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Nechells School, Eliot Street
Nechells Primary School opened in 1879 as Hutton Street Board School, in a Gothic revival building designed by J H Chamberlain and William Martin, architects to the Birmingham School Board. The Board came into being as a result of the Elementary Education Act of 1870, sometimes known as the Forster Act after the Liberal MP, William Forster, who introduced the bill to Parliament. The Act gave local school boards powers to set up new schools, known as board schools, and to pay the fees of the poorest children. Campaigners from Birmingham had agitated for state provision of education through the Birmingham Education League, which became the National Education League in 1869.
By 1902, when local authorities took control of schools from the boards, the Birmingham School Board had built fifty-two new schools, most of them designed by Martin and Chamberlain. They developed a distinct house style, of which the Nechells school, built in a very working-class industrial area, is a fine example: red brick Gothic with a tall tower, pointed windows and gables all giving strong vertical accents, and intended to inspire children. In 1894 the Pall Mall Gazette commented that, ‘In Birmingham you may generally recognise a Board School by its being the best building in the neighbourhood… with lofty towers which serve the utilitarian purpose of giving excellent ventilation, gabled windows, warm red bricks and stained glass, the best of the Birmingham Board Schools have quite an artistic finish'.
The Eliot Street school is one of several that are still in use as schools. It is a Grade II listed building: see the listing at the Historic England site https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1407994?section=official-list-entry . See also Richard Vinen, Second City: Birmingham and the Forging of Modern Britain, Allen Lane, 2022, pp99-100.
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 13 Jul 2024
0.03 miles
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George VI post box in Nechells, Birmingham
Smartly painted, this is in the slip road alongside the widened B4137 Cuckoo Road.
Box No B7 76.
Image: © Roger Kidd
Taken: 20 Aug 2012
0.12 miles
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Former canal from Carters Arm Bridge
Birmingham & Fazeley Canal.
Image: © Ian S
Taken: 25 Jul 2021
0.14 miles
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Aston under snow 3 - Birmingham
Taken from Cuckoo Bridge on Cuckoo Road, which here crosses the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal, looking south-east towards Nechells. Time taken 9.19 am GMT (Greenwich Mean Time).
Image: © Martin Richard Phelan
Taken: 12 Jan 2010
0.15 miles
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Birmingham & Fazeley Canal from Cuckoo Bridge
View looking South-West towards Birmingham from Cuckoo Bridge
Image
Image: © Roy Hughes
Taken: 24 Jan 2009
0.16 miles
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New build on Cuckoo Road - Aston, Birmingham
A new building arising beside Cuckoo Road and the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal. I will return there soon for a photo of the by-now finished product. Time taken 12.00 am BST (British Summer Time).
Image: © Martin Richard Phelan
Taken: 21 Sep 2010
0.16 miles
7
Overgrown canal arm
A short overgrown arm from the Birmingham & Fazeley Canal.
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 2 Oct 2019
0.17 miles
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Aston under snow 7 - Birmingham
This photo is the view from the Cuckoo Wharf office development, which overlooks the Birmingham and Fazeley Canal, looking towards Cuckoo Bridge. Time taken 9.31 am GMT (Greenwich Mean Time).
Image: © Martin Richard Phelan
Taken: 12 Jan 2010
0.17 miles
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Cuckoo Bridge, Aston
Seen from the Birmingham and Fazeley canal
Image: © Robert Eva
Taken: 26 Oct 2016
0.17 miles
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Birmingham & Fazeley canal approaching Cuckoo Bridge
Image: © Chris Allen
Taken: 2 Oct 2019
0.17 miles