fbpx
Wikipedia

Solihull

Solihull (/ˈsɒlihʌl/, /ˈsl-/ or /ˌsliˈhʌl/) is a market town and the administrative centre of the wider Metropolitan Borough of Solihull in West Midlands County, England. The town had a population of 126,577 at the 2021 Census.[1] Solihull is situated on the River Blythe in the Forest of Arden area. Solihull's wider borough had a population of 216,240 at the 2021 Census.[2]

Solihull
Town

Clockwise from top: St Alphege Church, Touchwood Shopping Centre, Malvern Park and Solihull town square
Solihull
Location within the West Midlands
Population126,577 (2021 Census)
DemonymSilhillian
OS grid referenceSP1579
• London110 mi (180 km)
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSolihull
Postcode districtB36, B37, B90–B94
Dialling code0121
PoliceWest Midlands
FireWest Midlands
AmbulanceWest Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
West Midlands
52°24′47″N 1°46′41″W / 52.413°N 1.778°W / 52.413; -1.778Coordinates: 52°24′47″N 1°46′41″W / 52.413°N 1.778°W / 52.413; -1.778

Solihull itself is mostly urban; however, the larger borough is rural in character, with many outlying villages, and three quarters of the borough is designated as green belt.[3] The town and its borough, which has been part of Warwickshire for most of its history, has roots dating back to the 1st century BC, and was further formally established during the medieval era. Today the town is famed as, amongst other things, the birthplace of the Land Rover car marque, the home of the British equestrian eventing team and is considered to be one of the most prosperous areas in the UK.

History

Toponymy

Solihull's name is commonly thought to have derived from the position of its arden stone parish church, St Alphege, on a 'soily' hill.[4] The church was built on a hill of stiff red marl, which turned to sticky mud in wet weather.

Early history

 
Wooden bridge over the Cole at Shirley, drawn in the 19th century by Samuel Rostill Lines.

The land now forming Solihull was once covered in the ancient Forest of Arden.

The earliest known settlement in the area was at Berry Mound, Shirley, which was the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort, a fortified village protected by earth banks, dating back to the 1st century BC and which covered approximately 11 acres (4.5 ha).[5] The name Shirley means either 'a bright clearing' or 'a border clearing' in the Forest of Arden.[6]

During the later Iron Age the River Cole which feeds the River Blythe, is believed to have been the border between the Corieltauvi and the Cornovii, with Solihull forming the junction of the two powerful Celtic Tribes.[7]

Throughout the Roman occupation of Britain it was held that no Roman roads made it through the Forest of Arden because it was so dense. The nearest known major Roman settlements being at Coleshill on the Solihull border, Metchley Fort (around 8.5 miles north west), and Alcester (around 15 miles south).

Anglo Saxon era

By the Anglo Saxon era, the forest of Arden was part of the Kingdom of Mercia. An assart settlement known as the manor of Ulverlei, meaning 'Wulfhere's clearing' was established, with its centre north east of the hillfort at Shirely. Wulfhere was the first Christian King of all Mercia. The settlement was a clearing in the dense woodland of the Forest of Arden, with the land farmed in common.[8] The older settlement at Shirely was considered part of the new Manor of Ulverlei. This status as a clearing in the countryside is still reflected to this day in the town motto, "Urbs in rure" or "town in the country".[9]

Local folklore holds that as part of his campaigns against the Viking invasion in the mid 9th century Alfred the Great fought a battle against the Danes at Berry Mound, Shirley.[10]

After the absorption of Mercia into the rest of England, Ulverlei became the property of the Earls of Mercia. The first of these was Leofric, husband of Lady Godiva, heroine of the Warwickshire legend. The manor of Ulverlei later passed to Leofric's grandson, Edwin, Earl of Mercia who held it until his death in 1071. Leofric's great-nephew, Thorkell of Arden, would become progenitor of the locally prominent Arden family, one of the few Anglo Saxon families to retain their land holdings after the Norman Conquest, and eventually settling in their primary estate in Castle Bromwich, today in the Borough of Solihull.

Early medieval era

In 1086, it was recorded that the Manor of Ulverlei was now held by Cristina, great-granddaughter of Ethelred the Unready, daughter of Edward the Exile, and sister of the last Anglo Saxon King Edgar Aetheling.[11] Shortly after 1086, Christina entered the nunnery of Romsey Abbey in Hampshire. Her lands were granted to the Norman Ralph de Limesy. The extent of the area historically considered the manor of Ulverlei is demarked by an area called 'Worlds End', a historical naming practice indicating that people did not live beyond there.[12]

It was between 1170 and 1180 that the de Limsey family founded the settlement of 'Solihull' as a "planted borough" or planned village to the south of Ulverli. It was called a borough simply because the de Limsey Lord of the Manor offered free burgage tenure where residents were free, rent-paying burgesses, rather than villeins owing service to the Lord of the Manor. By the time of Edward I, Ulverlie was sub-infeudated into the newly created Manor of Solihull, and became known as the 'Old Town', contracted to its present name, Olton to distinguish itself from the New Town of Solihull.[8]

The de Limsey family held the Manor of Solihull, until Ralph's great-granddaughter married Hugh de Odingsells, whose family were thought to be of Flemish origin.

The Odingsells were the Lords of the Manor of Ulverley, and later after its subinfeudation, Solihull, from the 12th century and are believed to have constructed a castle on the site now known as Hobs Moat (a possible corruption of Odingsells' Moat). The castle was occupied until around the 14th century.[13] The Odingsells were relatives of the powerful Clinton Earls of Huntingdon of Maxstoke Castle (around 8 miles north east of Hobs Moat), whose relatives would also found nearby Kenilworth Castle (around 13 miles south east of Hobs moat) and Baddesley Clinton (around 8 miles south of Hobs Moat).

The red sandstone parish church of St. Alphege dates from a similar period to Hobs Moat and is a large and handsome example of English Gothic church architecture, with a traditional spire 168 feet (51 metres) high, making it visible from a great distance. It is located at the head of High Street and is a Grade I listed building.[14] It was founded in about 1220 by Hugh de Oddingsell. A chantry chapel was also founded there by Sir William de Oddingsell in 1277 and the upper chapel in St Alphege was built for a chantry.

By 1242, the Manor of Solihull was granted a Royal charter to hold a weekly market and an annual fair "on the vigil, the feast and the morrow of St Alphege" (18-20 April).[8] It was around this time that Solihull became a hub for its surrounding parishes.

The town of Solihull would later absorb the nearby settlement of Longdon. The first recorded reference to Longdon was in 1086 as 'Langedone', meaning the 'long hill'. The 'long hill' in question was the hill on what is now Solihull's Marsh Lane and Yew Tree Lane, leading from the River Blythe up onto Elmdon Heath. The Longdon Manor House was at its edge on Copt Heath.[15] In 1161 the Manor of Longdon had been property of Ketelberne de Langdon, who founded Henwood Priory and gave his name to the settlement of Catherine-de-Barnes (a corruption of the name Ketelberne). The assimilation of Longdon into Solihull was so total that few references exist today indicating it was ever a separate place.

The Longdon area bordered onto the settlement of Hampton in Arden, appearing in the Domesday Survey of 1086 as 'Hantone'.[16] Despite bordering Solihull, Hampton in Arden would not be incorporated into the borough of Solihull until later. From the middle of the 12th century Hampton in Arden was owned by the de Arden family, and also included the then hamlet of Knowle. Knowle would become a royal manor in 1285 when the de Arden family sold it to King Edward I and Queen Eleanor. In 1396, Walter Cook applied for a faculty to build a church in 'Knoll', so the villagers would no longer have to cross the treacherous waters of the river Blythe to get to church, and this was granted by Pope Boniface IX on 4 May 1396. By 1402 the church was consecrated and Knowle broke away from Hampton in Arden, later becoming part of the borough of Solihull.[17][16]

Near Knowle lies the settlement of Temple Balsall, part of the borough of Solihull, that was founded by the Knights Templar, who farmed about 650 acres (2.6 km2) of the estate in the 12th century, and established the church and the Balsall Preceptory.[18]

Later medieval era

 
Hobs Moat Castle, Olton, Solihull

By 1295, the Manor of Solihull had passed from the Odingsells via heiress to the de Birmingham family, however they in turn quickly passed it into the Le Despencer family. The Despencers found themselves at odds with the Trussell family of nearby Nuthurst (now in the borough of Solihull) during the baronial revolt under Edward II. The warring between the two families ended when Sir William Trussell of Nuthurst led the invasion of England by Queen Isabella against Edward II, which installed Edward III on the throne. Hugh Despenser was executed and Sir William Trussell was made the King's Secretary of State for England under Edward III. The rivalry between the two families was intense, and at one point the grandson of Sir William Trussell, Sir John Trussell, abducted the widow of Hugh Despenser's grandson (also called Hugh Despenser), after he was killed in battle, and forced her to marry him in an ultimately futile attempt to take the manor of Solihull. The Despencers would briefly fall back into favour some years later when helping with the campaigns of Edward the Black Prince.[19][20]

It is during this time in the 14th century that Hobs Moat Castle is believed to have fallen into ruin. Antiquary Sir William Dugdale would visit the site three centuries later in 1656, finding only "a large Moat" and was informed by the locals that the castle there had long since been removed.[13] The Odingsells had built a new purpose-built manor house closer to the new town centre, called Silhill Hall, at some point in the 13th century.[21]

Within the Longdon area of Solihull, is an area known as Malvern, named for Simon de Malverne, believed to be of Malvern in Worcestershire, assassinated in 1317. A moated site opposite the end of Marsh Lane is believed to be the de Malvern former home.[22]

By the 14th century, the town had become famed for its blacksmiths, and the Solihull High Street was known as le Smythestret.[23] This was because of its location in the Forest of Arden, and the abundance of trees required to provide fuel for the fires.[24] The town was also known for textiles. The end of Dury Lane was known as Teinters Green, believed to be an area where cloth was stretched on tenter hooks.[25]

In the grounds of St Alphege church is a now Grade II listed ruin dating from the 14th century. It is believed to have been a well house for a holy spring, and later possibly an Oratory.[26]

Historians have suggested that the Shakespeare family, ancestors of William Shakespeare (born a few miles south in Stratford-upon-Avon), were originally from Solihull's Balsall, with their names appearing in local registers between 1385 and 1457.[27] Shakespeare's mother, Mary Arden, was from a cadet branch of the de Arden family of Castle Bromwich in the borough of Solihull.[28] Shakespeare's son Hamnet Shakespeare's baptism on 23 March 1560 is recorded in the Register of Solihull.

In 1400, Thomas Despenser, 1st Earl of Gloucester died a traitor for his part in the Epiphany Rising, and so the Crown took custody of the manor because the heir, Richard le Despenser, was a minor.[20]

Early modern era

 
Lime Tree House, also erroneously known as "The Manor House", Solihull

The manor of Solihull remained property of the king for many years, and was passed through a number of custodians or lessees. In 1495 the Greswolde family of Solihull and nearby Kenilworth, while serving as the Kings custodians of the manor of Solihull, built the house on the Solihull High Street called Lime Tree House now erroneously known as the 'Manor House' (as no lord of the manor ever lived there - Silhill Hall was the manor house for Solihull).

The manor of Solihull was eventually granted to the Duke of Norfolk, who in turn passed it on in 1530 to the local Throckmorton family of Coughton Court. Solihull was owned by the Throckmorton's during the Throckmorton Plot of 1583, and the planning of the 1605 Gunpowder Plot to blow up Parliament in which the Throckmorton's were heavily involved. Their co-conspirators included the Catesby family of Lapworth (then part of the borough of Solihull), and the Digby family who were Lords of the Manor of Coleshill (much of which is part of the borough of Solihull today). They rented a house in London from Henry Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton (then in the borough of Solihull) to store the gunpowder. Sir Richard Walsh, owner of Walsh Hall in Meriden (part of the modern borough of Solihull) was the Sheriff of Worcestershire who eventually cornered and killed the gunpowder plotters.[20] John Greswolde, brother of Robert Greswolde, of the wider Greswolde family of Solihull, was an attendant of Henry Garnet (a priest executed for his complicity in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605). It was said that when John was arrested and interrogated after the Gunpowder plot he was racked so badly at the Tower of London that it was rumoured he was dead.[29][30]

The sub-manor of Longdon in Solihull meanwhile had passed to the Greswolde family, in the era of Elizabeth I, however it soon passed through a daughter to Thomas Dabridgecourt. In 1680 the Rev. Henry Greswolde, then rector of Solihull, bought a large farm called Malvern Farm, in the Malvern part of Longdon Manor, to establish a new family seat, which would be called Malvern Hall.[31]

 
Historic Solihull town centre

In 1604 the Throckmorton family sold the Manor of Solihull to Edmund Hawes. The Hawes family were already prominent local landowners, having owned the Hillfields area of Solihull since 1311, when Thomas Hawes, a lawyer, purchased the land. William & Ursula Hawes had constructed Hillfield Hall in 1576, a grand Tudor hall with battlements and a long gallery. The hall oversaw five farms, including Hillfields and Shelly farm. William Hawes lived there until his death in 1611.[32] Shelly had been a thriving hamlet during the 13th and 14th centuries, and included Monkspath, but there was little mention of the area by the 17th century.[33] Hillfield Hall remains residential to this day, while the 16th-century Grade II listed Shelly farmhouse is an upmarket bar and restaurant.[34]

The historic Solihull School was also founded in 1560 (although not on its present site). On the right along High Street from St Alphege Church porch is one of the town's oldest landmarks, the George, a hotel which dates from the 16th century.

 
Hillfield Hall

Solihull appears to have survived the English Civil War of 1642–1651 relatively unscathed, even though many important close engagements and battles were fought nearby including the Battle of Edgehill to the south and the Battle of Camp Hill to the north. It is reported that Prince Rupert, commander of the Royalist forces, was on his way to meet King Charles in Solihull when he was skirmished by Parliamentary forces in the Battle of Kings Norton.[35]

Before its eventual sale to the Greswoldes as part of the Manor of Longdon, the Malvern area of Solihull had been the property of Parliamentarian commander Robert Greville.[22] The Greville family remained important to the area, with Fulke Greville, 5th Baron Brooke being erroneously recorded as the Lord of the Manor of Longdon in 1682.[20] A branch of the Greville family would make donations for schools in Knowle in the early 1700s.[36]

Modern era

In the modern era, Solihull became quieter, with textile working and iron working still prominent in the town.[23] The Manor of Solihull continued to pass through a number of other holders including the Archer family of Umberslade Hall in Nuthurst. Eventually in 1850 it passed to Robert Short an officer in the East India Company, who left it to his son in law, Rev. John Couchman. The Couchman's remain the Lords of the Manor of Solihull to the present day.[37]

 
John Constable - Malvern Hall, Warwickshire

By the 1700s, work was underway on Malvern Hall, with Humphrey Greswolde overseeing, it would be completed in the first half of the century. The hall featured a gatehouse onto the Warwick Road designed by Sir John Soane, architect of the Bank of England.[38] In 1809 the hall would be painted by John Constable, for his patron, Henry Greswolde Lewis.[39] The Greswoldes would later sell the house to Solihull council who converted the estate into Malvern Park. The hall is today part of Solihull School.

Also constructed in 1712, was Touchwood Hall at the end of Dury Lane on Teinters Green. The hall would serve as the home of the Holbeche family, former lords of the manor at Widney Manor and a prominent local family. The hall would later be held by the Madeley and Martineau families. The hall was demolished in 1963 but lends its name to Solihull's famous shopping centre.[40]

During this time poets William Shenstone and Richard Jago attended Solihull School, where today, two houses are named after them.

 
Solihull Malvern Hall

In 1775, Monkspath Hall would be constructed, which would capture the nations media attention two centuries later when it was illegally demolished, sparking a court case which demanded it be put back exactly as it was.

In 1785, the Earl of Aylesford would help found, and become patron, of the Woodmen of Arden. This is a prestigious society of Toxophilites who meet to shoot longbows at their ground in the Forest of Arden in Meriden, in the borough of Solihull. The Woodmen target shoot at only one distance, 100 yards and score in the Archers disfavour.[41] Archery had always been an important sport in Solihull. On the doorway of the church of St Alphage are incisions which are arrow sharpening marks from the 1360s when men were required to practice archery on a Sunday to ensure a ready supply of archers. The long marks have been made by Broadheads, the round by Bodkins - types of arrowheads used with the long bows of the time.[42] The society is strictly limited to a membership of 80, with this rule only having been bent once, when in 1835 Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel, Lord of the Manor of Hampton in Arden, was added.[43]

 
 
During the 19th Century the area was home to the country residences of abolitionist William Wilberforce (left) and Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel (right).

In the early 1800s, Isaac William Lillingston sold the Manor of Hampton in Arden to former Prime Minister, and founder of the modern police force, Sir Robert Peel. Peel and his son Sir Frederick Peel modernised and made improvements to Hampton in Arden, including the construction of a new manor house, (which is today the Michelin starred Peel's Restaurant).[16]

It was also during the early 1800s that abolitionist William Wilberforce moved to the Elmdon area of Solihull following his marriage to Barbara Spooner, of the Spooner banking family who were the owners of Elmdon hall. A road - Wilberforce Way - is named for him north of Solihull town centre.[44]

The manor of Longdon came to famous poet Lord Byron in 1815 by his marriage with Anne, daughter of Sir Ralph Milbanke Noel, and on her death in 1860 passed to her grandson the Earl of Lovelace. Two roads in Solihull are named after the family, Lady Byron Lane and Lovelace Avenue.[45]

 
Dog Kennel Lane Post Box

Longdon Hall, with its remaining manorial rights, was later bought by a solicitor, Mr. J. B. Clarke of Birmingham in 1899 and soon afterwards sold to Mr. Alfred Lovekin, a silversmith.[20] Mr Lovekin also leased land near Solihull town centre from the Chattock family of Castle Bromwich, on which he built the Jacobean style Tudor Grange Hall. After Mr Lovekin's death, Tudor Grange Hall was sold to Sir Alfred Bird, 1st Baronet, a chemist and politician, who would later leave the land for creation of a Tudor Grange grammar school and Tudor Grange Park. Longdon hall was eventually sold to a nearby golfcourse.[32]

In 1868, George Muntz of nearby Umberslade, a campaigner for suffrage and friend of Thomas Attwood, would become the owner of the manor of Widney Manor. He would also later buy land in Bentley Heath and develop the Solihull area of Dorridge.

In the 1870s, the Hobday family would construct Monkspath Priory. The property would later serve Solihull as the Regency Club, a gentlemen's club and banqueting complex, before becoming a hotel in the late 20th century.[46]

In 1870, metallurgist and inventor James Fern Webster moved to Whitlocks End on the outskirts of Solihull. While here, he discovered the process for making the extraction of aluminium sufficiently cost effective for the metal to be used in the manufacture of everyday objects. Before this, aluminium was considered a precious metal, with bars of aluminium exhibited alongside the French Crown Jewels in the Paris Exhibition of 1855. In 1878, Webster was producing 100 pounds of pure Aluminium every week at his Solihull Lodge factory.[47]

In 1898, the Fowlers Cheese company - the oldest cheese manufacturer in England, founded 1670 - moved to its current site in Earlswood.[48]

In the 1890s, famed pen manufacturer Joseph Gillott constructed New Berry Hall outside Catherine de Barnes. The architect of the hall was J. A. Chatwin who designed the Victoria Tower in the Houses of Parliament. Around this time Chatwin also designed School House at Solihull School.

Towards the end of this era telephone and postal services came to the town.

It was said the post office in Castle Bromwich, later part of the borough of Solihull, was one of the first locations to have a telephone installed outside of London. The purported reason for this is that in 1876 Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli was visiting, supposedly to court Lady Bradford at Castle Bromwich Hall, and needed to be able to contact the government in London.[49]

During the Victorian era a rare fluted pillar box was installed on Dog Kennel lane. Today it is Grade II listed. The post box is designed to look like a Doric column.[50]

20th century

Unlike major cities to the north, the Industrial Revolution largely passed Solihull and much of the rest of rural Warwickshire by, and until the 20th century Solihull remained a small market town. Local population growth was due to a number of factors, perhaps most significantly, the release of large tracts of land for housing development attracting inward migration of new residents from across the United Kingdom.

In 1894, Solihull (including the parishes of Shirley, Baddesley Clinton, Barston, Lapworth, Balsall, Bushwood, Elmdon, Knowle, Nuthurst, Packwood and Tanworth-in-Arden) was made into the Solihull Rural District in the county of Warwickshire. In 1932 some of its rural areas were taken away when the RDC was succeeded by Solihull Urban District Council.

Solihull School continued to grow during this period. Arthur Tolkien, father of J. R. R. Tolkien (the author of The Lord of the Rings series of books) was a pupil there during the 1860s. J. R. R. Tolkien mentioned Solihull and Solihull School in some of his letters. J. R. R. Tolkien's son Michael would go on to teach at Solihull School in the 1950s.[51]

In 1909, Cathleen Cartland would found one of the countries first non-denominational co-educational preparatory schools - Ruckleigh School - in Solihull, many decades before others followed.

Like most other parts of the UK, Solihull and its borough was impacted by the First World War. In 1914 the Army Remount Service, responsible for the nations war horses (specifically collecting horses and dispatching them on to combat areas) was headquartered in what is now the Wilson Arms in Knowle.[52] The town and borough also provided a number of Auxiliary Hospitals.[53] The village of Hockley Heath was bombed by a lost Zeppelin L 62.

It was during the early 1900s that the poet W. H. Auden grew up in Solihull on Homer Road.

In 1936, two Solihull farms were bought for the construction of a shadow factory to prepare for the Second World War. The purpose of the shadow factories were to be as secret as possible, often located in rural areas, to prevent enemy bombing. After the war in 1948, this factory would become the home of the Land Rover car company.

 
Avro 652A Anson T21, Celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the airport at the art deco Elmdon Terminal

On 8 July 1939, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and the Duchess of Kent opened Solihull's airport 'Elmdon Airport'. The Elmdon Terminal, which incorporated the airport's air traffic control tower, is famous for having been designed by Norman and Dawbarn in an Art Deco style. Shortly after opening it would be requisitioned for the Second World War, becoming RAF Elmdon. On 8 July 1946, the aerodrome was reopened to civilian operations, though it remained under government control. In 1960 control of the airport was handed to Birmingham City Council, and the airport was renamed 'Birmingham International Airport'. At the time despite being England's second city, Birmingham was without an airport and Elmdon Airport in Solihull was the closest. Reflecting the fact that Birmingham Airport was in Solihull and not Birmingham, a train station called Birmingham International Rail Station was added to transport travelers the 8 mile journey into Birmingham. The airport and station are connected via Air-Rail Link. The airport is still affectionately known amongst some Solihull residents as Elmdon Airport.

By the time the Second World War started Solihull had become a reception area for evacuated Children from Coventry and the East End of London. Some barrage balloons, smokescreens and searchlights were erected around Solihull in an effort to confuse any enemy bomber planes flying over head on their way to critical major industrial areas. A military convalescent hospital was opened in Tudor Grange House. A British Restaurant was opened up on Mill Lane. The town adopted the ship HMS Vivacious in 1942. In preparation for the D-Day landings, an American Army headquarters was established on Blossomfield Road.[54] The town also had a Home Guard Battalion.[55]

In 1954, Queen Elizabeth II granted a Royal Charter of Incorporation making Solihull into a Municipal Borough; ten years later it was given the status of County Borough. Reorganisation of boundaries and council responsibilities in 1974 created the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull by the merger of the Solihull County Borough and most of the Meriden Rural District, which forms the main rural part of the borough and county. It included Balsall Common, Barston, Berkswell, Bickenhill, Castle Bromwich, Chelmsley Wood, Elmdon, Fordbridge, Hampton in Arden, Hockley Heath, Kingshurst, Knowle, Marston Green, Meriden, Olton, Smiths Wood, Solihull, Shirley and Temple Balsall. A coat of arms was granted to the borough, with a Black Griffin taken from the arms of the Earls of Aylesford of Meriden, a Silver Fleur-de-lys comes from the Digby family associated with Coleshill and Fordbridge, and a Black Greyhound taken from the arms of the Greswolds, of Solihull town.

Until the early 1960s, the main high street remained much as it would have been in the late 19th century with several streets of Victorian terraced houses linking High Street with Warwick Road. The construction of the central shopping area known as Mell Square (named after W. Maurice Mell, the town clerk who planned the work) involved the demolition of properties in Mill Lane and Drury Lane, some of which were several hundred years old, together with that of the large Victorian Congregational church that had stood on the corner of Union Street and Warwick Road.

In 1966, Silhill Hall, the 13th century manor house of Solihull was illegally demolished by the owner Malcolm Ross who attempted unsuccessfully to claim that a violent storm had made the structure unsafe. The site of the property is now used for housing, remembered only by the name of Silhill Hall road.[56][57][58]

In 1986, the Solihull borough effectively became a unitary authority after the abolition of the County Council. The borough is administered from a building on Church Hill in Solihull town centre.

On 23 November 1981, an F0/T1 tornado touched down in nearby Shirley. The tornado later moved over Solihull town centre, causing some damage to the town centre before dissipating.[59]

Present day

 
A look up High Street in Solihull

Despite its proximity to cities like Birmingham to the northwest, Coventry to the east, Worcester to the southwest and the build-up of conurbations around nearby Warwick, Stratford-upon-Avon, the Royal Town of Sutton Coldfield, and Royal Leamington Spa, Solihull maintains its unique and distinct identity and is bordered by greenbelt countryside to the south and east.

Solihull itself remains administered by Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council, effectively a unitary authority providing the majority of local government services. Regional administrative functions such as policing, fire and public transport are organised through the West Midlands administrative division and combined authority.

Geography

Solihull is located south of the centre of England in the Forest of Arden area on the River Blythe 127 m (416 ft) above sea level.[60] The town, and most of the borough is within the West Midlands Green Belt.

Via national roads and/or motorways, the town is 7.5 miles (12.1 km) southeast of Birmingham, 14 miles (21 km) west of Coventry, 18 miles (29 km) northwest of Warwick, 32 miles (51 km) northeast of Worcester and 111 miles (179 km) northwest of London.[61]

Governance

Local Government Level

Due to its growth, Solihull was promoted from an urban district to a municipal borough, the honour being bestowed by Princess Margaret, who waved from the balcony of the Old Council House in March 1954.[62]

The Queen opened the new civic hall in the town in May 1962.[63] The town became a county borough in 1964. In 1974, the Solihull county borough was merged with the rural district surrounding Meriden to form the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull. This also includes the districts known as Shirley, Knowle, Dorridge, Balsall Common, Castle Bromwich and Chelmsley Wood.

There are now 17 wards in Solihull;[64] Olton, Knowle, Dorridge, Silhill, Blythe, Meriden, Elmdon, Lyndon, Smith's Wood, Chelmsley Wood, Hockley Heath, St. Alphege, Shirley West, Shirley East, Shirley South, Kingshurst & Fordbridge, Castle Bromwich and Bickenhill.[65] Each ward is represented by three councillors at Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council, making a total of 51 councillors.[64] The mayor is elected by the council and is currently (2022) Ken Meeson of the Conservative Party.

There are parish councils serving villages across the wider borough.

Regional and National Government Level

Regionally, Solihull comes under the West Midlands Combined Authority, and therefore also takes part in elections for the Mayor of the West Midlands and the West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner.[66][67]

The member of parliament for the Solihull constituency is former Conservative Julian Knight, who won his seat in 2015 running on a Conservative ticket. The seat is one of two parliamentary seats within the Borough of Solihull, the other being Meriden constituency, named for the village of Meriden within the Meriden Gap.

Traditions

Traditionally the Mayor of Solihull is driven in a Land Rover - usually a Range Rover - with the license plate 'Sol 1', reflecting the towns connection to the Land Rover vehicle manufacturer.[68]

Although the town and borough of Solihull are in the West Midlands metropolitan county, Solihull is in the historic county of Warwickshire. This means the town can fly the flag of Warwickshire and celebrate "Warwickshire Day", when an official date is agreed upon.[69][70] Some local support has been recorded to return the borough entirely to Warwickshire, such as when Bath was returned to Somerset after the abolition of the County of Avon.[71]

Education

Higher education

Solihull has no university, but there are seven universities within 16 mi (26 km) of the town in the surrounding cities. However, Solihull College, formerly known as the Solihull Technical College, incorporates a University Centre which offers several foundation degree and full degree courses, particularly in technical subject areas such as computer sciences and engineering. These courses are offered through the college's partner, the University of Warwick. As yet the college has not applied to attain university college status.

Further education

There is also a sixth form college located on the outskirts of the town centre. This is known as Solihull Sixth Form College.

Independent schools

 
Solihull School

Solihull School is an independent school and is located on Warwick Road near the centre of the town. It was founded in 1560 and celebrated its 450th anniversary in 2010.

Ruckleigh School is an independent preparatory school founded in 1909 by Cathleen Cartland and is notable for being a nondenominational co-educational school many decades before any others followed. Another preparatory school called Eversfield School is also located in the town centre.

State-funded schools

 
Tudor Grange Academy

The town centre is also well served by some high performing state schools. Tudor Grange house, a now grade II listed property, was completed in Solihull in 1887 for Alfred Lovekin, a silversmith, who later sold the estate to Sir Alfred Bird, the owner of Bird's Custard then produced at the Birmingham Custard Factory. The Bird family bequeathed the house and estate to the people of Solihull for the construction of a 'Tudor Grange' grammar school around the turn of the century. After Tudor Grange grammar school had been established on this site, other parcels of the estate were passed on by the school for other neighbouring schools, colleges and parkland.[72] Tudor Grange School and Solihull School continue to enjoy a friendly sporting rivalry centred around rugby union. Solihull's state schools, Tudor Grange School and Arden Academy, regularly feature in good school guides, such as "the Tatler guide to the best state secondary schools".[73]

Solihull had a 'Wave 1' proposal of the Building Schools for the Future investment programme approved. They were awarded over £80 million to transform six schools in the north of the borough in December 2004. As a result of the funding, there will be six new schools constructed within seven years. The school curriculum will be redesigned as well as a further £6 million investment in managed ICT services. The six schools to be rebuilt are Park Hall Academy, Smith's Wood Academy, Archbishop Grimshaw, Lanchester Special School, Forest Oak School and Merstone school. Forest Oak and Merstone have been already rebuilt on one site. Lanchester, Park Hall and Smith's Wood have been built by BAM PPP, under 'Private Finance Initiative'. Archbishop Grimshaw has been built by BAM PPP under a traditional contract.[74]

Transport

Road

A number of main roads pass through Solihull including the A41 Birmingham to Warwick road and the A34 Birmingham to Stratford road: the A34 becomes the commercial centre of Shirley, making for a busy town-centre feel along the main road.

The M42 and the M40 both pass through the outskirts of the borough of Solihull, providing very rapid links to Oxford and London in the South East, and to the rest of the motorway network surrounding the West Midlands region. The M42 opens up to the M5, providing links to Cheltenham, the West Country and South West England.

Rail

 
Solihull station

Solihull railway station is on the former Great Western Railway line to London Paddington although trains now run along the Chiltern Main Line terminating at London Marylebone.

Other railway links are provided on the West Coast Main Line, as Birmingham International railway station lies within the borough's boundaries and offers frequent express connections to London. Express train services through Solihull are now run by Chiltern Railways and local services by West Midlands Railway. Cross Country trains pass through the station but no longer stop here.

Solihull will be served by a HS2 interchange station if the project is approved, putting London just 38 minutes away by train.[75][76]

Bus

 
A Mercedes-Benz Citaro bus in Signature livery in Solihull

Local bus services are provided largely by National Express West Midlands from their Yardley Wood and Acocks Green depots in south and southeast Birmingham respectively. Other services are provided by Diamond West Midlands, including service X20 between Coventry and Stratford-upon-Avon, Landflight and Diamond Bus. Until 2019 Diamond buses operated the Signature brand of buses in Solihull. The Diamond buses operating in Solihull were fitted with leather seats and wireless internet, and used the cleanest bus engines in Europe.[77] The Diamond buses have since moved elsewhere.

Due to a review of services in Warwickshire by Diamond, service X20 was split into two parts from 13th August 2022 with Stagecoach operating the Stratford to Solihull section daily. The remaining section between Solihull and Coventry will continue to be operated by Diamond Mon-Sat until 28th August 2022 when this section will be operated by Stagecoach as service 82. Stagecoach will also begin operating services 87 & 88 on the same date.

In preparation for the 2022 Commonwealth Games which will be held across the West Midlands and Warwickshire, Transport for West Midlands is constructing a new Bus Rapid Transit network of tram style buses that will form critical infrastructure ahead of the games. The new network, known as Sprint, will utilise dedicated lanes and zero-emission tram style buses which will provide off-board ticketing, multiple-door boarding, wheelchair and pushchair access, free Wi-Fi, and air conditioning as well as on-board audio visual announcements and travel information. The network will connect Solihull town centre, Birmingham Airport, the National Exhibition Centre and future HS2 Interchange (all in Solihull) with Birmingham City Centre, and other parts of the region, such as the Royal Town of Sutton Coldfield. Any green space lost as part of Sprint's proposals will be replaced according to the local highway authority tree replacement policy. Work commenced on the network in March 2021.[78][79][80][81]

Canal

 
A Narrowboat on the Canal in Shirley

The Grand Union Canal passes across Solihull, coming within 1 mi (1.6 km) of the town centre and linking the town to the River Thames in London. There are a flight of five locks at Knowle added in the 1930s which are wide enough to allow narrowboats to navigate together, side by side.[82]

The Stratford-upon-Avon Canal passes through Hockley Heath in the Borough of Solihull. Hockley Wharf (now a public house) served the rest of the surrounding Solihull area and beyond. Non-perishable goods were unloaded there, including timber, lime, coke, coal, cement, bricks and salt. The last commercial load was brought into the wharf on Christmas Eve, 1929.[83]

Bicycle

Bicycling in Solihull is popular, and as of March 2021 it was announced that Solihull would benefit from a cycle hire scheme, where residents and visitors would be able to hire bikes from an app on their phone. Three free to use cycle repair stations are being installed across the borough, and new cycle lanes added.[84]

Trams

In 2024, work will commence on an extension to the Transport for West Midlands West Midlands Metro tram network down to Solihull. The extension will link up to Birmingham Airport, the National Exhibition Centre and future HS2 Interchange with the wider network, before continuing on through the region, going as far south as the University of Warwick.[85][86]

Air

Birmingham Airport is located in the Elmdon part of Solihull and was known as Elmdon Airport until control passed from the government to Birmingham City Council in the 1960s, as Birmingham itself was without an airport. Elmdon Airport was 8 miles from Birmingham, but still closer than any other contender. The airport is connected to the NEC and Birmingham International Station via the Air-Rail Link APM.

Economy

Retail

 
Touchwood, Solihull

Solihull offers a variety of shopping facilities. In recent years, the town has undergone much development, and its High Street has been pedestrianised since 1994. On 2 July 2002, a large new shopping centre, Touchwood, was opened by Queen Elizabeth II. The Crown Estate has an equity interest in the shopping centre. In 2014 the town was listed as one of the top five destinations for shopping in the UK.[87] In addition to the Touchwood shopping centre it also has an open-air 1960s-style shopping centre called Mell Square which was constructed following the demolition of several terraces of Victorian houses and the original Solihull Congregational Church. When Mell Square was first opened it was known for its large block of fountains, which were switched off and removed in the late 80s. In recent years some residents have called for the fountains to be returned.[88] Luxury vehicle sales also make up some of the Solihull economy, with a dealership for Rolls-Royce, and other luxury car marques, present in the town.

Industry

 
The Land Rover Solihull Plant

Solihull is the home of the four-wheel-drive car manufacturer Land Rover. Its main production plant is situated east of the Lode Heath district, along with a range of other major companies. Engineering and professional services firm Arup have a large presence in Solihull.[89] Fitness apparel manufacturer Gymshark has been based in Solihull since 2012.

The Solihull village of Meriden was the famous home of the Triumph motorbike factory from 1942 to 1983. In January 2021 motorcycle company Norton announced they would be investing in a technologically advanced production site and headquarters in Solihull.[90] The Lucas company, who supplied lighting and electric components to the motorcycle and aerospace industries was also headquartered in Solihull for many years, with a research facility in Shirley.[91]

Food and beverage

Food and drink production and hospitality also make up part of the local Solihull economy. Earlswood in the Solihull borough is home to Fowlers, established since 1670, it is the oldest cheese-making business in England. The company still makes all its cheese by hand.[48] In Catherine de Barnes is the Silhill Brewery. The former home of retail bakers Three Cooks was based in Solihull, and after it was brought out of administration in 2006, the new company Cooks the Bakery retains its HQ in Solihull. The pub company Enterprise Inns is also headquartered in Solihull. The Grenade Protein Bar company, valued at £200m in 2021, is based in Solihull, having been started by a couple from Solihull in 2010.[92]

There are a number of restaurants and eateries in Solihull, including the Michelin starred Peel's Restaurant.

Service sector

Financial services make up some of the Solihull economy. Personal loan provider Paragon, and retail and commercial bank Secure Trust Bank are both based in Solihull.

The National Exhibition Centre is within the borough of Solihull, which hosts a number of national trade shows, such as The Horse of the Year Show and The Crufts International Dog Show. The Blythe Valley Business Park is also both within the borough of Solihull. Both have excellent links to Birmingham Airport and the M42, M40 and M6 motorways.

Third sector and charity

A number of regional and national charities are based in, or have offices in, Solihull. Royal Star and Garter Homes a charity founded in 1916 to provide care for ex-Service people and their partners who live with disability or dementia, operates one of its three state of the art care homes in Solihull.[93]

Culture

 
Statue of a Horse and Tamer in Malvern Park, Solihull, by artist Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm. Donated to the town by Captain Oliver Bird, High Sheriff of Warwickshire.

Screen and stage

Solihull is home to the Core Theatre, part of the Solihull Arts Complex. The centre of Solihull has a Cineworld cinema.{cn}

Music and dance

 
Resorts World Arena under old branding

In Solihull is the Resorts World Arena, a multipurpose indoor arena with a capacity of 15,685 opened in 1980 with a concert by Queen. A number of internationally renowned acts have performed there in recent years, including Lady Gaga and Adele. In 2019, Resorts World Arena had the fifth highest ticket sales of an arena venue in the United Kingdom.[94]

Solihull has a symphony orchestra founded in 1990.[95]

The town has a professional ballet school, which teaches according to the International Dance Teachers Association syllabus.[96]

The town has a troop of mixed border Morris dancers called Silhill Morris.[97]

Art and museums

Solihull is home to a large number of public sculptures and art works. There are also a number of museums, galleries and historic properties open to the public.

Museums and galleries

The Solihull Arts Complex includes the Courtyard Gallery and Art Space, an exhibition space and gallery. The town also has a number of private art galleries.

Reflecting the towns British motorcycle heritage, as home to the Triumph Motorcycle company for many years, Solihull also has the National Motorcycle Museum. The museum was founded in 1984 and is affiliated to the British Motorcycle Charitable Trust. The museum has become the largest collection of British motorcycles in the world, with over 250,000 visitors a year.[98]

Heritage and historic attractions

Berry Mound is the site of an Iron Age hill fort dating back to the 1st century BC in Shirely, Solihull, on the Worcestershire border.[99]

Hobs Moat in Olton, Solihull, is the site of the ruined 12th-century castle of the Lords of the Manor of Solihull. Today it is a scheduled ancient monument and Local nature reserve. The ruin itself is now below ground level, but the moated earthworks remain above the ground level.[100]

Baddesley Clinton is a 13th-century Grade I Listed moated manor house in the village of Baddesley Clinton on the border of the borough of Solihull managed by the National Trust.

Packwood House is a Grade I listed Tudor manor house on the outskirts of the borough of Solihull managed by the National Trust. It was home to the Featherston family, who would later marry into the Dilke family of nearby Maxstoke Castle. They also provided the first usher at Solihull School, where a house is named Featherston.[101] The yew tree topiary garden of Packwood House is also famous in its own right, and is supposed to symbolise the Sermon on the Mount. Packwood church, known as St Giles, was the location of the marriage of the parents of Samuel Johnson, author of the first dictionary. Samuel's mother, Sara Ford, was from Packwood and St Giles was her parish church.[101]

Berkswell Mill is a historic windmill in the borough of Solihull which is occasionally open to the public.[102]

There is a historic miniature steam railway founded in 1936 in Illshaw Heath in the borough of Solihull.[103]

Communal facilities

Parks and local nature reserves

 
The Lake, Brueton Park, Solihull

Solihull has a number of parks and local nature reserves, including the UK's first dedicated hedgehog conservation area.[104]

The nearest parks to the town centre are Malvern and Brueton Parks. They are interlinked and cover a total area of about 130 acres (0.53 km2). Brueton Park used to be part of the grounds of Malvern Hall, which dates back to about 1690. Tudor Grange Park is also close to the town centre. The River Blythe, a headwater tributary of the River Trent, passes through parts of Solihull including Malvern and Tudor Grange Parks.

Other parks across the borough include Elmdon Park, Hillfield Park, Cole Bank Park, Knowle Park, Langley Hall Park and Shirley Park.

The list of parks and reserves across the borough includes:

  • Alcott Wood in Moorend Avenue, Chelmsley Wood; 5.7 hectares (14 acres) of semi natural ancient woodland, designated in 2002.[105]
  • Babbs Mill in Fordbridge Road, Kingshurst; 24 hectares (59 acres) of mixed grassland, lake and woodland habitats, designated in 2000.[105]
  • Bills Wood, in Bill's Lane, Shirley; 7 hectares (17 acres) of semi natural ancient woodland, designated in 1991.[105]
  • Dorridge Wood, in Arden Road, Dorridge; 7.5 hectares (19 acres) of semi natural woodland, designated in 2000.[105]
  • Elmdon Park, at Elmdon Manor, Solihull; 4.6 hectares (11 acres) of former walled garden, managed by Warwickshire Wildlife Trust, designated in 1995.[105]
  • Harry's Wood, between Naseby Road and St Helen's Road, also known as Coldlands Wood; 9.9 hectares (24 acres) of dense woodland, designated in 2020.[105]
  • Jobs Close in Longdon Road, Knowle; 3.5 hectares (8.6 acres) of grassland and woodland with pond, designated in 2004.[105]
  • Palmers Rough, in Jacey Road, Shirley; 6.5 hectares (16 acres) of semi natural woodland, designated in 2000.[105]
  • Malvern & Brueton Park in Old Warwick Road, Solihull; 30 hectares (74 acres) of mixed grassland, woodland and marsh, designated in 2002.
  • Millisons Wood, in Albert Road, Meriden; 11 hectares (27 acres) of semi natural ancient woodland, designated in 1993.[105]
  • Smith's Wood in Windward Way, Smiths Wood; 4.5 hectares (11 acres) of semi natural ancient woodland, designated in 2004.[105]
  • Yorks Wood, in Fordbridge Road, Kingshurst; 10 hectares (25 acres) of semi natural ancient woodland, designated in 1991.[105]

Leisure

Solihull's Leisure sector has seen growth in recent years, with an average tourism spend in the region per person of £4,081 in 2018.[106]

Leisure and entertainment facilities

Solihull has numerous leisure facilities including a public swimming pool on the edge of Tudor Grange Park. This pool replaced the old Tudor Grange Sports Centre, which was demolished in 2007, to make way for the brand new leisure centre (A combination of the old Norman Green Athletics Centre and Tudor Grange Sports Centre). This in turn had replaced the outdoor swimming pool – Malvern Park Lido – that had served Solihull from 1954 till its closure in 1982.[107] At present there are two sports centres, the more modern Tudor Grange Sports Centre, and the older North Solihull Sports Centre. There is also an outdoor wooden skateboarding and in-line skating facility in Tudor Grange Park.

On the outskirts of Solihull is the Bear Grylls Adventure Park, run by Merlin Entertainments and named after British adventurer Bear Grylls. The centre offers rock climbing, indoor skydiving, a zip line from a Chinook helicopter, Europe's tallest high ropes, an assault course and a chance to dive with sharks.[108]

At the Solihull Land Rover plant is the Land Rover Experience which features a "14 miles of varied terrain on the legendary Jungle Track, Land Track and Adventure Zone" and driving experiences can be booked.[109]

In woodland on Cut-Throat-Lane in Hockley Heath is the largest paintball centre in the Midlands.[110]

Clubs and societies

The borough is well served by numerous youth groups, both from the statutory and voluntary sector. There are several Scout groups including Knowle Sea Scout Group which is based in the south of Solihull and is sponsored by the Royal Navy providing a wide programme of activities for young people from all over Solihull aged from 6 to 18. The recently refurbished ice rink on Hobs Moat Road is home to Solihull's ice hockey teams, the Solihull Barons, Solihull Vikings, a junior ice hockey team, the Mohawks ice racing club, as well as ice dance and figure skating clubs. Above the ice rink was a Riley's snooker club before the company entered administration in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A number of service organisations and other clubs operate in Solihull including a Round Table, and a Women's Institute founded over 90 years ago. There is a Freemasonic temple in Knowle hosting a number of lodges.

The Lunar Society of Birmingham, a local learned society re-founded by Dame Rachel Waterhouse, is headquartered in Shirley, Solihull.[111]

Events

Every year since the early 1930s (apart from gaps during world wars, and in 2020 due to COVID-19[112]), Solihull Carnival has taken place. This is now fixed to the first weekend after the June half-term and takes place in Tudor Grange Park, organised by Shirley Round Table.

Tudor Grange Park is also the venue for the annual free firework display held on the Saturday closest to 5 November, organised by Solihull Round Table. The event attracts about 15,000 people to the park.[113]

Every year the town plays host to the Crufts international dog show at its National Exhibition Centre.

The council hosts a popular farmers market every first Friday of the month on the High Street to cater to the increased demand for organic and locally grown food.[114]

The town hosts an annual CAMRA beer festival.[115]

Every year a large unofficial St George's Day Parade takes place, meeting in Solihull, traveling down through neighbouring Henley-in-Arden and into Stratford-upon-Avon.[116]

Sport

Association football

The largest football club in the town is Solihull Moors, who play at Damson Park, 2 miles (3.2 km) from the town centre. The club was established in 2007 following the merger of Solihull Borough and Moor Green and currently play in the National League after being promoted from the National League North at the end of the 2015–16 season.

After the demolition of the Old Wembley Stadium a bid was made for a new multi-purpose English National Stadium to be built in the north of the borough of Solihull as a new home for English football. The bid was ultimately unsuccessful.

Rugby football

Birmingham & Solihull R.F.C., known as "the Bees", compete in Midlands 4 West (South) league as of 2020–21. The club had a brief period in the RFU Championship (the second tier of English Rugby) in 2010. The club played at a ground in the Solihull town centre at Sharmans Cross Road until August 2010 when they were relegated from the Championship. Following a brief spell at Solihull Moors' Damson Park ground the club now play at Portway. Other amateur clubs play in the borough at various levels.

Former England Captain and World Cup winner Martin Johnson is from Solihull.

Former Premiership side Wasps who entered administration and were relegated in 2022 will share Damson Park with Solihull Moors for their return to competitive rugby in the RFU Championship in 2023.[117]

Cricket

There are several local level cricket clubs across Solihull, including Hampton and Solihull CC and Solihull Municipal CC, both of whom compete in the Warwickshire Cricket League and Arden Sunday Cricket League.

Equestrian

Solihull Riding Club is the longest established riding club in the UK. It has one of the largest indoor riding arenas in the country and a premier competition centre.

Adjacent to Hogarths Hotel in the Four Ashes area of Solihull is the Stables, home of the British Equestrian Eventing Team.[118][119]

Sailing
 
Olton Mere Sailing Club

Solihull borough is home to two sailing clubs. The Earlswood Lakes Sailing Club founded in 1960 meet at Windmill Lake amongst the Earlswood Lakes. The Olton Mere Sailing Club founded in 1926 meet at Olton Reservoir.

Racquet sports

Tennis is a popular sport in Solihull with courts available to the public in Malvern Park. The Solihull Arden Racquets Club is a thriving racquets and fitness club in Solihull.[120]

Former UK tennis number one Jeremy Bates grew up in Solihull and attended Tudor Grange school.

Golf

Solihull has a number of golf clubs and facilities, including Shirley Golf Club, Olton Golf Club, Copt Heath Golf Club, Robin Hood Golf Club, West Midlands Golf Club, Widney Manor Golf Club, Tidbury Green Golf Club, the Arden Course at the Forest of Arden Marriott Hotel & Country Club, an 18-hole pitch and putt at Tudor Grange Park, and a driving range at Four Ashes. Arden Golf Club, Solihull, (now defunct) was founded in 1891. The course was still appearing on maps into the 1930s.[121]

Archery
 
The Gates to Forest Hall, home of the Woodmen of Arden

Archery has always been a prominent sport in Solihull. The Meriden Archery Club, founded in 1936, meet within the grounds of the Packington Estate and practice target archery. The Forest of Arden Bowmen practice field archery in grounds nearby.

Meriden is also home to the Woodmen of the Forest of Arden founded 1785, an illustrious society of archers who shoot a unique and historic type of clout archery with longbows.

Cycling

Solihull is also home to Solihull Cycling Club which was founded in 1929. The club has produced National Champions, Olympic Medallists and Tour de France riders[122]

Meriden is home to the National Cyclists Memorial, dedicated to the cyclists who died in the First World War. National cycling organisations commemorate these deaths with an annual mid-May service on the green.

Swimming

Solihull Swimming Club is based at Tudor Grange Leisure Centre. First established in 1963,[123] the club now boasts over 600 members and also runs water polo teams.

Hockey

Solihull Barons are the local ice hockey team and play their home games at the Solihull Ice Rink.

Solihull also has a number of field hockey clubs, namely Old Silhillians Hockey Club, Olton & West Warwickshire Hockey Club and Solihull Blossomfield Hockey Club.

Other

Gaelic games are played by Warwickshire GAA who play their home matches in Páirc na hÉireann in Solihull.

The town has an indoor bowling area and club.

Localities

 
The Shelley Farmhouse pub and restaurant in Hillfield

Solihull town has several suburbs including Olton (formerly known as Ulverli), Solihull Lodge, Blossomfield, Sharmans Cross, Cranmore, Shirley (considered a sub-town of Solihull), Longdon, Shirley Heath, Hillfield, Monkspath, Widney Manor, Lode Heath, Elmdon Heath, Hobs Moat, Haslucks Green and World's End.

Solihull Borough includes several satellite towns and villages including Barston, Balsall Common, Bentley Heath, Bickenhill, Blythe Valley, Castle Bromwich, Catherine-de-Barnes, Cheswick Green and Illshaw Heath, Copt Heath, Dickens Heath and Whitlocks End, Dorridge, Eastcote, Elmdon, Hampton in Arden, Hockley Heath and Nuthurst, Knowle, Meriden, Ravenshaw, Tidbury Green, and Temple Balsall.

Twin towns

Solihull is twinned with:[124]

Notable people

This list includes notable persons who were born or have lived in Solihull and its borough.

In popular culture

William Camden visited Solihull in 1558 and said of it in his work Britannia: "I saw Solyhill; but in it, setting aside the church, there is nothing worth sight."[127]

In David Turner's 1962 play Semi-Detached, Solihull is parodied as Dowlihull, a fictional town where the protagonist aspires to live.[128]

In the British Political TV Series Yes Minister, in the S1E07 1980 episode "Jobs For The Boys" a public-private partnership project is called the "Solihull Project".[129]

The steam engine used as the Hogwarts Express in the Harry Potter film franchise was the GWR 4900 Class 5972 Olton Hall, named for the now demolished Olton Hall estate in Olton, Solihull.[130]

References

  1. ^ "Local Authority population 2011". from the original on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  2. ^ "Solihull People and Place" (PDF). Solihull Observatory. 2019.
  3. ^ Hulse, Cathrina; Belcher-BM, Annette (25 October 2015). "Super-Solihull: 16 reasons why the town is a great place to live". BirminghamLive.
  4. ^ [dead link]
  5. ^ "Heritage Gateway - Results". Heritagegateway.org.uk.
  6. ^ "Towns and Villages Around Solihull | Shirley". Visitoruk.com.
  7. ^ "A Brief History of Birmingham". History of Birmingham Places A to Y.
  8. ^ a b c "Explore & Visit Solihull Heritage". Visitsolihull.co.uk.
  9. ^ "Solihull the best place to live in the UK? Absolutely". The Guardian. 14 November 2013.
  10. ^ "Swanshurst Quarter 2". Aghs.jimdofree.com.
  11. ^ "Olton history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  12. ^ "Worlds End". Billdargue.jimdofree.com.
  13. ^ a b "Hob's Moat, 60m north of Castle Lane, Non Civil Parish - 1014043 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk.
  14. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1076693)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 19 September 2007.
  15. ^ "Local History". Aboutb93.net.
  16. ^ a b c "Hampton in Arden history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  17. ^ "Knowle history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  18. ^ Says, Sheila Bates (13 April 2020). "The Knights Templar".
  19. ^ "TRUSSELL, Sir John (c.1349-1424), of Gayton, Northants. | History of Parliament Online". Historyofparliamentonline.org.
  20. ^ a b c d e "Parishes: Solihull | British History Online". British-history.ac.uk.
  21. ^ "Solihull Enterprise Agency : Sites of Historical Interest - Borough of Solihull" (PDF). Hobsmoat.website. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  22. ^ a b "Malvern Waters, Malvern Springs and Wells". Malvernwaters.com.
  23. ^ a b "Explore & Visit Solihull Heritage". Visitsolihull.co.uk.
  24. ^ "Solihull town history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  25. ^ "The Place Names of Warwickshire" (PDF). Nottingham.ac.uk. 1970. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  26. ^ Stuff, Good. "The Ruin, Solihull, St Alphege, Solihull". britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.
  27. ^ Butcher, Shannon (23 April 2020). "Where Arden met Shakespeare - Towpath Talk". Towpathtalk.co.uk.
  28. ^ "Park Hall". Historyofcastlebromwich.jimdofree.com.
  29. ^ "Saint Francis of Assisi Church - Baddesely Clinton". Sfachurch.org.uk.
  30. ^ "The Gunpowder Plot and its links to the Midlands".
  31. ^ "Malvern Hall and the Greswold, Lewis and Wigley families". 8 September 2020.
  32. ^ a b "PAST MEETINGS - SOLIHULL LOCAL HISTORY CIRCLE". sites.google.com.
  33. ^ "Towns and Villages Around Solihull | Monkspath". Visitoruk.com.
  34. ^ "Shelly Farmhouse, Blythe, Solihull". Britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.
  35. ^ [2][dead link]
  36. ^ "Solihull Warwickshire Family History Guide". Parishmouse.co.uk. 7 February 2022.
  37. ^ Fetherston, John (1859). "The Warwickshire antiquarian magazine (Ed. By J. Fetherston)". p. 3.
  38. ^ "John Soane's Gatehouse". Flickr.com. 11 October 2014.
  39. ^ . Nga.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2 April 2011. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  40. ^ "Solihull town history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  41. ^ "Woodmen of Arden". Longbow-archers.com.
  42. ^ "Tour - SolihullParish". Solihullparish.org.uk.
  43. ^ "The Woodmen of Arden" (PDF). Weddingtoncastle.co.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  44. ^ "Elmdon history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  45. ^ [3][dead link]
  46. ^ "Corus Hotel Solihull. Book with Hotelsclick.com". Hotelsclick.com.
  47. ^ "James Fern Webster – the "wizard of Warwickshire"". Solihulllife.org. November 2019.
  48. ^ a b "Family producer to extend its world-renowned reputation with Central England Co-operative link-up | Central England Co-operative". Centralengland.coop.
  49. ^ "The Age of Queen Victoria". Castle Bromwich History for Young People.
  50. ^ "The Victorian Fluted Pillar Box in England". Historianruby.com. 10 December 2017.
  51. ^ "Tolkien – Guy Cuthbertson". Guycuthbertson.com. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  52. ^ Gargate, Brian. "Knowle in the First World War". Ourwarwickshire.org.uk.
  53. ^ "Temporary server error | British Red Cross" (PDF). Vad.redcross.org.uk.
  54. ^ "Solihull in Wartime booklet - Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council". Yumpu.com.
  55. ^ "Watch Solihull in Wartime". Player.bfi.org.uk.
  56. ^ "Geograph:: Silhill Hall Site © Graham Butcher cc-by-sa/2.0". Geograph.org.uk.
  57. ^ "Libros de Blurb España". Blurb.es.
  58. ^ "Mar. 03, 1966 - the hall that was pulled down: Wealthy property owner Malcolm Ross admitted yesterday he had pulled down a 700-year old building which was protected by a Government preservation order only a fortnight ago. Standing near a 30ft. High mound of rubble all that is left of 13th. Century Shilhill Hall at Solihull, Warwicks - he said: I now agree that the week-end gale did not blow it down, as was earlier reported. Mr. Ross then told the night the hall came down. He said I was returning from a hunt ball at 4 a.m". Alamy.com.
  59. ^ "European Severe Weather Database". Eswd.eu.
  60. ^ "Solihull, West Midlands, United Kingdom on the Elevation Map. Topographic Map of Solihull, West Midlands, United Kingdom". elevationmap.net.
  61. ^ "UK Driving Distance Calculator, Driving Directions, Distance Between Cities, Distance Chart". Distancecalculator.globefeed.com.
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 February 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
  63. ^ "Midlands News: 25.05.1962: Queen at Solihull". Mace Archive. 23 June 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  64. ^ a b . Solihull.gov.uk. 26 September 2007. Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  65. ^ . 23 January 2008. Archived from the original on 23 January 2008. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  66. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2022. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  67. ^ "Find your PCC".
  68. ^ "Is Solihull 'Jaguar Land Rover Land'?". Bbc.co.uk. 10 September 2013. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  69. ^ "Warwickshire Day – 23rd April". Abcounties.com. 22 April 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  70. ^ "Chris Game: It's too much to bear - give our historic county a flag worth flying". Business-live.co.uk. 21 July 2011.
  71. ^ "We came we saw . . . And we left no signs. - Free Online Library".
  72. ^ Mullen, Enda (31 October 2017). "Bird's Custard mansion set for major retirement scheme makeover". Coventrytelegraph.net.
  73. ^ Bains, Sanjeeta (7 January 2018). "These local schools have been named among best in UK". Birminghammail.co.uk.
  74. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 September 2007. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  75. ^ Irwin, David (11 February 2021). "8 things you didn't know about Solihull's huge new HS2 station". BirminghamLive.
  76. ^ "Solihull set for boom town status as HS2 brings London within an hour". solihullbid.co.uk.
  77. ^ Live, Birmingham (1 June 2010). "Solihull buses get hi-tech revamp on S2 and S3 routes". BirminghamLive.
  78. ^ "Sprint public transport routes - Birmingham City Council - Citizen Space". Birminghambeheard.org.uk.
  79. ^ Irwin, David (6 August 2019). "Exactly how and when sprint bus service will be arriving in Solihull". BirminghamLive.
  80. ^ "Transport bosses respond to Solihull residents' concerns about new high speed bus service". Solihullobserver.co.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  81. ^ "Work starts on new Sprint bus corridor into the heart of the city". Solihullobserver.co.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  82. ^ "Geograph:: Knowle Locks on the Grand Union Canal [47 photos] in SP1976". Geograph.org.uk.
  83. ^ "Hockley Heath history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  84. ^ "Cycle hire scheme coming to Solihull | solihull.gov.uk". Solihull.gov.uk.
  85. ^ Irwin, David (22 February 2021). "Start date pledge for 'Solihull leg' of tram line extension". BirminghamLive.
  86. ^ Madeley, Peter. "Revealed: Tube-style vision for £15bn West Midlands Metro and rail revolution". Expressandstar.com.
  87. ^ Mullen, Enda (19 July 2014). "Solihull in top 5 destinations for shopping in UK". Business Live.
  88. ^ Young, Graham (7 October 2019). "Amazing pix of Solihull's old Mell Square and fountains in a pool". BirminghamLive.
  89. ^ "UK Central Hub". Arup.com.
  90. ^ "Norton Motorcycles invests in advanced new factory headquarters in Solihull". Salon Privé.
  91. ^ "Historic building featuring work by renowned sculptor set to be bulldozed in Solihull - Birmingham Live". 9 April 2019.
  92. ^ Rodger, James (22 March 2021). "Cadbury owner Mondelez buys Solihull company in 11-year first". BirminghamLive.
  93. ^ "What we do". Starandgarter.org. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  94. ^ "Worldwide Ticket Sales : Top 200 Arena Venues" (PDF). Pollstar.com. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  95. ^ "Solihull Symphony Orchestra - About". Solihullsymphony.org.uk.
  96. ^ "Solihull School of Dance". Solihullschoolofdance.co.uk.
  97. ^ "Who Are We ?". Silhillmorris.weebly.com.
  98. ^ "Founder WR (Roy) Richards | National Motorcycle Museum". Nationalmotorcyclemuseum.co.uk.
  99. ^ "Shirley history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  100. ^ "Hobs Moat history". Solihull.gov.uk.
  101. ^ a b "Towns and Villages Around Solihull | Packwood". Visitoruk.com.
  102. ^ "Berkswell windmill set to open doors this weekend". Solihullobserver.co.uk.
  103. ^ "Home - Birmingham Society of Model Engineers Ltd". Birminghamsme.com. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  104. ^ "Helping hedgehogs around the UK - The Wildlife Trusts". Wildlifetrusts.org. from the original on 26 March 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  105. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . Archived from the original on 30 June 2011. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  106. ^ "Tourism sector 'on the rise' in Solihull, council member says". Solihullobserver.co.uk.
  107. ^ . 20 July 2013. Archived from the original on 20 July 2013. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  108. ^ "£20m Bear Grylls adventure park to open in Solihull next year after council green light". Coventryobserver.co.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  109. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 April 2021. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  110. ^ "Paintball in Birmingham - Best UK paintballer games | Delta Force". Paintballgames.co.uk. 21 April 2017.
  111. ^ "Contact the Lunar Society". Lunarsociety.org.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  112. ^ "Shirley Lions pledges Carnival Day will be back next year - and appeals for funds". 2 July 2020. Retrieved 19 February 2021.
  113. ^ "Get ready for Solihull's Bonfire Night in Tudor Grange Park". Solihull News. 3 November 2011. Archived from the original on 11 September 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2012.
  114. ^ "Farmers' Markets in Solihull". Solihull.gov.uk.
  115. ^ "20th Solihull CAMRA Beer Festival 2019 - Solihull and District CAMRA". Solihull.camra.org.uk.
  116. ^ "St George's Day motorcycle parade to take to Solihull's road". Solihullobserver.co.uk. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  117. ^ Sandiford, Josh (16 December 2022). "Wasps new home 'set to be in Solihull' as takeover completed". BirminghamLive. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  118. ^ Ltd, Jarkko Sibenberg, Creare Communications. "Home". Solihull Riding Club.
  119. ^ "Hogarths Hotel Solihull". Bigvenuebook.com.
  120. ^ "Solihull Arden Club - Tennis Squash Rackteball Gym Functions". Solihullarden.co.uk.
  121. ^ "Arden Golf Club, Solihull, Warwickshire". Golfsmissinglinks.co.uk. from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  122. ^ "Club History". Solihull Cycling Club. from the original on 27 September 2016. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
  123. ^ "Solihull Swimming Club". Solihullswimmingclub.co.uk. from the original on 17 March 2018. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  124. ^ Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council website retrieved 20 January 2019
  125. ^ Whiting, David (2009). Modern British Potters and their studios. A&C Black.
  126. ^ . solihullartscomplex.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 October 2014.
  127. ^ Plinth, Colin (12 March 2009). Don't Go There!: 1001 Rude Things People Have Said About Places in Britain and Ireland. ISBN 9780297858010.
  128. ^ "Solihull the best place to live in the UK? Absolutely". TheGuardian.com. 14 November 2013.
  129. ^ "The Solihull Project". YouTube.com. 30 June 2020.
  130. ^ "Hogwarts Express".

External links

  • Solihull at Curlie
  • Solihull Council

solihull, this, article, about, town, larger, local, government, district, metropolitan, borough, constituency, parliament, constituency, market, town, administrative, centre, wider, metropolitan, borough, west, midlands, county, england, town, population, 202. This article is about the town For the larger local government district see Metropolitan Borough of Solihull For the constituency see Solihull UK Parliament constituency Solihull ˈ s ɒ l i h ʌ l ˈ s oʊ l or ˌ s oʊ l i ˈ h ʌ l is a market town and the administrative centre of the wider Metropolitan Borough of Solihull in West Midlands County England The town had a population of 126 577 at the 2021 Census 1 Solihull is situated on the River Blythe in the Forest of Arden area Solihull s wider borough had a population of 216 240 at the 2021 Census 2 SolihullTownClockwise from top St Alphege Church Touchwood Shopping Centre Malvern Park and Solihull town squareSolihullLocation within the West MidlandsPopulation126 577 2021 Census DemonymSilhillianOS grid referenceSP1579 London110 mi 180 km Metropolitan boroughSolihullMetropolitan countyWest MidlandsRegionWest MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townSolihullPostcode districtB36 B37 B90 B94Dialling code0121PoliceWest MidlandsFireWest MidlandsAmbulanceWest MidlandsUK ParliamentSolihullList of places UK England West Midlands 52 24 47 N 1 46 41 W 52 413 N 1 778 W 52 413 1 778 Coordinates 52 24 47 N 1 46 41 W 52 413 N 1 778 W 52 413 1 778Solihull itself is mostly urban however the larger borough is rural in character with many outlying villages and three quarters of the borough is designated as green belt 3 The town and its borough which has been part of Warwickshire for most of its history has roots dating back to the 1st century BC and was further formally established during the medieval era Today the town is famed as amongst other things the birthplace of the Land Rover car marque the home of the British equestrian eventing team and is considered to be one of the most prosperous areas in the UK Contents 1 History 1 1 Toponymy 1 2 Early history 1 3 Anglo Saxon era 1 4 Early medieval era 1 5 Later medieval era 1 6 Early modern era 1 7 Modern era 1 8 20th century 1 9 Present day 2 Geography 3 Governance 3 1 Local Government Level 3 2 Regional and National Government Level 3 3 Traditions 4 Education 4 1 Higher education 4 2 Further education 4 3 Independent schools 4 4 State funded schools 5 Transport 5 1 Road 5 2 Rail 5 3 Bus 5 4 Canal 5 5 Bicycle 5 6 Trams 5 7 Air 6 Economy 6 1 Retail 6 2 Industry 6 3 Food and beverage 6 4 Service sector 6 5 Third sector and charity 7 Culture 7 1 Screen and stage 7 2 Music and dance 7 3 Art and museums 8 Communal facilities 8 1 Parks and local nature reserves 8 2 Leisure 8 3 Events 9 Sport 10 Localities 11 Twin towns 12 Notable people 13 In popular culture 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditToponymy Edit Solihull s name is commonly thought to have derived from the position of its arden stone parish church St Alphege on a soily hill 4 The church was built on a hill of stiff red marl which turned to sticky mud in wet weather Early history Edit Wooden bridge over the Cole at Shirley drawn in the 19th century by Samuel Rostill Lines The land now forming Solihull was once covered in the ancient Forest of Arden The earliest known settlement in the area was at Berry Mound Shirley which was the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort a fortified village protected by earth banks dating back to the 1st century BC and which covered approximately 11 acres 4 5 ha 5 The name Shirley means either a bright clearing or a border clearing in the Forest of Arden 6 During the later Iron Age the River Cole which feeds the River Blythe is believed to have been the border between the Corieltauvi and the Cornovii with Solihull forming the junction of the two powerful Celtic Tribes 7 Throughout the Roman occupation of Britain it was held that no Roman roads made it through the Forest of Arden because it was so dense The nearest known major Roman settlements being at Coleshill on the Solihull border Metchley Fort around 8 5 miles north west and Alcester around 15 miles south Anglo Saxon era Edit By the Anglo Saxon era the forest of Arden was part of the Kingdom of Mercia An assart settlement known as the manor of Ulverlei meaning Wulfhere s clearing was established with its centre north east of the hillfort at Shirely Wulfhere was the first Christian King of all Mercia The settlement was a clearing in the dense woodland of the Forest of Arden with the land farmed in common 8 The older settlement at Shirely was considered part of the new Manor of Ulverlei This status as a clearing in the countryside is still reflected to this day in the town motto Urbs in rure or town in the country 9 Local folklore holds that as part of his campaigns against the Viking invasion in the mid 9th century Alfred the Great fought a battle against the Danes at Berry Mound Shirley 10 After the absorption of Mercia into the rest of England Ulverlei became the property of the Earls of Mercia The first of these was Leofric husband of Lady Godiva heroine of the Warwickshire legend The manor of Ulverlei later passed to Leofric s grandson Edwin Earl of Mercia who held it until his death in 1071 Leofric s great nephew Thorkell of Arden would become progenitor of the locally prominent Arden family one of the few Anglo Saxon families to retain their land holdings after the Norman Conquest and eventually settling in their primary estate in Castle Bromwich today in the Borough of Solihull Early medieval era Edit In 1086 it was recorded that the Manor of Ulverlei was now held by Cristina great granddaughter of Ethelred the Unready daughter of Edward the Exile and sister of the last Anglo Saxon King Edgar Aetheling 11 Shortly after 1086 Christina entered the nunnery of Romsey Abbey in Hampshire Her lands were granted to the Norman Ralph de Limesy The extent of the area historically considered the manor of Ulverlei is demarked by an area called Worlds End a historical naming practice indicating that people did not live beyond there 12 It was between 1170 and 1180 that the de Limsey family founded the settlement of Solihull as a planted borough or planned village to the south of Ulverli It was called a borough simply because the de Limsey Lord of the Manor offered free burgage tenure where residents were free rent paying burgesses rather than villeins owing service to the Lord of the Manor By the time of Edward I Ulverlie was sub infeudated into the newly created Manor of Solihull and became known as the Old Town contracted to its present name Olton to distinguish itself from the New Town of Solihull 8 The de Limsey family held the Manor of Solihull until Ralph s great granddaughter married Hugh de Odingsells whose family were thought to be of Flemish origin The Odingsells were the Lords of the Manor of Ulverley and later after its subinfeudation Solihull from the 12th century and are believed to have constructed a castle on the site now known as Hobs Moat a possible corruption of Odingsells Moat The castle was occupied until around the 14th century 13 The Odingsells were relatives of the powerful Clinton Earls of Huntingdon of Maxstoke Castle around 8 miles north east of Hobs Moat whose relatives would also found nearby Kenilworth Castle around 13 miles south east of Hobs moat and Baddesley Clinton around 8 miles south of Hobs Moat St Alphege Church The red sandstone parish church of St Alphege dates from a similar period to Hobs Moat and is a large and handsome example of English Gothic church architecture with a traditional spire 168 feet 51 metres high making it visible from a great distance It is located at the head of High Street and is a Grade I listed building 14 It was founded in about 1220 by Hugh de Oddingsell A chantry chapel was also founded there by Sir William de Oddingsell in 1277 and the upper chapel in St Alphege was built for a chantry By 1242 the Manor of Solihull was granted a Royal charter to hold a weekly market and an annual fair on the vigil the feast and the morrow of St Alphege 18 20 April 8 It was around this time that Solihull became a hub for its surrounding parishes The town of Solihull would later absorb the nearby settlement of Longdon The first recorded reference to Longdon was in 1086 as Langedone meaning the long hill The long hill in question was the hill on what is now Solihull s Marsh Lane and Yew Tree Lane leading from the River Blythe up onto Elmdon Heath The Longdon Manor House was at its edge on Copt Heath 15 In 1161 the Manor of Longdon had been property of Ketelberne de Langdon who founded Henwood Priory and gave his name to the settlement of Catherine de Barnes a corruption of the name Ketelberne The assimilation of Longdon into Solihull was so total that few references exist today indicating it was ever a separate place The Longdon area bordered onto the settlement of Hampton in Arden appearing in the Domesday Survey of 1086 as Hantone 16 Despite bordering Solihull Hampton in Arden would not be incorporated into the borough of Solihull until later From the middle of the 12th century Hampton in Arden was owned by the de Arden family and also included the then hamlet of Knowle Knowle would become a royal manor in 1285 when the de Arden family sold it to King Edward I and Queen Eleanor In 1396 Walter Cook applied for a faculty to build a church in Knoll so the villagers would no longer have to cross the treacherous waters of the river Blythe to get to church and this was granted by Pope Boniface IX on 4 May 1396 By 1402 the church was consecrated and Knowle broke away from Hampton in Arden later becoming part of the borough of Solihull 17 16 Near Knowle lies the settlement of Temple Balsall part of the borough of Solihull that was founded by the Knights Templar who farmed about 650 acres 2 6 km2 of the estate in the 12th century and established the church and the Balsall Preceptory 18 Later medieval era Edit Hobs Moat Castle Olton Solihull By 1295 the Manor of Solihull had passed from the Odingsells via heiress to the de Birmingham family however they in turn quickly passed it into the Le Despencer family The Despencers found themselves at odds with the Trussell family of nearby Nuthurst now in the borough of Solihull during the baronial revolt under Edward II The warring between the two families ended when Sir William Trussell of Nuthurst led the invasion of England by Queen Isabella against Edward II which installed Edward III on the throne Hugh Despenser was executed and Sir William Trussell was made the King s Secretary of State for England under Edward III The rivalry between the two families was intense and at one point the grandson of Sir William Trussell Sir John Trussell abducted the widow of Hugh Despenser s grandson also called Hugh Despenser after he was killed in battle and forced her to marry him in an ultimately futile attempt to take the manor of Solihull The Despencers would briefly fall back into favour some years later when helping with the campaigns of Edward the Black Prince 19 20 It is during this time in the 14th century that Hobs Moat Castle is believed to have fallen into ruin Antiquary Sir William Dugdale would visit the site three centuries later in 1656 finding only a large Moat and was informed by the locals that the castle there had long since been removed 13 The Odingsells had built a new purpose built manor house closer to the new town centre called Silhill Hall at some point in the 13th century 21 Within the Longdon area of Solihull is an area known as Malvern named for Simon de Malverne believed to be of Malvern in Worcestershire assassinated in 1317 A moated site opposite the end of Marsh Lane is believed to be the de Malvern former home 22 By the 14th century the town had become famed for its blacksmiths and the Solihull High Street was known as le Smythestret 23 This was because of its location in the Forest of Arden and the abundance of trees required to provide fuel for the fires 24 The town was also known for textiles The end of Dury Lane was known as Teinters Green believed to be an area where cloth was stretched on tenter hooks 25 In the grounds of St Alphege church is a now Grade II listed ruin dating from the 14th century It is believed to have been a well house for a holy spring and later possibly an Oratory 26 Historians have suggested that the Shakespeare family ancestors of William Shakespeare born a few miles south in Stratford upon Avon were originally from Solihull s Balsall with their names appearing in local registers between 1385 and 1457 27 Shakespeare s mother Mary Arden was from a cadet branch of the de Arden family of Castle Bromwich in the borough of Solihull 28 Shakespeare s son Hamnet Shakespeare s baptism on 23 March 1560 is recorded in the Register of Solihull In 1400 Thomas Despenser 1st Earl of Gloucester died a traitor for his part in the Epiphany Rising and so the Crown took custody of the manor because the heir Richard le Despenser was a minor 20 Early modern era Edit Lime Tree House also erroneously known as The Manor House Solihull The manor of Solihull remained property of the king for many years and was passed through a number of custodians or lessees In 1495 the Greswolde family of Solihull and nearby Kenilworth while serving as the Kings custodians of the manor of Solihull built the house on the Solihull High Street called Lime Tree House now erroneously known as the Manor House as no lord of the manor ever lived there Silhill Hall was the manor house for Solihull The manor of Solihull was eventually granted to the Duke of Norfolk who in turn passed it on in 1530 to the local Throckmorton family of Coughton Court Solihull was owned by the Throckmorton s during the Throckmorton Plot of 1583 and the planning of the 1605 Gunpowder Plot to blow up Parliament in which the Throckmorton s were heavily involved Their co conspirators included the Catesby family of Lapworth then part of the borough of Solihull and the Digby family who were Lords of the Manor of Coleshill much of which is part of the borough of Solihull today They rented a house in London from Henry Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton then in the borough of Solihull to store the gunpowder Sir Richard Walsh owner of Walsh Hall in Meriden part of the modern borough of Solihull was the Sheriff of Worcestershire who eventually cornered and killed the gunpowder plotters 20 John Greswolde brother of Robert Greswolde of the wider Greswolde family of Solihull was an attendant of Henry Garnet a priest executed for his complicity in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 It was said that when John was arrested and interrogated after the Gunpowder plot he was racked so badly at the Tower of London that it was rumoured he was dead 29 30 The sub manor of Longdon in Solihull meanwhile had passed to the Greswolde family in the era of Elizabeth I however it soon passed through a daughter to Thomas Dabridgecourt In 1680 the Rev Henry Greswolde then rector of Solihull bought a large farm called Malvern Farm in the Malvern part of Longdon Manor to establish a new family seat which would be called Malvern Hall 31 Historic Solihull town centre In 1604 the Throckmorton family sold the Manor of Solihull to Edmund Hawes The Hawes family were already prominent local landowners having owned the Hillfields area of Solihull since 1311 when Thomas Hawes a lawyer purchased the land William amp Ursula Hawes had constructed Hillfield Hall in 1576 a grand Tudor hall with battlements and a long gallery The hall oversaw five farms including Hillfields and Shelly farm William Hawes lived there until his death in 1611 32 Shelly had been a thriving hamlet during the 13th and 14th centuries and included Monkspath but there was little mention of the area by the 17th century 33 Hillfield Hall remains residential to this day while the 16th century Grade II listed Shelly farmhouse is an upmarket bar and restaurant 34 The historic Solihull School was also founded in 1560 although not on its present site On the right along High Street from St Alphege Church porch is one of the town s oldest landmarks the George a hotel which dates from the 16th century Hillfield Hall Solihull appears to have survived the English Civil War of 1642 1651 relatively unscathed even though many important close engagements and battles were fought nearby including the Battle of Edgehill to the south and the Battle of Camp Hill to the north It is reported that Prince Rupert commander of the Royalist forces was on his way to meet King Charles in Solihull when he was skirmished by Parliamentary forces in the Battle of Kings Norton 35 Before its eventual sale to the Greswoldes as part of the Manor of Longdon the Malvern area of Solihull had been the property of Parliamentarian commander Robert Greville 22 The Greville family remained important to the area with Fulke Greville 5th Baron Brooke being erroneously recorded as the Lord of the Manor of Longdon in 1682 20 A branch of the Greville family would make donations for schools in Knowle in the early 1700s 36 Modern era Edit In the modern era Solihull became quieter with textile working and iron working still prominent in the town 23 The Manor of Solihull continued to pass through a number of other holders including the Archer family of Umberslade Hall in Nuthurst Eventually in 1850 it passed to Robert Short an officer in the East India Company who left it to his son in law Rev John Couchman The Couchman s remain the Lords of the Manor of Solihull to the present day 37 John Constable Malvern Hall Warwickshire By the 1700s work was underway on Malvern Hall with Humphrey Greswolde overseeing it would be completed in the first half of the century The hall featured a gatehouse onto the Warwick Road designed by Sir John Soane architect of the Bank of England 38 In 1809 the hall would be painted by John Constable for his patron Henry Greswolde Lewis 39 The Greswoldes would later sell the house to Solihull council who converted the estate into Malvern Park The hall is today part of Solihull School Also constructed in 1712 was Touchwood Hall at the end of Dury Lane on Teinters Green The hall would serve as the home of the Holbeche family former lords of the manor at Widney Manor and a prominent local family The hall would later be held by the Madeley and Martineau families The hall was demolished in 1963 but lends its name to Solihull s famous shopping centre 40 During this time poets William Shenstone and Richard Jago attended Solihull School where today two houses are named after them Solihull Malvern Hall In 1775 Monkspath Hall would be constructed which would capture the nations media attention two centuries later when it was illegally demolished sparking a court case which demanded it be put back exactly as it was In 1785 the Earl of Aylesford would help found and become patron of the Woodmen of Arden This is a prestigious society of Toxophilites who meet to shoot longbows at their ground in the Forest of Arden in Meriden in the borough of Solihull The Woodmen target shoot at only one distance 100 yards and score in the Archers disfavour 41 Archery had always been an important sport in Solihull On the doorway of the church of St Alphage are incisions which are arrow sharpening marks from the 1360s when men were required to practice archery on a Sunday to ensure a ready supply of archers The long marks have been made by Broadheads the round by Bodkins types of arrowheads used with the long bows of the time 42 The society is strictly limited to a membership of 80 with this rule only having been bent once when in 1835 Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel Lord of the Manor of Hampton in Arden was added 43 During the 19th Century the area was home to the country residences of abolitionist William Wilberforce left and Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel right In the early 1800s Isaac William Lillingston sold the Manor of Hampton in Arden to former Prime Minister and founder of the modern police force Sir Robert Peel Peel and his son Sir Frederick Peel modernised and made improvements to Hampton in Arden including the construction of a new manor house which is today the Michelin starred Peel s Restaurant 16 It was also during the early 1800s that abolitionist William Wilberforce moved to the Elmdon area of Solihull following his marriage to Barbara Spooner of the Spooner banking family who were the owners of Elmdon hall A road Wilberforce Way is named for him north of Solihull town centre 44 The manor of Longdon came to famous poet Lord Byron in 1815 by his marriage with Anne daughter of Sir Ralph Milbanke Noel and on her death in 1860 passed to her grandson the Earl of Lovelace Two roads in Solihull are named after the family Lady Byron Lane and Lovelace Avenue 45 Dog Kennel Lane Post Box Longdon Hall with its remaining manorial rights was later bought by a solicitor Mr J B Clarke of Birmingham in 1899 and soon afterwards sold to Mr Alfred Lovekin a silversmith 20 Mr Lovekin also leased land near Solihull town centre from the Chattock family of Castle Bromwich on which he built the Jacobean style Tudor Grange Hall After Mr Lovekin s death Tudor Grange Hall was sold to Sir Alfred Bird 1st Baronet a chemist and politician who would later leave the land for creation of a Tudor Grange grammar school and Tudor Grange Park Longdon hall was eventually sold to a nearby golfcourse 32 In 1868 George Muntz of nearby Umberslade a campaigner for suffrage and friend of Thomas Attwood would become the owner of the manor of Widney Manor He would also later buy land in Bentley Heath and develop the Solihull area of Dorridge In the 1870s the Hobday family would construct Monkspath Priory The property would later serve Solihull as the Regency Club a gentlemen s club and banqueting complex before becoming a hotel in the late 20th century 46 In 1870 metallurgist and inventor James Fern Webster moved to Whitlocks End on the outskirts of Solihull While here he discovered the process for making the extraction of aluminium sufficiently cost effective for the metal to be used in the manufacture of everyday objects Before this aluminium was considered a precious metal with bars of aluminium exhibited alongside the French Crown Jewels in the Paris Exhibition of 1855 In 1878 Webster was producing 100 pounds of pure Aluminium every week at his Solihull Lodge factory 47 In 1898 the Fowlers Cheese company the oldest cheese manufacturer in England founded 1670 moved to its current site in Earlswood 48 In the 1890s famed pen manufacturer Joseph Gillott constructed New Berry Hall outside Catherine de Barnes The architect of the hall was J A Chatwin who designed the Victoria Tower in the Houses of Parliament Around this time Chatwin also designed School House at Solihull School Towards the end of this era telephone and postal services came to the town It was said the post office in Castle Bromwich later part of the borough of Solihull was one of the first locations to have a telephone installed outside of London The purported reason for this is that in 1876 Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli was visiting supposedly to court Lady Bradford at Castle Bromwich Hall and needed to be able to contact the government in London 49 During the Victorian era a rare fluted pillar box was installed on Dog Kennel lane Today it is Grade II listed The post box is designed to look like a Doric column 50 20th century Edit Unlike major cities to the north the Industrial Revolution largely passed Solihull and much of the rest of rural Warwickshire by and until the 20th century Solihull remained a small market town Local population growth was due to a number of factors perhaps most significantly the release of large tracts of land for housing development attracting inward migration of new residents from across the United Kingdom The Old Council House In 1894 Solihull including the parishes of Shirley Baddesley Clinton Barston Lapworth Balsall Bushwood Elmdon Knowle Nuthurst Packwood and Tanworth in Arden was made into the Solihull Rural District in the county of Warwickshire In 1932 some of its rural areas were taken away when the RDC was succeeded by Solihull Urban District Council Solihull School continued to grow during this period Arthur Tolkien father of J R R Tolkien the author of The Lord of the Rings series of books was a pupil there during the 1860s J R R Tolkien mentioned Solihull and Solihull School in some of his letters J R R Tolkien s son Michael would go on to teach at Solihull School in the 1950s 51 In 1909 Cathleen Cartland would found one of the countries first non denominational co educational preparatory schools Ruckleigh School in Solihull many decades before others followed Like most other parts of the UK Solihull and its borough was impacted by the First World War In 1914 the Army Remount Service responsible for the nations war horses specifically collecting horses and dispatching them on to combat areas was headquartered in what is now the Wilson Arms in Knowle 52 The town and borough also provided a number of Auxiliary Hospitals 53 The village of Hockley Heath was bombed by a lost Zeppelin L 62 It was during the early 1900s that the poet W H Auden grew up in Solihull on Homer Road In 1936 two Solihull farms were bought for the construction of a shadow factory to prepare for the Second World War The purpose of the shadow factories were to be as secret as possible often located in rural areas to prevent enemy bombing After the war in 1948 this factory would become the home of the Land Rover car company Avro 652A Anson T21 Celebrating the 60th Anniversary of the airport at the art deco Elmdon Terminal On 8 July 1939 Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and the Duchess of Kent opened Solihull s airport Elmdon Airport The Elmdon Terminal which incorporated the airport s air traffic control tower is famous for having been designed by Norman and Dawbarn in an Art Deco style Shortly after opening it would be requisitioned for the Second World War becoming RAF Elmdon On 8 July 1946 the aerodrome was reopened to civilian operations though it remained under government control In 1960 control of the airport was handed to Birmingham City Council and the airport was renamed Birmingham International Airport At the time despite being England s second city Birmingham was without an airport and Elmdon Airport in Solihull was the closest Reflecting the fact that Birmingham Airport was in Solihull and not Birmingham a train station called Birmingham International Rail Station was added to transport travelers the 8 mile journey into Birmingham The airport and station are connected via Air Rail Link The airport is still affectionately known amongst some Solihull residents as Elmdon Airport By the time the Second World War started Solihull had become a reception area for evacuated Children from Coventry and the East End of London Some barrage balloons smokescreens and searchlights were erected around Solihull in an effort to confuse any enemy bomber planes flying over head on their way to critical major industrial areas A military convalescent hospital was opened in Tudor Grange House A British Restaurant was opened up on Mill Lane The town adopted the ship HMS Vivacious in 1942 In preparation for the D Day landings an American Army headquarters was established on Blossomfield Road 54 The town also had a Home Guard Battalion 55 In 1954 Queen Elizabeth II granted a Royal Charter of Incorporation making Solihull into a Municipal Borough ten years later it was given the status of County Borough Reorganisation of boundaries and council responsibilities in 1974 created the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull by the merger of the Solihull County Borough and most of the Meriden Rural District which forms the main rural part of the borough and county It included Balsall Common Barston Berkswell Bickenhill Castle Bromwich Chelmsley Wood Elmdon Fordbridge Hampton in Arden Hockley Heath Kingshurst Knowle Marston Green Meriden Olton Smiths Wood Solihull Shirley and Temple Balsall A coat of arms was granted to the borough with a Black Griffin taken from the arms of the Earls of Aylesford of Meriden a Silver Fleur de lys comes from the Digby family associated with Coleshill and Fordbridge and a Black Greyhound taken from the arms of the Greswolds of Solihull town Until the early 1960s the main high street remained much as it would have been in the late 19th century with several streets of Victorian terraced houses linking High Street with Warwick Road The construction of the central shopping area known as Mell Square named after W Maurice Mell the town clerk who planned the work involved the demolition of properties in Mill Lane and Drury Lane some of which were several hundred years old together with that of the large Victorian Congregational church that had stood on the corner of Union Street and Warwick Road In 1966 Silhill Hall the 13th century manor house of Solihull was illegally demolished by the owner Malcolm Ross who attempted unsuccessfully to claim that a violent storm had made the structure unsafe The site of the property is now used for housing remembered only by the name of Silhill Hall road 56 57 58 In 1986 the Solihull borough effectively became a unitary authority after the abolition of the County Council The borough is administered from a building on Church Hill in Solihull town centre On 23 November 1981 an F0 T1 tornado touched down in nearby Shirley The tornado later moved over Solihull town centre causing some damage to the town centre before dissipating 59 Present day Edit A look up High Street in Solihull Despite its proximity to cities like Birmingham to the northwest Coventry to the east Worcester to the southwest and the build up of conurbations around nearby Warwick Stratford upon Avon the Royal Town of Sutton Coldfield and Royal Leamington Spa Solihull maintains its unique and distinct identity and is bordered by greenbelt countryside to the south and east Solihull itself remains administered by Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council effectively a unitary authority providing the majority of local government services Regional administrative functions such as policing fire and public transport are organised through the West Midlands administrative division and combined authority Geography EditSolihull is located south of the centre of England in the Forest of Arden area on the River Blythe 127 m 416 ft above sea level 60 The town and most of the borough is within the West Midlands Green Belt Via national roads and or motorways the town is 7 5 miles 12 1 km southeast of Birmingham 14 miles 21 km west of Coventry 18 miles 29 km northwest of Warwick 32 miles 51 km northeast of Worcester and 111 miles 179 km northwest of London 61 Governance EditLocal Government Level Edit Due to its growth Solihull was promoted from an urban district to a municipal borough the honour being bestowed by Princess Margaret who waved from the balcony of the Old Council House in March 1954 62 The Queen opened the new civic hall in the town in May 1962 63 The town became a county borough in 1964 In 1974 the Solihull county borough was merged with the rural district surrounding Meriden to form the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull This also includes the districts known as Shirley Knowle Dorridge Balsall Common Castle Bromwich and Chelmsley Wood There are now 17 wards in Solihull 64 Olton Knowle Dorridge Silhill Blythe Meriden Elmdon Lyndon Smith s Wood Chelmsley Wood Hockley Heath St Alphege Shirley West Shirley East Shirley South Kingshurst amp Fordbridge Castle Bromwich and Bickenhill 65 Each ward is represented by three councillors at Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council making a total of 51 councillors 64 The mayor is elected by the council and is currently 2022 Ken Meeson of the Conservative Party There are parish councils serving villages across the wider borough Regional and National Government Level Edit Regionally Solihull comes under the West Midlands Combined Authority and therefore also takes part in elections for the Mayor of the West Midlands and the West Midlands Police and Crime Commissioner 66 67 The member of parliament for the Solihull constituency is former Conservative Julian Knight who won his seat in 2015 running on a Conservative ticket The seat is one of two parliamentary seats within the Borough of Solihull the other being Meriden constituency named for the village of Meriden within the Meriden Gap Traditions Edit Traditionally the Mayor of Solihull is driven in a Land Rover usually a Range Rover with the license plate Sol 1 reflecting the towns connection to the Land Rover vehicle manufacturer 68 Although the town and borough of Solihull are in the West Midlands metropolitan county Solihull is in the historic county of Warwickshire This means the town can fly the flag of Warwickshire and celebrate Warwickshire Day when an official date is agreed upon 69 70 Some local support has been recorded to return the borough entirely to Warwickshire such as when Bath was returned to Somerset after the abolition of the County of Avon 71 Education EditSee also List of schools in Solihull Higher education Edit Solihull has no university but there are seven universities within 16 mi 26 km of the town in the surrounding cities However Solihull College formerly known as the Solihull Technical College incorporates a University Centre which offers several foundation degree and full degree courses particularly in technical subject areas such as computer sciences and engineering These courses are offered through the college s partner the University of Warwick As yet the college has not applied to attain university college status Further education Edit There is also a sixth form college located on the outskirts of the town centre This is known as Solihull Sixth Form College Independent schools Edit Solihull School Solihull School is an independent school and is located on Warwick Road near the centre of the town It was founded in 1560 and celebrated its 450th anniversary in 2010 Ruckleigh School is an independent preparatory school founded in 1909 by Cathleen Cartland and is notable for being a nondenominational co educational school many decades before any others followed Another preparatory school called Eversfield School is also located in the town centre State funded schools Edit Tudor Grange Academy The town centre is also well served by some high performing state schools Tudor Grange house a now grade II listed property was completed in Solihull in 1887 for Alfred Lovekin a silversmith who later sold the estate to Sir Alfred Bird the owner of Bird s Custard then produced at the Birmingham Custard Factory The Bird family bequeathed the house and estate to the people of Solihull for the construction of a Tudor Grange grammar school around the turn of the century After Tudor Grange grammar school had been established on this site other parcels of the estate were passed on by the school for other neighbouring schools colleges and parkland 72 Tudor Grange School and Solihull School continue to enjoy a friendly sporting rivalry centred around rugby union Solihull s state schools Tudor Grange School and Arden Academy regularly feature in good school guides such as the Tatler guide to the best state secondary schools 73 Solihull had a Wave 1 proposal of the Building Schools for the Future investment programme approved They were awarded over 80 million to transform six schools in the north of the borough in December 2004 As a result of the funding there will be six new schools constructed within seven years The school curriculum will be redesigned as well as a further 6 million investment in managed ICT services The six schools to be rebuilt are Park Hall Academy Smith s Wood Academy Archbishop Grimshaw Lanchester Special School Forest Oak School and Merstone school Forest Oak and Merstone have been already rebuilt on one site Lanchester Park Hall and Smith s Wood have been built by BAM PPP under Private Finance Initiative Archbishop Grimshaw has been built by BAM PPP under a traditional contract 74 Transport EditRoad Edit A number of main roads pass through Solihull including the A41 Birmingham to Warwick road and the A34 Birmingham to Stratford road the A34 becomes the commercial centre of Shirley making for a busy town centre feel along the main road The M42 and the M40 both pass through the outskirts of the borough of Solihull providing very rapid links to Oxford and London in the South East and to the rest of the motorway network surrounding the West Midlands region The M42 opens up to the M5 providing links to Cheltenham the West Country and South West England Rail Edit Solihull station Solihull railway station is on the former Great Western Railway line to London Paddington although trains now run along the Chiltern Main Line terminating at London Marylebone Other railway links are provided on the West Coast Main Line as Birmingham International railway station lies within the borough s boundaries and offers frequent express connections to London Express train services through Solihull are now run by Chiltern Railways and local services by West Midlands Railway Cross Country trains pass through the station but no longer stop here Solihull will be served by a HS2 interchange station if the project is approved putting London just 38 minutes away by train 75 76 Bus Edit A Mercedes Benz Citaro bus in Signature livery in Solihull Local bus services are provided largely by National Express West Midlands from their Yardley Wood and Acocks Green depots in south and southeast Birmingham respectively Other services are provided by Diamond West Midlands including service X20 between Coventry and Stratford upon Avon Landflight and Diamond Bus Until 2019 Diamond buses operated the Signature brand of buses in Solihull The Diamond buses operating in Solihull were fitted with leather seats and wireless internet and used the cleanest bus engines in Europe 77 The Diamond buses have since moved elsewhere Due to a review of services in Warwickshire by Diamond service X20 was split into two parts from 13th August 2022 with Stagecoach operating the Stratford to Solihull section daily The remaining section between Solihull and Coventry will continue to be operated by Diamond Mon Sat until 28th August 2022 when this section will be operated by Stagecoach as service 82 Stagecoach will also begin operating services 87 amp 88 on the same date In preparation for the 2022 Commonwealth Games which will be held across the West Midlands and Warwickshire Transport for West Midlands is constructing a new Bus Rapid Transit network of tram style buses that will form critical infrastructure ahead of the games The new network known as Sprint will utilise dedicated lanes and zero emission tram style buses which will provide off board ticketing multiple door boarding wheelchair and pushchair access free Wi Fi and air conditioning as well as on board audio visual announcements and travel information The network will connect Solihull town centre Birmingham Airport the National Exhibition Centre and future HS2 Interchange all in Solihull with Birmingham City Centre and other parts of the region such as the Royal Town of Sutton Coldfield Any green space lost as part of Sprint s proposals will be replaced according to the local highway authority tree replacement policy Work commenced on the network in March 2021 78 79 80 81 Canal Edit A Narrowboat on the Canal in Shirley The Grand Union Canal passes across Solihull coming within 1 mi 1 6 km of the town centre and linking the town to the River Thames in London There are a flight of five locks at Knowle added in the 1930s which are wide enough to allow narrowboats to navigate together side by side 82 The Stratford upon Avon Canal passes through Hockley Heath in the Borough of Solihull Hockley Wharf now a public house served the rest of the surrounding Solihull area and beyond Non perishable goods were unloaded there including timber lime coke coal cement bricks and salt The last commercial load was brought into the wharf on Christmas Eve 1929 83 Bicycle Edit Bicycling in Solihull is popular and as of March 2021 it was announced that Solihull would benefit from a cycle hire scheme where residents and visitors would be able to hire bikes from an app on their phone Three free to use cycle repair stations are being installed across the borough and new cycle lanes added 84 Trams Edit In 2024 work will commence on an extension to the Transport for West Midlands West Midlands Metro tram network down to Solihull The extension will link up to Birmingham Airport the National Exhibition Centre and future HS2 Interchange with the wider network before continuing on through the region going as far south as the University of Warwick 85 86 Air Edit Birmingham Airport is located in the Elmdon part of Solihull and was known as Elmdon Airport until control passed from the government to Birmingham City Council in the 1960s as Birmingham itself was without an airport Elmdon Airport was 8 miles from Birmingham but still closer than any other contender The airport is connected to the NEC and Birmingham International Station via the Air Rail Link APM Economy EditRetail Edit Touchwood Solihull Solihull offers a variety of shopping facilities In recent years the town has undergone much development and its High Street has been pedestrianised since 1994 On 2 July 2002 a large new shopping centre Touchwood was opened by Queen Elizabeth II The Crown Estate has an equity interest in the shopping centre In 2014 the town was listed as one of the top five destinations for shopping in the UK 87 In addition to the Touchwood shopping centre it also has an open air 1960s style shopping centre called Mell Square which was constructed following the demolition of several terraces of Victorian houses and the original Solihull Congregational Church When Mell Square was first opened it was known for its large block of fountains which were switched off and removed in the late 80s In recent years some residents have called for the fountains to be returned 88 Luxury vehicle sales also make up some of the Solihull economy with a dealership for Rolls Royce and other luxury car marques present in the town Industry Edit The Land Rover Solihull Plant Solihull is the home of the four wheel drive car manufacturer Land Rover Its main production plant is situated east of the Lode Heath district along with a range of other major companies Engineering and professional services firm Arup have a large presence in Solihull 89 Fitness apparel manufacturer Gymshark has been based in Solihull since 2012 The Solihull village of Meriden was the famous home of the Triumph motorbike factory from 1942 to 1983 In January 2021 motorcycle company Norton announced they would be investing in a technologically advanced production site and headquarters in Solihull 90 The Lucas company who supplied lighting and electric components to the motorcycle and aerospace industries was also headquartered in Solihull for many years with a research facility in Shirley 91 Food and beverage Edit Food and drink production and hospitality also make up part of the local Solihull economy Earlswood in the Solihull borough is home to Fowlers established since 1670 it is the oldest cheese making business in England The company still makes all its cheese by hand 48 In Catherine de Barnes is the Silhill Brewery The former home of retail bakers Three Cooks was based in Solihull and after it was brought out of administration in 2006 the new company Cooks the Bakery retains its HQ in Solihull The pub company Enterprise Inns is also headquartered in Solihull The Grenade Protein Bar company valued at 200m in 2021 is based in Solihull having been started by a couple from Solihull in 2010 92 There are a number of restaurants and eateries in Solihull including the Michelin starred Peel s Restaurant Service sector Edit Financial services make up some of the Solihull economy Personal loan provider Paragon and retail and commercial bank Secure Trust Bank are both based in Solihull The National Exhibition Centre is within the borough of Solihull which hosts a number of national trade shows such as The Horse of the Year Show and The Crufts International Dog Show The Blythe Valley Business Park is also both within the borough of Solihull Both have excellent links to Birmingham Airport and the M42 M40 and M6 motorways Third sector and charity Edit A number of regional and national charities are based in or have offices in Solihull Royal Star and Garter Homes a charity founded in 1916 to provide care for ex Service people and their partners who live with disability or dementia operates one of its three state of the art care homes in Solihull 93 Culture Edit Statue of a Horse and Tamer in Malvern Park Solihull by artist Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm Donated to the town by Captain Oliver Bird High Sheriff of Warwickshire Screen and stage Edit Solihull is home to the Core Theatre part of the Solihull Arts Complex The centre of Solihull has a Cineworld cinema cn Music and dance Edit Resorts World Arena under old branding In Solihull is the Resorts World Arena a multipurpose indoor arena with a capacity of 15 685 opened in 1980 with a concert by Queen A number of internationally renowned acts have performed there in recent years including Lady Gaga and Adele In 2019 Resorts World Arena had the fifth highest ticket sales of an arena venue in the United Kingdom 94 Solihull has a symphony orchestra founded in 1990 95 The town has a professional ballet school which teaches according to the International Dance Teachers Association syllabus 96 The town has a troop of mixed border Morris dancers called Silhill Morris 97 Art and museums Edit Solihull is home to a large number of public sculptures and art works There are also a number of museums galleries and historic properties open to the public Museums and galleriesThe Solihull Arts Complex includes the Courtyard Gallery and Art Space an exhibition space and gallery The town also has a number of private art galleries Reflecting the towns British motorcycle heritage as home to the Triumph Motorcycle company for many years Solihull also has the National Motorcycle Museum The museum was founded in 1984 and is affiliated to the British Motorcycle Charitable Trust The museum has become the largest collection of British motorcycles in the world with over 250 000 visitors a year 98 Heritage and historic attractionsBerry Mound is the site of an Iron Age hill fort dating back to the 1st century BC in Shirely Solihull on the Worcestershire border 99 Hobs Moat in Olton Solihull is the site of the ruined 12th century castle of the Lords of the Manor of Solihull Today it is a scheduled ancient monument and Local nature reserve The ruin itself is now below ground level but the moated earthworks remain above the ground level 100 Baddesley Clinton is a 13th century Grade I Listed moated manor house in the village of Baddesley Clinton on the border of the borough of Solihull managed by the National Trust Packwood House is a Grade I listed Tudor manor house on the outskirts of the borough of Solihull managed by the National Trust It was home to the Featherston family who would later marry into the Dilke family of nearby Maxstoke Castle They also provided the first usher at Solihull School where a house is named Featherston 101 The yew tree topiary garden of Packwood House is also famous in its own right and is supposed to symbolise the Sermon on the Mount Packwood church known as St Giles was the location of the marriage of the parents of Samuel Johnson author of the first dictionary Samuel s mother Sara Ford was from Packwood and St Giles was her parish church 101 Berkswell Mill is a historic windmill in the borough of Solihull which is occasionally open to the public 102 There is a historic miniature steam railway founded in 1936 in Illshaw Heath in the borough of Solihull 103 Communal facilities EditParks and local nature reserves Edit The Lake Brueton Park Solihull Solihull has a number of parks and local nature reserves including the UK s first dedicated hedgehog conservation area 104 The nearest parks to the town centre are Malvern and Brueton Parks They are interlinked and cover a total area of about 130 acres 0 53 km2 Brueton Park used to be part of the grounds of Malvern Hall which dates back to about 1690 Tudor Grange Park is also close to the town centre The River Blythe a headwater tributary of the River Trent passes through parts of Solihull including Malvern and Tudor Grange Parks Other parks across the borough include Elmdon Park Hillfield Park Cole Bank Park Knowle Park Langley Hall Park and Shirley Park The list of parks and reserves across the borough includes Alcott Wood in Moorend Avenue Chelmsley Wood 5 7 hectares 14 acres of semi natural ancient woodland designated in 2002 105 Babbs Mill in Fordbridge Road Kingshurst 24 hectares 59 acres of mixed grassland lake and woodland habitats designated in 2000 105 Bills Wood in Bill s Lane Shirley 7 hectares 17 acres of semi natural ancient woodland designated in 1991 105 Dorridge Wood in Arden Road Dorridge 7 5 hectares 19 acres of semi natural woodland designated in 2000 105 Elmdon Park at Elmdon Manor Solihull 4 6 hectares 11 acres of former walled garden managed by Warwickshire Wildlife Trust designated in 1995 105 Harry s Wood between Naseby Road and St Helen s Road also known as Coldlands Wood 9 9 hectares 24 acres of dense woodland designated in 2020 105 Jobs Close in Longdon Road Knowle 3 5 hectares 8 6 acres of grassland and woodland with pond designated in 2004 105 Palmers Rough in Jacey Road Shirley 6 5 hectares 16 acres of semi natural woodland designated in 2000 105 Malvern amp Brueton Park in Old Warwick Road Solihull 30 hectares 74 acres of mixed grassland woodland and marsh designated in 2002 Millisons Wood in Albert Road Meriden 11 hectares 27 acres of semi natural ancient woodland designated in 1993 105 Smith s Wood in Windward Way Smiths Wood 4 5 hectares 11 acres of semi natural ancient woodland designated in 2004 105 Yorks Wood in Fordbridge Road Kingshurst 10 hectares 25 acres of semi natural ancient woodland designated in 1991 105 Leisure Edit Solihull s Leisure sector has seen growth in recent years with an average tourism spend in the region per person of 4 081 in 2018 106 Leisure and entertainment facilitiesSolihull has numerous leisure facilities including a public swimming pool on the edge of Tudor Grange Park This pool replaced the old Tudor Grange Sports Centre which was demolished in 2007 to make way for the brand new leisure centre A combination of the old Norman Green Athletics Centre and Tudor Grange Sports Centre This in turn had replaced the outdoor swimming pool Malvern Park Lido that had served Solihull from 1954 till its closure in 1982 107 At present there are two sports centres the more modern Tudor Grange Sports Centre and the older North Solihull Sports Centre There is also an outdoor wooden skateboarding and in line skating facility in Tudor Grange Park On the outskirts of Solihull is the Bear Grylls Adventure Park run by Merlin Entertainments and named after British adventurer Bear Grylls The centre offers rock climbing indoor skydiving a zip line from a Chinook helicopter Europe s tallest high ropes an assault course and a chance to dive with sharks 108 At the Solihull Land Rover plant is the Land Rover Experience which features a 14 miles of varied terrain on the legendary Jungle Track Land Track and Adventure Zone and driving experiences can be booked 109 In woodland on Cut Throat Lane in Hockley Heath is the largest paintball centre in the Midlands 110 Clubs and societiesThe borough is well served by numerous youth groups both from the statutory and voluntary sector There are several Scout groups including Knowle Sea Scout Group which is based in the south of Solihull and is sponsored by the Royal Navy providing a wide programme of activities for young people from all over Solihull aged from 6 to 18 The recently refurbished ice rink on Hobs Moat Road is home to Solihull s ice hockey teams the Solihull Barons Solihull Vikings a junior ice hockey team the Mohawks ice racing club as well as ice dance and figure skating clubs Above the ice rink was a Riley s snooker club before the company entered administration in 2020 as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic A number of service organisations and other clubs operate in Solihull including a Round Table and a Women s Institute founded over 90 years ago There is a Freemasonic temple in Knowle hosting a number of lodges The Lunar Society of Birmingham a local learned society re founded by Dame Rachel Waterhouse is headquartered in Shirley Solihull 111 Events Edit Every year since the early 1930s apart from gaps during world wars and in 2020 due to COVID 19 112 Solihull Carnival has taken place This is now fixed to the first weekend after the June half term and takes place in Tudor Grange Park organised by Shirley Round Table Tudor Grange Park is also the venue for the annual free firework display held on the Saturday closest to 5 November organised by Solihull Round Table The event attracts about 15 000 people to the park 113 Every year the town plays host to the Crufts international dog show at its National Exhibition Centre The council hosts a popular farmers market every first Friday of the month on the High Street to cater to the increased demand for organic and locally grown food 114 The town hosts an annual CAMRA beer festival 115 Every year a large unofficial St George s Day Parade takes place meeting in Solihull traveling down through neighbouring Henley in Arden and into Stratford upon Avon 116 Sport EditAssociation footballThe largest football club in the town is Solihull Moors who play at Damson Park 2 miles 3 2 km from the town centre The club was established in 2007 following the merger of Solihull Borough and Moor Green and currently play in the National League after being promoted from the National League North at the end of the 2015 16 season After the demolition of the Old Wembley Stadium a bid was made for a new multi purpose English National Stadium to be built in the north of the borough of Solihull as a new home for English football The bid was ultimately unsuccessful Rugby footballBirmingham amp Solihull R F C known as the Bees compete in Midlands 4 West South league as of 2020 21 The club had a brief period in the RFU Championship the second tier of English Rugby in 2010 The club played at a ground in the Solihull town centre at Sharmans Cross Road until August 2010 when they were relegated from the Championship Following a brief spell at Solihull Moors Damson Park ground the club now play at Portway Other amateur clubs play in the borough at various levels Former England Captain and World Cup winner Martin Johnson is from Solihull Former Premiership side Wasps who entered administration and were relegated in 2022 will share Damson Park with Solihull Moors for their return to competitive rugby in the RFU Championship in 2023 117 CricketThere are several local level cricket clubs across Solihull including Hampton and Solihull CC and Solihull Municipal CC both of whom compete in the Warwickshire Cricket League and Arden Sunday Cricket League EquestrianSolihull Riding Club is the longest established riding club in the UK It has one of the largest indoor riding arenas in the country and a premier competition centre Adjacent to Hogarths Hotel in the Four Ashes area of Solihull is the Stables home of the British Equestrian Eventing Team 118 119 Sailing Olton Mere Sailing Club Solihull borough is home to two sailing clubs The Earlswood Lakes Sailing Club founded in 1960 meet at Windmill Lake amongst the Earlswood Lakes The Olton Mere Sailing Club founded in 1926 meet at Olton Reservoir Racquet sportsTennis is a popular sport in Solihull with courts available to the public in Malvern Park The Solihull Arden Racquets Club is a thriving racquets and fitness club in Solihull 120 Former UK tennis number one Jeremy Bates grew up in Solihull and attended Tudor Grange school GolfSolihull has a number of golf clubs and facilities including Shirley Golf Club Olton Golf Club Copt Heath Golf Club Robin Hood Golf Club West Midlands Golf Club Widney Manor Golf Club Tidbury Green Golf Club the Arden Course at the Forest of Arden Marriott Hotel amp Country Club an 18 hole pitch and putt at Tudor Grange Park and a driving range at Four Ashes Arden Golf Club Solihull now defunct was founded in 1891 The course was still appearing on maps into the 1930s 121 Archery The Gates to Forest Hall home of the Woodmen of Arden Archery has always been a prominent sport in Solihull The Meriden Archery Club founded in 1936 meet within the grounds of the Packington Estate and practice target archery The Forest of Arden Bowmen practice field archery in grounds nearby Meriden is also home to the Woodmen of the Forest of Arden founded 1785 an illustrious society of archers who shoot a unique and historic type of clout archery with longbows CyclingSolihull is also home to Solihull Cycling Club which was founded in 1929 The club has produced National Champions Olympic Medallists and Tour de France riders 122 Meriden is home to the National Cyclists Memorial dedicated to the cyclists who died in the First World War National cycling organisations commemorate these deaths with an annual mid May service on the green SwimmingSolihull Swimming Club is based at Tudor Grange Leisure Centre First established in 1963 123 the club now boasts over 600 members and also runs water polo teams HockeySolihull Barons are the local ice hockey team and play their home games at the Solihull Ice Rink Solihull also has a number of field hockey clubs namely Old Silhillians Hockey Club Olton amp West Warwickshire Hockey Club and Solihull Blossomfield Hockey Club OtherGaelic games are played by Warwickshire GAA who play their home matches in Pairc na hEireann in Solihull The town has an indoor bowling area and club Localities EditFor a full list see List of areas in Solihull The Shelley Farmhouse pub and restaurant in Hillfield Solihull town has several suburbs including Olton formerly known as Ulverli Solihull Lodge Blossomfield Sharmans Cross Cranmore Shirley considered a sub town of Solihull Longdon Shirley Heath Hillfield Monkspath Widney Manor Lode Heath Elmdon Heath Hobs Moat Haslucks Green and World s End Solihull Borough includes several satellite towns and villages including Barston Balsall Common Bentley Heath Bickenhill Blythe Valley Castle Bromwich Catherine de Barnes Cheswick Green and Illshaw Heath Copt Heath Dickens Heath and Whitlocks End Dorridge Eastcote Elmdon Hampton in Arden Hockley Heath and Nuthurst Knowle Meriden Ravenshaw Tidbury Green and Temple Balsall Twin towns EditSolihull is twinned with 124 Changzhou China Cholet France Main Taunus Kreis GermanyNotable people EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This list includes notable persons who were born or have lived in Solihull and its borough Cecil Aldin b 1870 illustrator and artist educated in Solihull W H Auden b 1907 Anglo American poet lived on Homer Road in Solihull Jeremy Bates b 1962 former UK tennis number 1 born in Solihull Sir David Baulcombe b 1952 Professor of Botany at the University of Cambridge born in Solihull Mark Billingham b 1961 novelist actor and screenwriter born in Solihull Sir Alfred Bird 1st Baronet of Solihull in the County of Warwick b 1849 chairman of Bird s Custard lived in Solihull Elizabeth Bower b 1976 actress Doctors brought up in Solihull Karren Brady b 1969 vice chairman of West Ham United F C lived in Copt Heath Solihull Jeremy Brett b 1933 British actor famed for playing Sherlock Holmes and Freddy Eynsford Hill in My Fair Lady born in Berkswell Solihull David Briggs b 1962 English organist and composer educated in Solihull Michael Buerk b 1946 BBC News reader born and brought up in Solihull attending Solihull School Mike Bullen b 1960 screenwriter brought up and educated in Solihull Lorely Burt Baroness Burt of Solihull b 1954 British politician lived in Solihull John A Butt b 1960 conductor scholar keyboardist and Gardiner Chair at the University of Glasgow brought up in Solihull Daniel Caines b 1979 athlete born in Solihull Karen Carney b 1987 Birmingham England and Great Britain women s footballer born in Solihull Stephanie Cole b 1941 actress born in Solihull Dominic Coleman b 1970 actor born in Solihull Alan Cox b 1968 a Linux kernel engineer born in Solihull Matthew Croucher b 1983 Royal Marine George Cross holder born in Solihull Jon Fox Davies b 1998 Professional rugby player for the Scarlets Wales and the British and Irish Lions born in Solihull Gary Delaney b 1973 comedian born in Solihull Gwendoline Delbos Corfield b 1977 French politician born in Solihull Nick Drake b 1948 musician poet brought up in Tanworth in Arden in Solihull Dan Evans b 1990 top ranked British tennis player from October 2019 onwards lived in Solihull Susan Fletcher b 1979 novelist Winner of Whitbread Prize now Costa Book Award and Betty Trask Award brought up in Solihull Craig Gardner b 1986 Birmingham City midfielder born in Solihull Shane Geraghty b 1986 England rugby union player attended St Alphege Junior School Solihull Joseph Gillott b 1799 founder of Joseph Gillott Pens lived in Solihull Tommy Godwin b 1920 cyclist twice Olympic medallist in 1948 and President of Solihull Cycling Club Don Gould and Gerry Freeman members of the Applejacks born in Solihull Mark Goldbridge b 1979 English YouTuber and radio presenter Jack Grealish b 1995 professional footballer plays for Manchester City and the England national team brought up in Solihull Will Grigg b 1991 English born Northern Irish professional footballer attended Solihull School Amii Grove b 1985 glamour model born in Solihull Richard Hammond b 1969 television presenter Top Gear The Grand Tour etc born in Solihull and attended Solihull School John Hampson b 1901 novelist lived in Dorridge Solihull Air Vice Marshal Peter John Harding CB CVO CBE AFC b 1940 senior RAF officer and Defence Services Secretary educated in Solihull Richard Harrison scientist born in Solihull Dave Hill b 1946 Slade s guitarist lived in Solihull Rupert Hill b 1978 Jamie Baldwin in Coronation Street born and brought up in Solihull Edith Holden b 1871 British artist taught in Solihull Tony Iommi b 1948 lead guitarist of Black Sabbath lives in Solihull Richard Jago b 1715 poet and landscape gardener educated in Solihull David Jennens b 1929 Olympic and Cambridge University rower born in Solihull Martin Johnson CBE b 1970 England rugby union player and captain born in Shirley Solihull Felicity Kendal b 1946 actress and TV star born in Olton Solihull Nigel Kennedy b 1956 violinist brought up in Solihull Justin King b 1961 former CEO of J Sainsbury plc educated in Solihull Zat Knight b 1980 professional footballer mainly with Fulham Aston Villa and Bolton Wanderers born in Solihull Stewart Lee b 1968 stand up comedian attended Solihull School Russell Leetch b 1982 bass guitarist for Editors educated in Solihull Lady Leshurr b 1990 British rapper singer songwriter and producer born in Kingshurst in Solihull George Lloyd 1st Baron Lloyd b 1879 former Leader of the House of Lords and Secretary of State for the Colonies born in Olton in Solihull Caroline Redman Lusher b 1974 singer songwriter founder and director of Rock Choir educated in Solihull Don Maclean b 1944 1970s host of Crackerjack comedian broadcaster and personality lived in Solihull Clare Maguire b 1988 singer songwriter born in Solihull Nigel Mansell b 1953 former British racing driver and Formula 1 Champion attended Solihull College Tony Martin b 1957 singer songwriter lead singer of Black Sabbath lived in Solihull Simon Mayo b 1958 broadcaster attended Solihull School James McFadden b 1983 Birmingham City F C midfielder striker lived in Solihull Carol McNicoll b 1943 designer and potter 125 brought up in Solihull Lizo Mzimba b 1968 journalist and television presenter born and educated in Solihull Ritchie Neville b 1979 member of the band Five educated in Solihull Jonathan Nott b 1962 conductor born in Solihull Callum O Hare b 1998 footballer born in Solihull Sir Frederick Peel 3rd Baronet Peel of Drayton Manor and Bury b 1823 politician lived in Solihull Sir Robert Peel 2nd Baronet Peel of Drayton Manor and Bury b 1788 former British Prime Minister founded modern English police force Lord of the Manor in Hampton in Arden in Solihull Genesis P Orridge Neil Megson b 1950 musician poet performance artist and occultist studied at Solihull School Graham Potter b 1975 professional footballer and Head Coach of Chelsea born in Solihull Margaret Preece opera singer born in Solihull 126 Jim Proudfoot b 1972 TalkSport football commentator educated in Solihull Laurence Rees b 1957 historian and documentary filmmaker attended Solihull School Mandy Rice Davies b 1944 famed for her role in the Profumo affair attended Sharmans Cross Junior School in Solihull Guy Russell b 1967 footballer and football club manager brought up in and around Solihull William Shenstone b 1714 poet educated in Solihull Marc Silk b 1972 voice actor born in Solihull Robert Short b 1783 East India Company officer lived and educated in Solihull Malcolm Stent b 1945 playwright and entertainer lived in Solihull Pamela Helen Stephen b 1964 British mezzo soprano born in Solihull Nikki Sudden b 1956 singer songwriter educated in Solihull Nigel John Taylor b 1960 bass guitarist in new wave band Duran Duran born in Solihull David Thomas b 1959 former Surrey County Cricket Club player born in Solihull Andy Townsend b 1963 broadcaster and TV pundit and former Aston Villa Chelsea and Ireland footballer lives in Solihull Johnnie Walker b 1945 broadcaster radio host and DJ educated in Solihull Stephen Walters b 1973 actor lives in Solihull Sally Walton b 1981 GB Women s Hockey player and 2012 Summer Olympics bronze medalist lived in Solihull Madison Welch b 1990 glamour model and actress born in Solihull William Wilberforce b 1759 Abolitionist lived in Elmdon in Solihull John Wyndham b 1903 science fiction author born in Dorridge in Solihull Dorian Yates b 1962 IFBB professional bodybuilder and 6 x Mr Olympia born in SolihullIn popular culture EditWilliam Camden visited Solihull in 1558 and said of it in his work Britannia I saw Solyhill but in it setting aside the church there is nothing worth sight 127 In David Turner s 1962 play Semi Detached Solihull is parodied as Dowlihull a fictional town where the protagonist aspires to live 128 In the British Political TV Series Yes Minister in the S1E07 1980 episode Jobs For The Boys a public private partnership project is called the Solihull Project 129 The steam engine used as the Hogwarts Express in the Harry Potter film franchise was the GWR 4900 Class 5972 Olton Hall named for the now demolished Olton Hall estate in Olton Solihull 130 References Edit Local Authority population 2011 Archived from the original on 23 December 2015 Retrieved 15 December 2015 Solihull People and Place PDF Solihull Observatory 2019 Hulse Cathrina Belcher BM Annette 25 October 2015 Super Solihull 16 reasons why the town is a great place to live BirminghamLive 1 dead link Heritage Gateway Results Heritagegateway org uk Towns and Villages Around Solihull Shirley Visitoruk com A Brief History of Birmingham History of Birmingham Places A to Y a b c Explore amp Visit Solihull Heritage Visitsolihull co uk Solihull the best place to live in the UK Absolutely The Guardian 14 November 2013 Swanshurst Quarter 2 Aghs jimdofree com Olton history Solihull gov uk Worlds End Billdargue jimdofree com a b Hob s Moat 60m north of Castle Lane Non Civil Parish 1014043 Historic England historicengland org uk Historic England Details from listed building database 1076693 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 19 September 2007 Local History Aboutb93 net a b c Hampton in Arden history Solihull gov uk Knowle history Solihull gov uk Says Sheila Bates 13 April 2020 The Knights Templar TRUSSELL Sir John c 1349 1424 of Gayton Northants History of Parliament Online Historyofparliamentonline org a b c d e Parishes Solihull British History Online British history ac uk Solihull Enterprise Agency Sites of Historical Interest Borough of Solihull PDF Hobsmoat website Retrieved 25 June 2022 a b Malvern Waters Malvern Springs and Wells Malvernwaters com a b Explore amp Visit Solihull Heritage Visitsolihull co uk Solihull town history Solihull gov uk The Place Names of Warwickshire PDF Nottingham ac uk 1970 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Stuff Good The Ruin Solihull St Alphege Solihull britishlistedbuildings co uk Butcher Shannon 23 April 2020 Where Arden met Shakespeare Towpath Talk Towpathtalk co uk Park Hall Historyofcastlebromwich jimdofree com Saint Francis of Assisi Church Baddesely Clinton Sfachurch org uk The Gunpowder Plot and its links to the Midlands Malvern Hall and the Greswold Lewis and Wigley families 8 September 2020 a b PAST MEETINGS SOLIHULL LOCAL HISTORY CIRCLE sites google com Towns and Villages Around Solihull Monkspath Visitoruk com Shelly Farmhouse Blythe Solihull Britishlistedbuildings co uk 2 dead link Solihull Warwickshire Family History Guide Parishmouse co uk 7 February 2022 Fetherston John 1859 The Warwickshire antiquarian magazine Ed By J Fetherston p 3 John Soane s Gatehouse Flickr com 11 October 2014 CONSTABLE impressions of land sea and sky John CONSTABLE Malvern Hall The entrance front Nga gov au Archived from the original on 2 April 2011 Retrieved 5 April 2021 Solihull town history Solihull gov uk Woodmen of Arden Longbow archers com Tour SolihullParish Solihullparish org uk The Woodmen of Arden PDF Weddingtoncastle co uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Elmdon history Solihull gov uk 3 dead link Corus Hotel Solihull Book with Hotelsclick com Hotelsclick com James Fern Webster the wizard of Warwickshire Solihulllife org November 2019 a b Family producer to extend its world renowned reputation with Central England Co operative link up Central England Co operative Centralengland coop The Age of Queen Victoria Castle Bromwich History for Young People The Victorian Fluted Pillar Box in England Historianruby com 10 December 2017 Tolkien Guy Cuthbertson Guycuthbertson com Retrieved 25 June 2022 Gargate Brian Knowle in the First World War Ourwarwickshire org uk Temporary server error British Red Cross PDF Vad redcross org uk Solihull in Wartime booklet Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council Yumpu com Watch Solihull in Wartime Player bfi org uk Geograph Silhill Hall Site c Graham Butcher cc by sa 2 0 Geograph org uk Libros de Blurb Espana Blurb es Mar 03 1966 the hall that was pulled down Wealthy property owner Malcolm Ross admitted yesterday he had pulled down a 700 year old building which was protected by a Government preservation order only a fortnight ago Standing near a 30ft High mound of rubble all that is left of 13th Century Shilhill Hall at Solihull Warwicks he said I now agree that the week end gale did not blow it down as was earlier reported Mr Ross then told the night the hall came down He said I was returning from a hunt ball at 4 a m Alamy com European Severe Weather Database Eswd eu Solihull West Midlands United Kingdom on the Elevation Map Topographic Map of Solihull West Midlands United Kingdom elevationmap net UK Driving Distance Calculator Driving Directions Distance Between Cities Distance Chart Distancecalculator globefeed com Local History Charter Day Archived from the original on 22 February 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Midlands News 25 05 1962 Queen at Solihull Mace Archive 23 June 2017 Retrieved 30 January 2021 a b Solihull Website Council Structure Solihull gov uk 26 September 2007 Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 8 May 2018 Solihull Council Meeting Agendas 23 January 2008 Archived from the original on 23 January 2008 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Solihull Archived from the original on 5 March 2022 Retrieved 21 April 2022 Find your PCC Is Solihull Jaguar Land Rover Land Bbc co uk 10 September 2013 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Warwickshire Day 23rd April Abcounties com 22 April 2021 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Chris Game It s too much to bear give our historic county a flag worth flying Business live co uk 21 July 2011 We came we saw And we left no signs Free Online Library Mullen Enda 31 October 2017 Bird s Custard mansion set for major retirement scheme makeover Coventrytelegraph net Bains Sanjeeta 7 January 2018 These local schools have been named among best in UK Birminghammail co uk Building Schools for the Future Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 Retrieved 25 June 2022 Irwin David 11 February 2021 8 things you didn t know about Solihull s huge new HS2 station BirminghamLive Solihull set for boom town status as HS2 brings London within an hour solihullbid co uk Live Birmingham 1 June 2010 Solihull buses get hi tech revamp on S2 and S3 routes BirminghamLive Sprint public transport routes Birmingham City Council Citizen Space Birminghambeheard org uk Irwin David 6 August 2019 Exactly how and when sprint bus service will be arriving in Solihull BirminghamLive Transport bosses respond to Solihull residents concerns about new high speed bus service Solihullobserver co uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Work starts on new Sprint bus corridor into the heart of the city Solihullobserver co uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Geograph Knowle Locks on the Grand Union Canal 47 photos in SP1976 Geograph org uk Hockley Heath history Solihull gov uk Cycle hire scheme coming to Solihull solihull gov uk Solihull gov uk Irwin David 22 February 2021 Start date pledge for Solihull leg of tram line extension BirminghamLive Madeley Peter Revealed Tube style vision for 15bn West Midlands Metro and rail revolution Expressandstar com Mullen Enda 19 July 2014 Solihull in top 5 destinations for shopping in UK Business Live Young Graham 7 October 2019 Amazing pix of Solihull s old Mell Square and fountains in a pool BirminghamLive UK Central Hub Arup com Norton Motorcycles invests in advanced new factory headquarters in Solihull Salon Prive Historic building featuring work by renowned sculptor set to be bulldozed in Solihull Birmingham Live 9 April 2019 Rodger James 22 March 2021 Cadbury owner Mondelez buys Solihull company in 11 year first BirminghamLive What we do Starandgarter org Retrieved 25 June 2022 Worldwide Ticket Sales Top 200 Arena Venues PDF Pollstar com Retrieved 25 June 2022 Solihull Symphony Orchestra About Solihullsymphony org uk Solihull School of Dance Solihullschoolofdance co uk Who Are We Silhillmorris weebly com Founder WR Roy Richards National Motorcycle Museum Nationalmotorcyclemuseum co uk Shirley history Solihull gov uk Hobs Moat history Solihull gov uk a b Towns and Villages Around Solihull Packwood Visitoruk com Berkswell windmill set to open doors this weekend Solihullobserver co uk Home Birmingham Society of Model Engineers Ltd Birminghamsme com Retrieved 25 June 2022 Helping hedgehogs around the UK The Wildlife Trusts Wildlifetrusts org Archived from the original on 26 March 2018 Retrieved 8 May 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k Solihull Council Local Nature Reserves Archived from the original on 30 June 2011 Retrieved 4 April 2011 Tourism sector on the rise in Solihull council member says Solihullobserver co uk Solihull Council Malvern Park Lido 20 July 2013 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 25 June 2022 20m Bear Grylls adventure park to open in Solihull next year after council green light Coventryobserver co uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Land Rover Land Rover Experience Solihull Archived from the original on 12 April 2021 Retrieved 12 April 2021 Paintball in Birmingham Best UK paintballer games Delta Force Paintballgames co uk 21 April 2017 Contact the Lunar Society Lunarsociety org uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Shirley Lions pledges Carnival Day will be back next year and appeals for funds 2 July 2020 Retrieved 19 February 2021 Get ready for Solihull s Bonfire Night in Tudor Grange Park Solihull News 3 November 2011 Archived from the original on 11 September 2012 Retrieved 4 November 2012 Farmers Markets in Solihull Solihull gov uk 20th Solihull CAMRA Beer Festival 2019 Solihull and District CAMRA Solihull camra org uk St George s Day motorcycle parade to take to Solihull s road Solihullobserver co uk Retrieved 25 June 2022 Sandiford Josh 16 December 2022 Wasps new home set to be in Solihull as takeover completed BirminghamLive Retrieved 18 December 2022 Ltd Jarkko Sibenberg Creare Communications Home Solihull Riding Club Hogarths Hotel Solihull Bigvenuebook com Solihull Arden Club Tennis Squash Rackteball Gym Functions Solihullarden co uk Arden Golf Club Solihull Warwickshire Golfsmissinglinks co uk Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2014 Club History Solihull Cycling Club Archived from the original on 27 September 2016 Retrieved 24 September 2016 Solihull Swimming Club Solihullswimmingclub co uk Archived from the original on 17 March 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council website retrieved 20 January 2019 Whiting David 2009 Modern British Potters and their studios A amp C Black Solihull Arts Complex solihullartscomplex co uk Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Plinth Colin 12 March 2009 Don t Go There 1001 Rude Things People Have Said About Places in Britain and Ireland ISBN 9780297858010 Solihull the best place to live in the UK Absolutely TheGuardian com 14 November 2013 The Solihull Project YouTube com 30 June 2020 Hogwarts Express External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solihull Solihull at Curlie Official Solihull Tourism Website Solihull Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solihull amp oldid 1135621980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.