Birmingham - History Of Midlands TV News

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2013
  • This piece first broadcast on 9 May 2013. Televised on UK's regional television ITV Central. Programme (Program) -- ITV News Central.

Komentáře • 156

  • @ladywoodboy
    @ladywoodboy Před 3 lety +29

    I was born and bred in ladywood in 1946 , one of 10 kids , we had free school dinners and daily mail boots ! our mother kept the house spotless , we always where fed well and had a very happy childhood , we didnt know we were poor because we were all in the same boat , perhaps we were made of sterner stuff in those days , and they were happy days

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před rokem +4

      Well said. Some of us were tougher that average, and never gave in, but made the best of a bad situation.

    • @eileenpritchard9154
      @eileenpritchard9154 Před rokem +3

      @@MrDaiseymay
      ABSOLUTELY.

    • @jayneprice5174
      @jayneprice5174 Před rokem +4

      My dad lived in Landywood. He was eldest of 11

    • @marktaurus206
      @marktaurus206 Před 3 měsíci

      Birmingham hasn't progressed its a racist segregated shithole city fill of crime poverty and divisions and drugs.

    • @KathleenGotdon
      @KathleenGotdon Před 2 měsíci +1

      That's the difference everyone just got on with it and was still happy then ❤

  • @anni50ful
    @anni50ful Před 2 lety +13

    My Aunt Mary used to live in a back to back in Balsall Heath ,I always remember visiting her as a kid and having to use the communal toilets with newspaper squares hung up by string on the wall , there was also a wash house where laundry was done, tough times tough people. My aunt was one of the toughest people I knew who I loved very much, my whole Brummie family were poor tough Hawkers I wish I could of met them ☺

  • @johnbowkett80
    @johnbowkett80 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Born in Loveday Street and raised in Lower Essex Street ....... A true and proper Brummie . 💪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @alangriffiths3360
    @alangriffiths3360 Před 3 lety +10

    I lived in a back to back house in a yard in ladywood in the late 1940s early 1950s. I just remember it as a wonderful time with no sense of depredation at all.

  • @crc778Hypnodoc
    @crc778Hypnodoc Před 11 lety +24

    I was one of those urchins in the Ladywood slums (featured in B&W early in the video) Our street, Anderton St. Had a sign on the corner saying 1.700 children live in this St drive carefully' The houses were very cramped, the outside toilets unhygenic, wasn't unusual to find cockroaches in your pocket in the morning. But the neighbours were wonderful and the kids were well looked after When they tore the place down, that spirit died with it. I was never happier than living there

    • @davem9208
      @davem9208 Před 7 měsíci +1

      I used to live in Ladywood in the 70's. though at the other end on St Vincent St West, and had to look Anderton St up as I didn't recognize the name. Slightly embarrassing as I attended Nelson Junior School too. FYI, over the next 20 or so years, virtually the whole of Ladywood is scheduled to be demolished and rebuilt, in a plan costing over £2bn. The only places that seem to be "safe" are the tower blocks, but that's prob due to the number of people who would need to be rehoused were they to be knocked down. Anderton St is in Phase 3, so it will still be there for a few years.

  • @timvins
    @timvins Před rokem +6

    And now in 2022 people can’t afford to heat those wonderful new houses 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @MargaretUK
    @MargaretUK Před rokem +5

    I lived in Balsall Heath from 1962 to 1969, then we were moved out to Chelmsley Wood. I've been told I 'm a tough person, and I think that's why.

  • @tiltonroadbirmingham1153
    @tiltonroadbirmingham1153 Před 5 lety +15

    Lived in a doss house on the Alcester Road, drank in The Bull in Moseley. Born in Small Heath now live on the Coventry Road.

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 4 lety +6

      I've so much to thank Birmingham for and I still think very fondly of it. I grew up in a Victorian terraced house in Kings Heath and lived there until I was 18. It was a great place to grow up in. It had 2 parks and a swimming pool (at the time), also a library and a cinema - all of which I used a lot as a child. We used to roll down the hill in Highbury Park (also called Uffculme Park)and play 'putting' there. I played tennis in Kings Heath Park. Every year we would go to 'The Tulip Festival' in Canon Hill Park which had a fair, and I once did a pottery course there. Kings Heath also had a ballet school opposite the Library which I went to but it closed down when I was 9. It had a brilliant record shop in Poplar Road, where I bought my first Beatles record and also a wonderful butchers (Lashfords) in Poplar Road that won prizes for their sausages (the best I've ever tasted) but they've now moved to Knowle, I came from a working class Irish family. My parents left school at age 14. I loved the local Kings Heath primary school (an old Victorian building). I was in the skittleball team and we played other schools in the area.Our class had a maximum of 44 pupils and our teacher who taught us for 2 years, got all but a handful through the 11 plus. My brother went to Moseley Art School and my sisters to Bishop Challoner school. Birmingham is quite a green city in many places once you get out of the centre. Kings Heath has got a lot shabbier now with garish cheap and shop signs of bright and clashing colours, on the front of shop buildings that have been neglected. The cinema is still there but has been derelict for many years and someone set fire to it. We used to go there for a children's session on Saturday mornings where someone called Uncle Archie (if I remember correctly) introduced us to the films we would be seeing - often a Western, and we'd buy ice cream in the interval. The Library is still there (last time I looked) The swimming pool and the school were pulled down but there is a new modern school with the same name in a different location there. The record shop is gone. I was a supporter of Birmingham City F.C. but that was a team to regularly raise hopes and break hearts. I saw George Best play at St Andrews when we played Manchester United in the F.A Cup, and I saw Trevor Francis play for Birmingham F.C.. He was the first player to be transferred for a million pounds. We also had 2 corner shops in our road so sweets and pop were always nearby. They've both been closed for many years now, like nearly all corner shops. We were only about 3 miles from the city centre. I travelled around by bus. The bus services were excellent. I've good memories and my best friend at school, who lived 5 doors away from me, still lives in the same house.

    • @hasananwar9819
      @hasananwar9819 Před 4 lety +2

      Born in small heath living in saltley

    • @anni50ful
      @anni50ful Před 2 lety +2

      I was born in Tysley in Sunningdale Road, my nan put me in a washing basket ( lined I hope ) as soon as I was born , there was a man outside playing a penny box with a monkey on top,they were going to call me Penny but thought better of it ,it could of been worse I suppose 😂 you bought back a memory I'd forgotten about the tulip festival in Cannon hill park, is it still going? ☺

  • @deniseellis6938
    @deniseellis6938 Před 4 lety +6

    I lived in Lansdown House back in 1952/1972, and remember the park being built, we had our own play area in between the flats and the maisonettes, I also remember the back to back house's being demolished and the new house going up., I was luckily yes we had hot water, central heating, our own bathroom and toilet, but i didn't take it for granted as I had friends who lived in the back to backs

  • @wentonmastermind
    @wentonmastermind Před 10 lety +9

    Excellent report. I arrived in Brum as a painfully shy 18-year-old student. I remember some areas such as Lozells, Nechells and Digbeth as being pretty awful, but when I returned for an FA Cup quarter-final in 1984 (Birmingham City 1, Watford 3, since you ask) the area around St Andrews was a lot, lot better. A documentary about West Bromwich Albion made in 1963 graphically displays how squalid it was for many people.

    • @tellitlikeitis-rg4ny
      @tellitlikeitis-rg4ny Před 7 lety +1

      leave nechells alone it wasnt awful at all

    • @Rorrytherouter
      @Rorrytherouter Před 7 lety +1

      I lived in Nechells and had friends who lived there, nice people and they would go out of there way to help.

  • @shehran6936
    @shehran6936 Před 5 lety +39

    The back to back houses were a part of the history and should have been retained as much as possible.

    • @shehran6936
      @shehran6936 Před 5 lety +1

      @@brettc2727 not sure what your point is. The UK is third world?

    • @dragonofthewest8305
      @dragonofthewest8305 Před 4 lety +2

      True but a 100 percent white Britian was apart of its history too... So history has to change at the end of the day

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 4 lety +1

      They probably could have been upgraded, though people with children prefer to have a garden. Perhaps one line could have been removed so they were no longer back to back and bathrooms and gardens could have been created in the space.

    • @weylandyutani9622
      @weylandyutani9622 Před 4 lety +1

      no no and no

    • @simongill4715
      @simongill4715 Před 3 lety

      They were sluns

  • @RossJukesPhotography
    @RossJukesPhotography Před 6 lety +6

    This is great, thank you for sharing - #Birmingham is awesome...

  • @Rorrytherouter
    @Rorrytherouter Před 8 lety +11

    My sister and her husband and two kids lived in St Martins St Edgbaston/Ladywood and it was real back to back two up and a living room and very small kitchen down stairs. The place was damp no decent heating. Washing was done in a copper with a coal fire underneath. The toilets were across the courtyard and used by everyone, the toilets were flush but that was a bit of a luxury. There was a local shop just up the street and the local post office, which became a nightclub years later. The people who lived there were moved out when the area was demolished and found themselves living in places like Warstock, split up from all the other people in the community. Some of them were moved over to maisonettes on the other side of Broad Street opposite what was the Children's Hospital, and even these places were, and still are rough. Other families were moved to Nechells to live in places like Humber Tower, one bedroom, bathroom, living room and a really small kitchen. One memory I have is a summer in St Martins St, it was really hot and humid, and flying ants decided it would be a good time to swarm! They got everywhere, into cloths, eyes, mouths, up your nose, it was terrible, all us kids were out in the street and the courtyard stamping on them, batting them out of the air. Times have changed since then but it's one of the things you never forget.

    • @silvershoes9724
      @silvershoes9724 Před 3 lety +2

      Interesting story thank you for sharing, I often think that people forget that times were genuinely were very hard for a lot of people back then - you see a lot of this on the Facebook history groups where people refer to those days as the “good old days” and “simpler times” but I’m not so sure about that in some ways.

    • @cleverforman3720
      @cleverforman3720 Před 3 lety +1

      We lived in one in Tenant street of Broad street,us five kids with mom & dad,tin bath on wall ,outside toilet,wash house shared and yes we relocated to Shorters avenue Warstock in a masonete a few years later to prince of wales lane,close community and we never had much,,

    • @cleverforman3720
      @cleverforman3720 Před 3 lety +1

      Maisonettes

  • @johnboyle3297
    @johnboyle3297 Před 6 lety +4

    We lived at 1 back of 54 Cato street, having previously lived in part of a house in Cardigan street, eventually we got a maisonette in Hodnet grove, in Highgate and finally my parent got a house in Gooch street.

  • @007lovediamonds6
    @007lovediamonds6 Před 6 lety +11

    Born and bred last over years when my parents came in 1960s 👌

    • @sametoyoutoo8509
      @sametoyoutoo8509 Před 6 lety

      Shameem Akhter your parents work hard?

    • @007lovediamonds6
      @007lovediamonds6 Před 6 lety +7

      Claire 01 yes they did my dad was working in Dudley and in December it was a lot of snow over 3ft when he finished his shift in evening he couldn't wait to come home that time I was 5 days old then what he says came out of the factory he saw the bus was stopping on bus stop he ran to get bus when he reach to the bus stop but there was no driver other people said due lot snow bus won't go no where all other people start walking so did he walked from Dudley to lozzels freezing cold. That time no central heating imagine how they coped no washing machine no Hoover's no tumble dryer no disposable nappies no junk food and low income also our mum bought us up in good manners ,but todays children don't want to know .

  • @elizabethswan8185
    @elizabethswan8185 Před 9 lety +11

    two of my families lived in the back to back houses in Aston Cross and yes the toilets were outside pretty awful. but the quality of neighbourliness was terrific

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 5 lety

      our toilets were outside, two buckets, so we brought them indoors

  • @mohammednadeemanwar2213
    @mohammednadeemanwar2213 Před 4 lety +4

    I was raised in back to back house, along with my cousins. The toilet was shared by two families. No bathroom, metal bathtub stored in space under the stairs. Stone slab floor, first floor wooden but no plaster ceiling just painted joists and underside of floor boards. Coal fire, old sash windows. Miners strike my father and uncle would rob coal from nearby British Rail Yard sidings. This was in Yorkshire. yes I'm Pakistani born 1960's in Yorkshire, so I remember it well. Moved out of back to back in the 70's. So I can say, that was life and we made the best we could of such conditions.

  • @JohnLee-io8vr
    @JohnLee-io8vr Před 7 lety +7

    Born in 16 Kellet rd Nechells in 1959 moved to College st Springhill a back to back , no bathroom or hot water and a toilet we shared with 2 other families. My kids laugh when I tell them the conditions we lived in , live in Windsor now don't go back very often. ...

    • @cityzens634
      @cityzens634 Před 5 lety

      John Lee you were lucky. We had to live in a shoe box off college st with 5 other families. Toilet was a hole in the ground. Me and my 15 siblings had to walk 15 hours to school every day barefoot and when we had finished school we were made to work down the steel pit doing 25 hour shifts with no toilet break. Times were hard I grant you but we loved it and were always polite and well behaved. Kids today don’t know they are born.

    • @labradormom3656
      @labradormom3656 Před 4 lety

      joe bloggs My grandad DID walk to school barefoot in the snow. I’m not joking either.

  • @rob4831
    @rob4831 Před 4 lety +4

    i was still living with an out side toilet one cold tape no bath room no heating lozells 1979

  • @monsieurlewop
    @monsieurlewop Před 3 lety +3

    The back-to-backs in Hurst Street are very swanky compared to the real thing. I spent much of my first six years at my Nan's in Alma Street, Aston and it was unbelievably grim, uninhabitable really.

  • @hajrabibi6292
    @hajrabibi6292 Před 6 lety +5

    I love olden days

  • @ricpou8300
    @ricpou8300 Před 10 lety +5

    This doesn't go back to the late 50s early 60s days of ATV studios at Aston Road North, when what I believe was the first woman Newscaster, Patricia Cox presented the Midlands News, no fancy titles then, after the main news which was only 10 minutes then. The News some years started at 5.55, and Midlands news at 6.05pm. And I forget wat came at 6.15. Then before long the 6.45 slot was taken by another ATV Aston that I loathed, bu my mum was glued to it, CROSSROADS - Aarrrgghhh!

  • @glennoc8585
    @glennoc8585 Před 3 lety +1

    I left Brum in the 8Os no regrets. Much better now but it's like a different world.

  • @Terry-xf5pt
    @Terry-xf5pt Před 7 lety +4

    I once lived on great king St in the 50's one attic one bedroom and one living room,me and a brother a sister.No hot water, coal fire and outside toilet.Imoved from Brum over 40yrs ago now live on edge of peak district in derbyshire.I have a 42 year old son who was born here

  • @angelamary9493
    @angelamary9493 Před rokem

    Yes i remember the back to back houses ..

  • @johnwarner4513
    @johnwarner4513 Před 3 lety

    My early years were in Northbrook St, Ladywood, back to back house, outside toilets, outside wash house, tin bath for Fridays and frost on the inside of the windows, and some of the nicest people you could wish to meet. We shared meal times with our neighbors sometimes, when money was tight. Happy times, certainly better than Thatchers Britain

  • @buffi944
    @buffi944 Před 7 lety +2

    the bull ring be came a no go area in the late seventies and eighties, now its knocked down, i like to new hub cap bull ring, its very good.

  • @millomweb
    @millomweb Před 4 lety +2

    So that's where "Manzoni Gardens" got its name from !

  • @razullah1986
    @razullah1986 Před 8 lety +22

    Raz Ullah, I was born and bred in Clifton Road Aston, holes in my shoes, frayed jeans , outside toilet and barrowed coal on a Saturday but i made good , with a nice wife and family in Sutton Coldfield all the best Raz

    • @georgedeathe4683
      @georgedeathe4683 Před 7 lety +4

      Great to hear your story, I grew up in kings Heath

    • @debdanks4077
      @debdanks4077 Před 7 lety +6

      My dad says same. It may have been bad but at least they respected each other, considered each other and looked after each other....

    • @dennisneed8882
      @dennisneed8882 Před 6 lety

      Raz Ullah Hank Snow the wreck of Ninety severn

    • @MrDaiseymay
      @MrDaiseymay Před 5 lety +1

      I roughed it in Sutton Coldfield, then moved to Aston

    • @heliotropezzz333
      @heliotropezzz333 Před 4 lety

      @@georgedeathe4683 I also grew up in Kings Heath.

  • @yell50
    @yell50 Před 4 lety +10

    I dont like the new birmingham a lot of buildings they should have kept, they demolished they have taken away most of the character out of brum, its just not the same. Progress is ok as long as its in moderation and not an all out blitz..

    • @throwow1014
      @throwow1014 Před 4 lety +3

      mark caine I agree, the class divide in Birmingham brought by the gentrification caused loads of crime, loads of murders, loads of roadmen. It was nice when it was just chavs and poor ppl bcuz they weren’t murderers

    • @mariecarolescott5846
      @mariecarolescott5846 Před 4 lety +2

      I lived with my family at 1/452 new John Street West,Aston.. we bathed in the olde tin tub once a week usually Sunday.we lived in the back to backs 4 families sharing 2 toilets,one brew house .
      Being young I wasn't aware of the poverty,we were feed,clothed and attended school and Sunday school.
      It was only when my father passed in October 1963 that my mom sisters and brother were moved to Kingstanding...how posh was that...I have happy memories of my time living in Aston back to backs

    • @yell50
      @yell50 Před 4 lety

      @@mariecarolescott5846 i lived in Aston from 1962 1985 what was the name of your primary school you attended ?

    • @mariecarolescott5846
      @mariecarolescott5846 Před 4 lety

      @@yell50 i lived in and around aston from 1953 -1964..i attended Elkington Street School ...

    • @colroy31
      @colroy31 Před 3 lety +1

      Born in loveday street 1958 then home to a back to back at the top of Irving street . 1 room downstairs 1 room up stairs and shared toilet block at the top yard. Then moved out 1961 to a house in cattle road on the corner of Tilton road. Stayed there till 1965 because it was due for demolition . Then to dolman street until 1970 when that was due for demolition. Loved all the people in all my homes .trusted all our neighbours. Every Saturday in to the bull ring last thing before closing to get all bargains. Colin walker

  • @throwow1014
    @throwow1014 Před 4 lety +3

    That old bullring lasted 60 years

  • @tonimoseley7885
    @tonimoseley7885 Před 2 lety +1

    Them high rise were the build back better of the time.
    Doing it again now

  • @user-zm9yc2kb8x
    @user-zm9yc2kb8x Před 5 lety +3

    I love brum..

  • @francisgeere1849
    @francisgeere1849 Před 3 měsíci

    My Grandma lived in 2/93 Mansfield rd. All knocked down now..and area Black...all the lovely Victorian homes turned into scruffy flats..litter everywhere....😢

  • @Atherosdel
    @Atherosdel Před 11 měsíci

    I lived on Great Brooke Street. We had to move to Elswick road when they starting demolishing the homes, they were from the Victorian era. No bathrooms inside the homes.

  • @nicolahurlstone7927
    @nicolahurlstone7927 Před rokem

    I lived in the back to back in greenway street , small heath

  • @matthewemery1153
    @matthewemery1153 Před 6 lety +2

    my dad went to school upper thames

  • @winstonharris3724
    @winstonharris3724 Před 3 lety

    At least I know I'm nearly twenty years older than the retunder that circle building in the city

  • @44bluenose
    @44bluenose Před 9 lety +4

    was born in balsall heath Thomas street it a car park now then lived in Darwin street named Williams truie brummie bluenose

    • @janicebull9283
      @janicebull9283 Před 18 dny

      We were born in Walsall heath and lived in Darwin street our name was Williams there were 14 of us .

  • @Zauchi
    @Zauchi Před 10 měsíci

    there's so many people in the comment section that say they grew up in these areas... Just here wondering if they all once knew each other...

  • @JimOverbeckgenius
    @JimOverbeckgenius Před 3 lety +3

    In the early 80's I lived with my wife & 2 gay teens in 2 rooms over a dilapidated shop-space in Harborne. A structural engineer spotted a fault in the cellar, which could have caused the building to cave in - hence I funded girders to prop the place up. We began selling books & opened a chess-cafe, but built it up to become a boutique. Then we invested in a 2up2down house ETC ETC and eventually bought a villa + art-gallery + apartments on the Italian Riviera. Enough is sufficient - to hell with greed - but I'm now building a private Art library, altho' I've enough volumes for 2, to sit & write & learn & draw & paint as my vast illustrated masterpiece continues to grow almost daily.

    • @myyt7590
      @myyt7590 Před 3 lety +1

      Homophobic

    • @JimOverbeckgenius
      @JimOverbeckgenius Před 3 lety +1

      @@myyt7590 Not guilty.

    • @arthedainedain9846
      @arthedainedain9846 Před 2 lety

      @@myyt7590 oh shut up, and quit promoting degeneration. Have you seen the state of society? Drones like you are the reason. Disgusting,

    • @anni50ful
      @anni50ful Před 2 lety

      @ Jim,what a story,amazing ! ☺

    • @JimOverbeckgenius
      @JimOverbeckgenius Před 2 lety

      @@myyt7590 How can having 2 gay boyfriends be homophobic!? Imbecile.

  • @pinksnail821
    @pinksnail821 Před 3 lety +2

    Did they actually need to knock down the back-to-back houses? Surely they could have turned two houses that were 'back-to-back' into a single house, then turn one of the roads in front or behind the house into rear garden space for each house?

    • @girlwiththebraidsinherhair2516
      @girlwiththebraidsinherhair2516 Před 3 lety +1

      It was probably cheaper to knock them down and start again rather than refurbish them. Many of them were in very poor condition.

    • @monsieurlewop
      @monsieurlewop Před 3 lety +1

      Not really. Many more old terraced houses should have been renovated, but the back-to-backs were beyond repair and uninhabitable.

    • @stevecarter8810
      @stevecarter8810 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Plus reinforced concrete was new and exciting, and pretty soon we were going to live on the moon and get everywhere by monorail.

  • @margiedee6700
    @margiedee6700 Před 9 lety +8

    Those where the days .You only know what it was really like when you have lived in them days

    • @anni50ful
      @anni50ful Před 2 lety

      I'm only just finding out now how interesting my family were , Hawkers ,poor, id
      love to find out what they sold and it they worked off the narrowboats ?☺

    • @slurmsmckenzie4852
      @slurmsmckenzie4852 Před rokem

      Obviously

  • @mcc9887
    @mcc9887 Před 3 lety +1

    1:56 iv got rat mice and Beagles......plague of beagles

  • @rob4831
    @rob4831 Před 8 lety +5

    me said 71 I was 11 in 79 in a house with out side toilet no hot water in lozells

    • @tellitlikeitis-rg4ny
      @tellitlikeitis-rg4ny Před 7 lety

      lived in newtown in the late 70s but grew up in nechells

    • @MrMagsimus
      @MrMagsimus Před 4 lety

      Rob 48 yup that was the normal thing , remember had a gas geyser was a great luxury , living in Lozells and going holte school was daily life 👍🇬🇧🇵🇰❤️

    • @bernardlandymore7372
      @bernardlandymore7372 Před 4 lety +1

      @@MrMagsimus My mothers family lived in Wheeler street.

  • @jayneprice5174
    @jayneprice5174 Před rokem

    Did anyone in the slums in Landywood remember the Price family?

  • @John-jd3nr
    @John-jd3nr Před 3 lety +7

    The quality of people from Birmingham is getting worse

    • @_lambert_1785
      @_lambert_1785 Před 3 lety

      Birmingham is getting more funding than ever before but instead of using the money to address the cities' rampant poverty they are just gentrifying the city centre.

    • @_B.M_
      @_B.M_ Před 3 lety

      The quality of troll comments on youtube videos is also getting worse.

    • @brainsmith3931
      @brainsmith3931 Před 3 lety +2

      Birmingham is a poverty shithole nothing changes people are miserable and ignorant as fuck.

    • @glennoc8585
      @glennoc8585 Před 3 lety

      @@brainsmith3931 They were friendly in the 80s and 90s

    • @brainsmith3931
      @brainsmith3931 Před 3 lety +3

      @@glennoc8585 Not nice most are racist and hostile lots of bigoted people in Birmingham and west Midlands in denial the city and region in is segregated and divided and crime is out of control now.

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
    @golden.lights.twinkle2329 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Demolishing a house with only a sledgehammer. Now there's a productive process!

  • @duartecboc8028
    @duartecboc8028 Před 4 lety +3

    Its old tradition tgat one of British people loving makin babies but after they dont know what to do with them.. it all revolvs around home education

  • @buffi944
    @buffi944 Před rokem +1

    That Indian her back to back would have a grass hut, or a stolen house in handsworth.

  • @tonimoseley7885
    @tonimoseley7885 Před 2 lety

    Proud of my family history. Bullring traders.

  • @Giggler.
    @Giggler. Před rokem

    Red and white taxi base those back to back houses! If u know u know 😂

  • @vicsaul5459
    @vicsaul5459 Před 2 lety

    Till the 70s, ur joking right , lived in terraced block, 2002!, date in the brick stamped 1895, sparkhill,

  • @vvggv9794
    @vvggv9794 Před 5 lety +12

    These areas are Gangster areas now...

  • @stephenroche5107
    @stephenroche5107 Před 4 lety +6

    It's like that now for some people under this despicable goverment.

  • @glennoc8585
    @glennoc8585 Před 3 lety +3

    Yeah there's white privilege

  • @angelamary9493
    @angelamary9493 Před rokem +3

    It's a dump now

    • @marktaurus206
      @marktaurus206 Před 3 měsíci

      Birmingham was a dump in the 80s.and 90s run down neglected city full of poverty and ugly buildings.

  • @spymack7792
    @spymack7792 Před 3 lety

    Bata

  • @mikepett4575
    @mikepett4575 Před 6 měsíci

    I have lived in Birmingham all my life. Born in Nechells in the 1950's it architecturally an interesting and beautiful city with thriving industries. Now it is the laughing stock of the world, ugly, tacky and boring.

    • @marktaurus206
      @marktaurus206 Před 3 měsíci

      Birmingham has never been nice its always been rough and neglected Birmingham has suffered years of austerity and cuts areas are run down and locals are backwards and still live in the past ,brummies are not integrated and areas are racist and segregated , poverty is a big issue and drugs is a big factor ,Birmingham city council are lazy and don't invest in the people and waste money in areas not needed ,lack on underfunding lots of rif raf in Birmingham including locals.

  • @martinjones1089
    @martinjones1089 Před 8 dny

    Whatever there Building in Birmingham now? It's becoming A Complete Dump!

  • @chriso8485
    @chriso8485 Před 3 lety

    Typical low quality news item

  • @marktaurus206
    @marktaurus206 Před 3 měsíci

    Birmingham is very boring and dull it hasnt moved with the times it lacks a lot of things nothing to do locals are very unfriendly and backwards, nothing to do boring Birmingham lacks in cinemas in areas and doesnt have a IKEA its a dull depressing city full of cuts.

  • @iseegoodandbad6758
    @iseegoodandbad6758 Před 4 lety +7

    Still a nasty city!!!!

    • @marktaurus206
      @marktaurus206 Před 3 měsíci

      Full of racist ,chavs and drugs issues mental health is bad in Birmingham it's a dump.