Billesley
2057 Brick Kiln Field (owner James Taylor, occupier Daniel Whitehouse)
Location: north side of Brook Lane in Moseley golf course. Old claypits are shown on the 1884 map.
260 Cottage, Garden and Brickyard (owner James Taylor, tenant Aaron Peyton)
Location: south side of Brook Lane in a triangle of land at corner of Barn
Lane. A brickworks is shown in this area in 1884, but with different
buildings. Joseph Payton was listed as a brick maker at Billesley Common
from 1872 until 1890 (an earlier listing in 1852 is without location, and
Frederick Payton is at Acocks Green in 1858). The 1881 Census has Joseph
Payton as a brick manufacturer, living at Billesley Farm. Remains of the older buildings may be in gardens at the corner of Barn
and Brook Lanes. Allotments replaced the brickworks site.

1847

1884

1937
Hall
Green
1673
Brickhouse and Garden (owner John Dolphin, occupier Elizabeth Magenis)
Estimated location: north side of Doveridge Road, Hall Green,
in back gardens.
1660
Brick House Meadow (owner Christopher Scriber, tenant himself)
Estimate location of structure: under Tixall
Road between Doveridge and Eggington Roads, Hall Green, the boundary with
field 1654 is not defined.

1847

1937
Acocks Green
700
Brickkiln Meadow (owner John Mumford, occupier himself)
Location: a large field on the north side of the Warwick Road between
Dolphin
Lane and the city boundary: no buildings are shown on the Tithe Map.
 1847
Directory listings show references to brick making in Acocks Green from the
1850s. J. Purrott is listed in Yardley in 1856, and Frederick Payton at
Acocks Green in 1858. Purrott is at Acocks Green in 1860 and 1864. Clarke
and Clifford are listed at Yardley tunnel, on the canal, between 1867 and
1871, and in 1872 William Mansfield is at Bordesley Green and Acocks Green (Mansfields
owned Pinfold Farm nearby, but the brick maker may or may not be related).
Stephenson refers to a Henry Smith at Rushall Lane in the 1870s (this was
later Stockfield Road). In 1875 David Shirley is listed, and in 1878 Charles
Shirley and Mrs Caroline Smith are listed at Stockfield Road.
Caroline Smith
is listed here until 1884, with the location described as South Yardley in
1881. The 1881 Census has Caroline, a widow, as head of the family, with
occupation as brick manufacturer. With her at Broom Hill Cottage are four
sons, Alfred, Jessie, Thomas, and William, all brick makers. By 1883 the
directory shows Broom Hill Cottage occupied by a Joseph Gilman. The 1916 map
shows Broom Hill House on the corner of Stockfield and Amington Roads. Even
if this is not the cottage itself, it must be very close by.
It is reasonable to conclude that the works was on the south side of
the canal between Stockfield Road and Yardley Road, or nearby, and indeed there are
pits shown here on Ordnance Survey maps. The maps show that sand and gravel were
extracted here, confirming the location of part of the dry ridgeway route to
Yardley church, rather than disproving the extraction of clay nearby. Spoil
banks are named on the Tithe Schedule along the canal here, piled up as the
canal was dug through the ridge: perhaps that is where some clay was
obtained. In
1888 a Jesse Smith is listed at Tyseley, and in 1890 Caroline joins him
there. It seems possible, therefore, that brick making had ceased by the
mid-1880s in Acocks Green. The pits were later used by Harding's bakery at
the Swan for dumping their waste: this resulted in a plague of crickets for
occupants of new houses on Kilmorie Road.

1888

1916
Introduction
Billesley, Hall Green and Acocks Green
Greet and
Tyseley
Hay Mills
South Yardley
Yardley
village area
Blakesley Hall
area
Stechford
Kents Moat
Directory
listings
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