 votes in a straight fight 18 Labour held the seat until 1931 from 1926 the MP was Sir Oswald Mosley future founder of the British Union of Fascists Mosley resigned the Labour whip in March 1931 but continued to represent the constituency until it was taken by the Conservatives at that year s general election Labour won in the UK general election of 1945 held on 26 July that year However the victorious MP Alfred Dobbs was killed in a car crash the very next day He is thus the shortest serving Member of Parliament MP in British history if one discounts a few cases of people being elected posthumously In the resulting by election Patrick Gordon Walker won for Labour In the 1964 general election Gordon Walker who was Shadow Foreign Secretary was defeated in controversial circumstances in the constituency by the openly anti immigration Conservative candidate Peter Griffiths Labour s victory at the general election would inevitably have seen him appointed as Foreign Secretary in the government led by Harold Wilson however Smethwick had attracted immigration from the Commonwealth in the economic and industrial growth of the years following the Second World War and Griffiths ran a campaign critical of the government s policy There were rumours that his supporters had circulated the slogan If you want a nigger for a neighbour vote Liberal or Labour 19 Griffiths refused to condemn the slogan 20 Colin Jordan a British Neo Nazi and leader of the British Movement claimed that members of his group had produced the initial slogan as well as spread the publicised poster and sticker campaign which contained it Jordan s group in the past had also campaigned on other slogans such as Don t vote a vote for Tory Labour or Liberal is a vote for more Blacks 21 Jordan would also use similar campaign tactics against Gordon Walker in the 1965 Leyton by election The election of Griffith led to Smethwick becoming famous worldwide as Britain s most racist town 20 Historian Rachel Yemm argues that the anti immigration sentiment in the town was the result of a housing shortage which local newspapers such as The Smethwick Telephone blamed on migrants Griffith not only drew on these fears but also raised concerns about miscegenation and argued for the repatriation of migrants 20 At the beginning of 1965 Smethwick Council was planning to purchase all available houses on Marshall Street to prevent their sale to immigrants This made national headlines and the plan was later stopped by the government 20 22 In February 1965 American black activist Malcolm X visited Marshall Street just days before his assassination Earlier in his career he had advocated the complete separation of African Americans from whites but he now showed his opposition to racial segregation 23 24 telling the press I have come here because I am disturbed by reports that coloured people in Smethwick are being treated badly I have heard they are being treated as the Jews under Hitler I would not wait for the fascist element in Smethwick to erect gas ovens Malcolm X s visit to Smethwick had been organised by a BBC News journalist with a view to X having a debate with Griffiths outside a council house in Smethwick Griffiths declined at late notice and so an interview with X was conducted on the streets of Smethwick This was to be X s last TV interview before his assassination nine days later It was never aired 23 Labour candidate and actor Andrew Faulds defeated Griffiths in the 1966 general election remaining as an MP until his retirement at the 1997 general election 23 years after Smethwick became part of the Warley East constituency Griffiths subsequently moved away from the area and served as Conservative MP for Portsmouth North 25 Civic history edit See also Evolution of Worcestershire county boundaries nbsp The local government structure within North Worcestershire and South Staffordshire Prior to the West Midlands Order 1965 reorganisation nbsp Smethwick Council HouseOriginally a hamlet within the parish of Harborne Staffordshire Smethwick was made into an urban district in 1894 and later incorporated as a municipal borough in 1899 and county borough within Staffordshire in 1907 with its base at Smethwick Council House 26 In 1966 Smethwick was merged with the boroughs of Oldbury and Rowley Regis to form the new County Borough of Warley and was transferred into the county of Worcestershire This in turn was merged with West Bromwich in 1974 to form the Sandwell Metropolitan Borough which was incorporated into the new West Midlands county 27 In 1888 there had been plans for Smethwick to be incorporated into the city of Birmingham but the urban district council voted against these plans by a single vote 28 The archives for the Borough of Smethwick are held at Sandwell Community History and Archives Service Transport history edit Canals edit See also BCN Main Line Smethwick has a long association with canals which were the town s first major transport links from a time before decent roads and of course railways The Birmingham Canal Navigation Old and New Main Line Canals run through the industrial areas and right past the High Street running parallel to the Stour Valley Line all three end up in Wolverhampton James Brindley was the engineer charged with building the canal a man who gives his name to the busy district in the centre of Birmingham near the International Convention Centre National Indoor Arena and Broad Street nbsp Galton Bridge viewed from the Galton TunnelThe old main line was completed through Smethwick by 1769 It required 12 locks to climb over the hill through the town Brindley had found the earth too soft to dig a cutting through at the time Water was supplied by two steam engines One of them was located on the Engine Arm which led to the Smethwick Engine on Rabone Lane and the other was near Spon Lane New Smethwick Pumping Station next to Brasshouse Lane was added later in 1892 Because of the locks the canal through Smethwick became a bottleneck and Thomas Telford was commissioned in 1824 to look at alternatives The new main line through Smethwick was completed by 1829 and completely bypassed all six remaining locks of the summit with a deep cutting The Engine Arm and Stewarts aqueducts were built to carry their respective canals over the new mainline The cutting was built through the land of the local businessman Samuel Galton and thus this cutting created the Galton Valley and Galton Bridge was named in his honour The bridge was the longest single span iron bridge in the world at the time The canals of the new and old main line diverged at one end at Smethwick Junction near Bridge Street and rejoined at Bromford Junction near Bromford Road in Oldbury Today Galton Valley is a nature area and of more historical interest than commercial and used mainly for leisure rather than transporting commercial goods Railways edit The LNWR was the first to construct a railway through Smethwick in 1852 from New Street towards Wolverhampton and the North West Rolfe Street and Spon Lane opened that year followed by Soho in 1853 In 1867 the Stourbridge Railway opened a link between the Great Western Birmingham Wolverhampton amp Dudley Railway of 1852 near the current Hawthorns and Stourbridge with a station at Smethwick West and a link to the Stour Valley line towards New Street called Smethwick Junction the Stourbridge Railway was merged into the Great Western in 1870 Not until 1931 was a railway station was constructed at the Hawthorns although it was a halt primarily for the football ground this station closed in 1967 nbsp British Rail Class 33 at Swanage built by the Birmingham Railway Carriage amp Wagon CompanyFrom 1854 the Birmingham Railway Carriage amp Wagon Company was based in Smethwick until its closure in 1963 The company not only built trains but also London Underground stock buses and a military equipment Soho railway station closed in 1949 followed by Spon Lane station in 1968 In 1972 the section of line between Smethwick West and Birmingham Moor Street as well as the Birmingham Wolverhampton and Dudley railway was closed with the exception of a single line between Smethwick West and Coopers Scrap Metal in Handsworth and all Stourbridge services were diverted into Birmingham New Street In 1995 the line between Birmingham Snow Hill and Smethwick West was restored and a new station called Smethwick Galton Bridge was constructed over both the Snow Hill and Stour Valley lines to provide an interchange Smethwick West was due to close when Galton Bridge opened but due to a legal error British Railways had to maintain a parliamentary train service to the station Most local trains from Stourbridge to Birmingham were diverted into Snow Hill although it was not until 2004 that the last regular service used the route into Birmingham New Street via Smethwick Junction Soho TMD is located next to Soho rail junction road access is just off Wellington Street It is the principal train depot for West Midlands Trains Class 323 train fleet which are often seen providing local train services in the area Buses and trams edit nbsp A Midland Red D9 in 2002The town of Smethwick has a long association with buses From 1914 the famous Birmingham amp Midland Motor Omnibus Company BMMO or Midland Red was based on Bearwood Road on the site of the current Bearwood Shopping Centre until 1974 The garage later saw use as an indoor market until it was demolished in 1979 29 Smethwick never had its own Corporation Transport Department like West Bromwich or Birmingham Most bus services until the earlier 1970s were provided by the Midland Red West Bromwich and Birmingham In the early 1970s all local bus transport was taken over by the WMPTE until deregulation in the 1980s Since then National Express West Midlands has been the primary operator in the West Midlands Steam trams started through Smethwick in 1885 operated by Birmingham and Midland Tramways These were replaced by electric trams in 1904 and then merged into the Birmingham Corporation Tramways in 1906 and trams eventually ran from both the Dudley Road and Hagley Road direction Dudley Road trams operated to Cape Hill and then diverged to either take the route towards Dudley Route 87 via the High Street or towards Bearwood Route 29 via Waterloo Road terminating near the site of current Bearwood Bus Station and Kings Head public house Route 34 from Birmingham to Bearwood along the Hagley Road and terminated at the top of Bearwood Road next to the route from Cape Hill despite terminating so close to each other there was no physical link between route 29 and 34 in Bearwood 30 Route 34 was the first route in Smethwick to disappear in 1930 the last tram route was closed in 1939 and replaced by motor buses Both the current National Express West Midlands routes 82 and 87 are former tram routes and the 87 in fact uses the same number nbsp The Hawthorns railway station and metro stopThe West Midlands Metro opened in 1999 is more of a light railway than a tramway It follows the former Great Western Railway track bed from Birmingham Snow Hill station to the former Wolverhampton Low Level via West Bromwich until Priestfield in Wolverhampton After that it becomes a tramway proper and runs along the Bilston Road into Wolverhampton city centre From late 2015 the service was extended from its former terminus at Snow Hill through the city centre to Grand Central 31 The metro can be caught at the Hawthorns railway station Geography editSmethwick borders West Bromwich and Oldbury to the north and west and the Birmingham districts of Handsworth Winson Green Harborne Edgbaston and Quinton to the south and east Demographics editAt the 2011 census there were 48 765 residents in Smethwick in 18 381 households and the median age of Smethwick residents was 32 32 In terms of ethnicity 32 43 3 of Smethwick residents were White Comprising 37 6 White British 4 6 Other White 1 1 Irish and 0 1 Gypsy Irish Traveller 37 5 were Asian Comprising 15 7 Indian 12 4 Pakistani 4 4 Bangladeshi 0 4 Chinese and 4 6 from another Asian background 11 3 were Black Comprising 6 1 Caribbean 3 3 African and 1 9 other Black 4 7 were Mixed 0 5 were Arab and 2 8 were from another ethnic group In terms of religion 39 5 of Smethwick residents identified as Christian 21 8 were Muslim 15 7 were Sikh 14 0 said they had no religion 5 8 did not state any religion 2 3 were Hindu 0 3 were Buddhists and 0 6 were from another religion 32 Industry and commerce editUntil the end of the 18th century Smethwick was largely rural with farming as the main industry A water mill named Briddismylne is recorded in 1499 as belonging to Halesowen Abbey thought to be on the more recent Thimblemill site 33 In 1659 a mill in the Hockley Brook is recorded as belonging to a Mr Lane 33 The mill which led to the street name Windmill Lane was built on land bought in 1803 by William Croxall a miller The last part of the windmill building was demolished in 1949 33 nbsp Soho Foundry main gateThe Soho Foundry opened in 1796 by James Watt and Matthew Boulton trading as Boulton Watt amp Sons was built to produce complete steam engines to Watt s designs Waste dumped from the foundry gave rise to the name Black Patch to the field to the east The Soho Foundry is now the headquarters of the Avery Company The route of the canal passing through the valley of the Hockley Brook the boundary with Handsworth on the north side of Smethwick resulted in most of the heavy industry being located there 34 The railway was opened in 1852 One of Smethwick s significant industrial enterprises of the 19th century was the Fox Henderson Company formerly Brannah Fox and Co 35 which built the steel structure for the Crystal Palace in 1851 At its peak this employed about 2 000 people at the London Works The bankruptcy and closure of the firm in 1856 had a devastating effect on the local economy The site of the London Works was later acquired by Chamberlain and Nettlefold and in 2014 was cleared to build the new Midland Metropolitan University Hospital amalgamating the Sandwell General Hospital at West Bromwich with the City Hospital Dudley Road Richard Tangye was a notable builder of steam engines in the late 19th century His designs in a characteristic green colour have a distinctive elegance of form He demolished Smethwick Hall on the border with Handsworth and built his factory the Cornwall Works on the site Mitchells amp Butlers opened a brewery on Cape Hill in 1879 It was a local landmark in Smethwick and provided employment in the town for 123 years However following a decline in sales and revenue American owners Coors closed the brewery on 6 December 2002 It was demolished two years later and a 650 home private housing estate was developed on its site 36 Charles Carr opened a bell foundry in the town in 1891 which cast bells for many churches including John s Lane Dublin 37 Castle Bromwich Church Stoke Bliss and Astley Worcestershire 38 Teale amp Yates Ltd Inc 29 November 1962 was a fish game and poultry shop which also sold fruit and vegetables It was on the High Street for many years during the 1960s and 1970s providing good quality fresh food for many local people The shop was owned by Arthur Teale and his wife Joan with their eldest son joining the family business in the early 1970s The courier company Interlink Express established its head office and national distribution hub in the town in the early 2000s and is a major employer in the area nbsp Smethwick Heritage CentreThe Smethwick Heritage Centre museum was opened on 15 September 2004 by Professor Carl Chinn It maintains a collection of material on Smethwick s industrial and social heritage 39 Education editAbbey Junior and Infants two sites Abbey Road Bearwood Annie Lennard Infant School The Oval Thimblemill Bearwood Primary School Bearwood Road Bearwood In 1967 Tony O Connor was appointed headmaster at what was then Bearwood Junior and Infants School 40 Cape Hill Primary School Cape Hill Crocketts Primary School Coopers Lane Cape Hill Devonshire Primary School Auckland Road Uplands Galton Valley Primary school George Betts Primary School West End Avenue Holly Lodge High School Holly Lane West Smethwick Ruskin House Pupil Ref Unit Holly Lane West Smethwick St Gregory s Roman Catholic Primary School Park Road St Mathew s Church of England School Windmill Lane St Phillip s Catholic Primary Messenger Road Sandwell Academy Halfords Lane West Bromwich built on the sites of Sandwell Secondary Modern and Albion Junior schools Shireland Collegiate Academy Waterloo Road Cape Hill Shireland Hall Infant and Junior School Edith Road Cape Hill Smethwick College part of Sandwell College now in a new purpose built building in West Bromwich town centre Crocketts Lane Uplands Manor Primary School Addenbrooke Road Uplands Victoria Park Primary School Ballot StreetTransport editMajor roads The M5 runs along the western edge of Smethwick passing over the two canals and a railway near Spon Lane M5 Junction 1 is accessible at West Bromwich using the A41 road Soho Road M5 Junction 2 is accessible at Oldbury on the A4123 Wolverhampton Road Harborne to Wolverhampton at Birchley Island Another major road passing through Smethwick is the A456 Hagley Road from Birmingham to Halesowen Kidderminster and Ludlow which passes through Bearwood along Lightwoods Park Public transport Local bus service is provided primarily by National Express West Midlands as well as other operators Smethwick is on both the Hagley Road Birmingham Dudley Merry Hill Halesowen and Stourbridge and Dudley Road Birmingham Smethwick Oldbury and Dudley bus corridors and the famous Number 11 Birmingham Outer Circle bus routes There are also direct regular bus services to West Bromwich Wolverhampton Oldbury Blackheath Harborne Birmingham University and Dudley 41 Dudley Road corridor buses provide a bus link to the nearby City Hospital in Winson Green Smethwick has three operational railway stations providing regular local and some long distance services All of the stations are currently managed by West Midlands Trains who provide most of the train services The closest intercity railway stations are either Birmingham New Street or Sandwell amp Dudley nbsp Rolfe Street railway station in SmethwickSmethwick Rolfe Street railway station Rolfe Street amp North Western Road near the High Street Located on the Stour Valley it is mainly for local trains between Birmingham New Street Wolverhampton and Walsall Smethwick Galton Bridge Oldbury Road As a bi level railway station it sits on both the Stour Valley a section of the West Coast Main Line and the Jewellery Line It has the same services as both the Hawthorns and Rolfe Street railway stations plus it has direct long distance services to Birmingham International Shrewsbury Chester Northern Wales Crewe Liverpool and a limited peak time only direct service to London The Hawthorns Halfords Lane and close to the West Bromwich football ground It sits on the Jewellery line just like Smethwick Galton Bridge station but also interchanges with the Midland Metro linking Birmingham and Wolverhampton The Jewellery Line has regular direct services to Birmingham Snow Hill Solihull Stratford upon Avon Stourbridge Junction Kidderminster and Worcester Chiltern Railways also provide a limited service direct to London Marylebone Airports The closest airport to Smethwick is Birmingham which is around 20 mi 30 km east at the other side of Birmingham city centre National Express do provide some long distance coach services to some London Airports from Bearwood 42 By road the fastest routes are either via the M5 M6 and M42 motorways or via Birmingham city centre and the A45 For travellers by rail there are direct train services from Galton Bridge or from Rolfe Street railway station changing at Birmingham New Street There are no direct bus services from Smethwick to the airport Passengers would have to travel to Birmingham and change buses The principal bus service to the airport is the National Express West Midlands Limited Stop express service X1 Birmingham to Coventry Public services and government editGovernment Smethwick is represented at Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council by 12 councillors covering the four wards of Soho amp Victoria St Pauls which covers up to the Hawthorns ground Smethwick and Abbey It is represented in the House of Commons as part of the Warley constituency It also included Bristnall ward until 2004 when that was transferred to Oldbury town Library services There are two public libraries in Smethwick the larger main library is located on the High Street 43 and a smaller one is located on Thimblemill Road 44 Smethwick Swimming Centre nbsp Smethwick BathsFormerly known as Thimblemill Baths it is a public swimming pool which opened in 1933 located on Thimblemill Road between Gladys Road and Reginald Road in Bearwood It is a Grade II listed building There are two pools a 1933 main pool and a 1968 small pool gym dance studio sauna and steam facilities 45 During the Second World War the basement was used as an air raid shelter and a supply depot for the US Air Force who were stationed in Smethwick The main pool was capable of being covered for the purpose of public events concerts galas and exhibitions took place there until the late 1960s Famous acts including Tommy Cooper the Beatles the Rolling Stones the Who the Small Faces and the Kinks played at the baths 46 Emergency services Policing in Smethwick is provided by the West Midlands Police who have a police station on Piddock Road just off the High Street West Midlands Fire Service is responsible for fire and rescue A fire station is located on Stony Lane a short distance from the High Street Emergency medical care is provided by the West Midlands Ambulance Service Healthcare Smethwick is part of Sandwell and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust The closest hospital is City Hospital previously known as Dudley Road Hospital located in Winson Green Other local hospitals include Sandwell General Hospital in West Bromwich and Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Selly Oak Sport editThe town has a semi professional association football club Smethwick Rangers Nicknamed SR1 the club competes in the 2020 21 season in the West Midlands Regional League Premier Division the 9th tier of the English football league system Despite representing the town the team play their home games in Tividale The Sandwell Aquatics Centre used in the 2022 Commonwealth Games is in the Londonderry area Smethwick Cricket Club a founder member of the Birmingham League is an amateur cricket club in the town The Hawthorns home of West Bromwich Albion FC is also partially within Smethwick Districts editSee Districts of Smethwick Bearwood Black Patch amp Soho Cape Hill including Windmill Lane and French Walls High Street Smethwick including Victoria Park Londonderry North Smethwick Brasshouse Lane Albion Estate Hawthorns Middlemore Estate The Uplands West Smethwick 47 Including Galton Village Notable residents editThis article s list of residents may not follow Wikipedia s verifiability policy Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are residents or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations October 2018 Charles Douglas Fox 1843 1921 English civil engineer Sydney Barnes 1873 1967 England fast bowler was born in Smethwick Billy Williams 1876 1929 English professional footballer entirely with West Bromwich Albion Harold John Colley 1894 1918 First World War Victoria Cross recipient born in Smethwick John Davison MP 1870 1927 Smethwick s first Member of Parliament Labour was born in Spon Lane Ann George 1903 1989 actress Ken Wharton 1916 1957 British racing driver Richard Swinburne born 1934 British philosopher specialising in philosophy of religion was born in Smethwick Julian Dawes born 1942 musician composer Christine McVie 1943 2022 musician songwriter Bobby Thomson 1943 2009 English professional footballer David Hallam born 1948 British Labour politician Julie Walters born 1950 actress born in Edgbaston but spent her early years at 69 Bishopton Road in the Bearwood area of Smethwick Patrick Cowdell born 1953 British boxer Mark Van Hoen born 1966 electronic music artist born in Croydon but brought up in Smethwick Lee Hughes born 1976 professional football playerSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Smethwick Black Patch ParkReferences edit a b Smethwick in West Midlands West Midlands Built up Area Subdivision City Population Archived from the original on 5 March 2021 Retrieved 3 May 2021 a b Smethwick Ward in West Midlands City Population Archived from the original on 10 November 2020 Retrieved 3 May 2021 a b Inskip K W 1966 Smethwick from hamlet to county borough Smethwick Corporation of Smethwick p 3 Midland Metropolitan Hospital 107m funding withdrawn by banks BBC News 7 June 2018 Archived from the original on 29 May 2019 Retrieved 13 August 2019 Smethwick Other estates British History Online British history ac uk Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Cemetery Details Cwgc org Archived from the original on 24 January 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Maddison John 2000 Smethwick in old photographs Gloucester Budding ISBN 1840151552 Bhanot Kavita 2018 The book of Birmingham a city in short fiction Manchester Comma Press ISBN 9781910974377 Edwards Kathryn 18 April 2008 UK England West Midlands Powell s rivers of blood legacy BBC News Archived from the original on 1 March 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Sean McLoughlin William Gould Ananya Jahanara Kabir Emma Tomalin 11 July 2014 Writing the City in British Asian Diasporas p 45 ISBN 9781317679677 Archived from the original on 24 January 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Campaign launched to chart life of first black headmaster www expressandstar com Archived from the original on 29 March 2019 Retrieved 29 March 2019 Concrete Jungle Up The Oss Road Uptheossroad wordpress com 8 July 2014 Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Bosses speak out over tragic accident as Chinese lantern sparks region s biggest fire Express amp Star Archived from the original on 3 July 2013 Retrieved 1 July 2013 History Smethwick Old Church Archived from the original on 20 July 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 The Buildings of England Worcestershire Nikolaus Pevsner 1968 Penguin p81 Rolfe Street Baths Black Country Living Museum Bclm co uk Archived from the original on 29 July 2010 Retrieved 29 June 2016 British Listed Buildings Warley Branch Library Smethwick British Listed Buildings Archived from the original on 4 March 2018 Retrieved 21 May 2015 Hallam David J A Taking on the Men the first women parliamentary candidates 1918 Archived 29 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Studley 2018 Chap 2 Christabel Pankhurst in Smethwick Peter H S Griffiths A Question of Colour 1966 See pp 154 166 171 a b c d Yemm Rachel 2019 Immigration Race and Local Media Smethwick and the 1964 General Election Contemporary British History 33 106 109 doi 10 1080 13619462 2018 1535973 S2CID 150219506 Jackson Paul 2016 Colin Jordan and Britain s Neo Nazi Movement Hitler s Echo Bloomsbury Academic p 129 ISBN 978 1472509314 Not everything is black and white Marshall Street Then and now 2013 Archived from the original on 17 April 2022 Retrieved 3 April 2022 a b Malcolm X s visit to Smethwick remembered in pictures BBC News 12 February 2015 Archived from the original on 19 June 2020 Retrieved 22 June 2020 Natives Race and Class in the Ruins of Empire Two Roads 21 March 2019 p 271 ISBN 9781473661233 Peter Griffiths obituary Telegraph Archived from the original on 20 June 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Historic England Council House 1342665 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 12 May 2021 Smethwick CB MB UD through time Vision of Britain Archived from the original on 24 December 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2012 Country Black 17 July 2008 When a single vote saved Smethwick from Brummagem Black Country Bugle Retrieved 29 June 2016 MidlandRed net Depots Bearwood depot Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2015 Smethwick Public services British History Online British history ac uk Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Construction phases Construction phases Centro org uk 17 June 2016 Archived from the original on 13 March 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 a b c UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Smethwick Built up area E35000380 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 3 May 2021 a b c Greenslade Baggs Baugh amp Johnston op cit Greenslade Baggs Baugh amp Johnston A History of the County of Stafford Volume 17 Offlow Hundred Archived 10 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine 1976 Fox Henderson and Co Graces Guide www gracesguide co uk Archived from the original on 18 February 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2020 M amp B Cape Hill Brewery Smethwick Birmingham Roundabout Archived from the original on 10 September 2011 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Dove Details online Dove cccbr org uk 2018 Archived from the original on 15 August 2020 Retrieved 6 June 2018 Church Bells in Worcestershire www ringing demon co uk Archived from the original on 27 January 2019 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Smethwick Heritage Centre Archived from the original on 6 April 2018 Retrieved 12 May 2018 England s pioneering black head teachers BBC News 11 May 2018 Archived from the original on 9 November 2020 Retrieved 30 November 2020 Buses National Express West Midlands Nxbus co uk GB BIR 29 June 2016 Archived from the original on 2 March 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 UK Stop finder National Express Coach Coach nationalexpress com Archived from the original on 7 February 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Smethwick Library Sandwell Council Sandwell gov uk 6 October 2010 Archived from the original on 11 September 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Thimblemill Library Sandwell Council Sandwell gov uk 30 September 2010 Archived from the original on 3 September 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Smethwick Swimming Centre Slt leisure co uk Archived from the original on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 29 June 2016 History of Smethwick Swimming Centre PDF Slt leisure co uk Archived PDF from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Friends of West Smethwick Park SCVO sandwellvcs info Archived from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 2 April 2020 External links editSandwell Council Smethwick Local History Society Smethwick Economic history A History of the County of Staffordshire Volume XVII Offlow hundred part 1976 pp 107 18 Smethwick Borough Archive Catalogue Smethwick Heritage Centre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Smethwick amp oldid 1189097862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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