Birkenshaw
BIRKENSHAW, an ecclesiastical district, in the
parish of Birstal, wapentake of Morley, W. riding
of York, 6½ miles (E.) from Leeds; containing 3000
inhabitants, of whom 1803 are in the hamlet. This
place, which is situated at the junction of the Leeds and
Halifax, and Dewsbury and Bradford turnpike-roads, in
the heart of a district abounding with coal, iron-ore, and
building-stone, has been rapidly increasing in importance, and is now an extensive, populous, and thriving
village. The inhabitants are chiefly employed in the
coal-mines, and in the extensive worsted factories of the
Messrs. Ackroyd and others; in the combing of wool;
and in the weaving of stuffs and woollen-cloths, the former for the Bradford, and the latter for the Leeds market. The church, dedicated to St. Paul, was erected in
1829, at an expense of £2929, by the Parliamentary
Commissioners, on a site given by the late Emanuel
Emmet, Esq.: it is in the early English style, with a
square embattled tower crowned with pinnacles and surmounted by a spire, and contains 702 sittings. The
living is a perpetual curacy, in the gift of the Vicar of
Birstal, with a net income of £150, and a handsome
residence built in 1835 at an expense, including the
purchase of nearly five acres of land, of £2000.
Birker, with Austhwaite
BIRKER, with Austhwaite, a township, in the
parish of Millom, union of Bootle, Allerdale ward
above Derwent, W. division of Cumberland, 7½ miles
(E. by N.) from Ravenglass; containing 105 inhabitants.
It is within the limits of the chapelry of Eskdale, in the
adjoining parish of St. Bees, and the inhabitants marry
and bury there. The neighbourhood abounds with picturesque scenery, heightened and diversified by the lake
Devock-water, and the water-falls of Birker Force and
Stanley Gill.
Birkin (St. Mary)
BIRKIN (St. Mary), a parish, in the Lower division of the wapentake of Barkstone-Ash, W. riding of
York; comprising the townships of Birkin, West
Haddlesey, Chapel Haddlesey, Temple-Hurst, and HurstCourtney; and containing 921 inhabitants, of whom
169 are in the township of Birkin, 4 miles (N. E. by E.)
from Ferry-Bridge. The parish is intersected by the
Selby canal, and bounded on the south by the
river Aire. It is nine miles long, and comprises 5890
acres, of which about 3355 are arable, 2000 pasture, and
45 woodland; the soil varies in quality, part being light,
and adapted to the growth of barley and turnips, and
part being of a stronger nature, and well suited for
wheat and beans. The surface is varied, the scenery
pleasingly diversified, and the air salubrious. The living
is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £36; net
income, £1008; patron, the Rev. Thomas Hill. The
church, erected in the 12th century, is a very curious
and perfect specimen of Norman architecture, and contains a chancel particularly worthy of notice: there is
an inscription by Whitehead, the poet laureate, commemorating Elizabeth Wright, wife of a former rector.
A chapel of ease was erected, in 1836, at Chapel Haddlesey, upon the site of one which, being very dilapidated
and insufficient for the accommodation of the parishioners there, was pulled down. The Wesleyan Methodists have small places of worship at Chapel Haddlesey and Temple-Hurst.
Birksceugh, Cumberland.—See Brisco.
BIRKSCEUGH, Cumberland.—See Brisco.
Birley (St. Peter)
BIRLEY (St. Peter), a parish, in the union of
Weobley, hundred of Stretford, county of Hereford, 4 miles (E. by N.) from Weobley; containing 172
inhabitants. The parish comprises by measurement 934
acres, of which 48 are common or waste; the surface is
rather flat, and the soil principally clay, but in some
places inclining to gravel. On the west, Birley is
bounded by the road from Hereford to Pembridge. The
living is a discharged vicarage, consolidated with that of
King's Pion, and valued in the king's books at £5. 9. 7.
Birling (All Saints)
BIRLING (All Saints), a parish, in the union of
Malling, hundred of Larkfield, lathe of Aylesford,
W. division of Kent, 2 miles (N.) from Town Malling;
containing 511 inhabitants, and comprising 1883a. 2r.
35p., of which 178 acres are woodland. The living is
a vicarage, valued in the king's books at £6. 9. 4½.;
patron and impropriator, the Earl of Abergavenny.
The great tithes have been commuted for £118. 9. 11.,
and the vicarial for £170; there are 8 acres of glebe.
Foundations of buildings have been discovered in a field
near the church.
Birling
BIRLING, a township, in the parish of Warkworth, union of Alnwick, E. division of Coquetdale
ward, N. division of Northumberland, 6½ miles (S. E.)
from Alnwick; containing 80 inhabitants. It is situated
on the road from Warkworth to Lesbury, and is the
property of the Duke of Northumberland: the river
Coquet flows on the south. The tithes have been commuted for £95. 8., payable to the Bishop of Carlisle, and
£32. 7. to the vicar of the parish.
Birlingham (St. James)
BIRLINGHAM (St. James), a parish, in the union,
and Upper division of the hundred, of Pershore, Pershore and E. divisions of the county of Worcester, 3
miles (S. S. W.) from Pershore; containing 390 inhabitants. The parish is surrounded on all sides, except the
west and a portion of the north, by a bend of the navigable river Avon; and comprises 1274a. 2r. 22p., of
which 700 acres are pasture, 470 arable, and 13 woodland: the surface is moderately undulated, and the soil
highly fertile. The village contains several respectable
houses. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's
books at £9. 17. 11.; net income, £205; patron and
incumbent, the Rev. Robert Eyres Landor. The church
is a neat stone structure with a tower: in the chancel
are two windows with ancient stained glass.
Birmingham
BIRMINGHAM, a celebrated manufacturing town
and a borough, locally in
the Birmingham division of
the hundred of Hemlingford, N. division of the
county of Warwick, 18
miles (N. W. by W.) from
Coventry, 20 (N. W.) from
Warwick, and 109 (N. W.)
from London; containing in
the parish 138, 215, and, with
the parish of Edgbaston,
and the hamlets of Bordesley, Deritend, and Duddeston
with Nechels (which, though in the parish of Aston,
form parts of the town, and are included within the
borough), 182, 922 inhabitants. The name of this town
has been traced by its local antiquary, the late Mr.
Hamper, through no less than 140 variations, and
its etymology is involved in great uncertainty. Dugdale, from its Saxon termination, deduces it from the
first Saxon lord; while others assign to it an origin
of much higher antiquity, inferring that, with more probability, the first Saxon proprietor took his name from
that of the town, which they suppose to have been
originally "Bromwych," from the quantity of broom
formerly growing in the neighbourhood; from which
circumstance also are derived the names of two villages
in the immediate vicinity, called respectively Castle
Bromwich and West Bromwich. In proof of the high
antiquity of the place, and also of its having been distinguished for the manufacture of arms and warlike
instruments prior to the Roman invasion, may be adduced the great number of exhausted coal-mines on a
common of large extent, called Wednesbury Old Field,
within a short distance of the town, and the prodigious
accumulation of scoria produced by the smelting of
iron, at Aston furnace, on the border of the parish.
Both of these it is concluded must have been the work
of many centuries; as in the latter, though continually
receiving additions, no perceptible increase has been observed within the memory of the oldest inhabitant.
From its situation near the Ikeneld-street, the town is
supposed to have been the Bremenium of the Romans.
During the time of the Saxons, it appears to have been
governed by two constables, and to have obtained the
grant of a weekly market on Thursday.

Arms.
In the Conqueror's survey the place is noticed under
the name "Bermengeham;" and from the reign of
Henry I. till that of Henry VIII., the manor and lordship were held by a distinguished family from whom,
according to Camden, "the noble and warlike family of
the Bremichams, earls of Louth, in Ireland," who were
instrumental in assisting Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke,
in the conquest of that country, "had both their
original and name." Of this family were William de
Bermingham, who attended Edward I. into Gascony,
where he was made prisoner at the siege of Bellegarde
in 1297, and his descendant William, who was summoned to parliament by the title of William, Lord Birmingham, in the 1st of Edward III. The lordship continued in the possession of that family till the 37th of
Henry VIII., when by the artifices of John Dudley,
afterwards Duke of Northumberland, who at that time
held the castle of Dudley, and was ambitious of adding
to it the manor of Birmingham, which he had no hope
of purchasing, it was wrested from Edward de Birmingham, whom that unprincipled nobleman had by a fictitious charge of felony, supported by perjured hirelings,
reduced to the necessity of ransoming his life by the
sacrifice of his estate. On the attainder and execution
of the duke, in the reign of Mary, the manor escheated
to the crown; and, in 1643, a descendant of the Bermingham family through the female line, named Humble
Ward, was raised to the peerage as Baron Ward of
Birmingham, which title was subsequently absorbed in
the superior dignities of Viscount Dudley and Ward,
and Earl of Dudley. Of the ancient manor-house, a
memorial is preserved in the name of the site, at present
occupied by the Smithfield market, and which for many
years has retained the appellation of "the Moat," from
the intrenchment by which the mansion was surrounded.
In St. Martin's church are the recumbent effigies of a
crusader and an ecclesiastic, both members of the Bermingham family.
Few events of importance occur in the history of the
place prior to the commencement of the civil war of the
17th century, when the inhabitants, with those of Coventry and Warwick, embraced the cause of the parliament, and in 1642, after the king had passed through
the town on his route from Shrewsbury, immediately
before the battle of Edge-Hill, seized the royal carriages
and plate, which they sent to Warwick Castle. In the
following year, Prince Rupert, whom the king had despatched with a detachment of 2000 of the royal army,
to open a communication between Oxford and York,
was, on his arrival at Birmingham, intercepted in his
progress by a company of foot belonging to the parliamentarians. This company, reinforced by a troop of
horse from Lichfield, and assisted by the inhabitants,
having thrown up some works on the summit of Bordesley, since called Camp-hill, on the line of approach
from the Oxford road, and having blocked up all the
smaller avenues, fired upon the prince's army, and
obstinately opposed its entrance into the town. A
sharp conflict ensued, which was of longer duration than
could have been expected from the great disparity of the
numbers; the parliamentarians were driven from their
station, and the prince, after much difficulty, obtained
an entrance by another avenue. A second attempt to
obstruct his progress was made by the inhabitants, who
were animated in their resistance by a clergyman who
acted as governor, and who, being taken prisoner during
the action, and refusing to accept quarter, was, after
the battle, put to death at the Red Lion inn. At length,
exasperated by the determined resistance of the inhabitants and the death of the Earl of Denbigh, who had
been shot by an officer in the service of the parliament,
the prince set fire to the town; which, however, after
several houses had been burnt, was saved from further
devastation by the payment of a heavy fine. In 1791
occurred the memorable riots, which originated in the
meeting of about eighty persons on Thursday, the 14th
of July, to celebrate the anniversary of the French
revolution by a dinner, at the Royal Hotel; and on
the 15th of July, 1839, another riot took place, occasioned by the Chartists, who committed numerous and
serious outrages.
The most prominent and interesting features in the
history of Birmingham are, the extraordinary increase
of the town, the progressive improvements of its manufactures, and the wide extension of its trade and commerce. For these advantages it is indebted to the rich
mines of ironstone and coal with which the northern
and western districts of the neighbourhood abound, and
to the numerous canals and railways by which it is
connected with all parts of England; carrying on
through these channels not only an immense trade with
every town of importance in the kingdom, but also
exporting its manufactures and its merchandise to every
quarter of the civilized world, and receiving, in return,
the produce of every country. In the reign of
Henry VIII., Leland describes Birmingham as inhabited
"by smithes that use to make knives and all manner of
cutting tooles, and lorimers that make bittes, and a
great many nailours." In the reign of Elizabeth, it is
described by Camden as "swarming with inhabitants,
and echoing with the noise of anvils; but the upper
part rising with abundance of handsome buildings;"
and his continuator, Bishop Gibson, in the reign of
Anne, mentions "its artificers in iron and steel, whose
performances in that way are greatly admired both at
home and abroad." Prior to the restoration of Charles
II., the town had for centuries consisted merely of one
long street, extending from the hamlet of Deritend to
the present Bull-street; and its population, till that
period, probably did not amount to 5000. In 1711, its
public edifices were only the parish church of St. Martin,
the chapel of St. John in Deritend, the Old and New
meeting-houses, and the free grammar school of King
Edward VI. In 1731, it had received the addition of
St. Philip's church and the Blue-coat charity school, and
at that time its population had increased to 8254. In
Westley's Plan of Birmingham, which was published in
that year, and which accurately delineates the state of
the town, not a house appears northward of St. Philip's
church, with the single exception of an ancient mansion
called New Hall, of which a memorial is preserved in
the name of New Hall street, now leading to its site.
From 1731 to 1778, the chapels of St. Bartholomew
and St. Mary were the sole additions to the public
buildings of the town, which at the latter period contained 42,550 inhabitants. From 1778 to 1801, St.
Paul's chapel, the general hospital, the dispensary, the
Old and New Libraries, the barracks, and the theatre,
were added to its public edifices; and, during the same
interval, its population, including the hamlets, increased
to 69,384. Since this period, so rapid has been the
increase of the buildings in the suburbs, that upwards
of 100,000 inhabitants have been added to its population.
The town is advantageously situated on an eminence
at the north-western extremity of the county, bordering
closely on the counties of Stafford and Worcester, from
the former of which it is separated only by a small
brook. On every side, except the north-west, it is approached by an ascent; and the streets, which are in
general spacious, are well paved and flagged, lighted with
gas, and, being commonly on a declivity, always clean.
The houses, most of which are modern and well built,
and of which several of more recent erection are large
and handsome, are chiefly of brick; but, since the introduction of Roman cement, many have been newfronted, and nearly throughout the town and its environs
(the latter of which are thickly studded with the pleasant villas and private houses of merchants, manufacturers, and tradesmen) are presented specimens of elegance in almost every style of architecture. The inhabitants are amply supplied with water from pumps
attached to their houses, and with soft water of excellent quality from two fine wells at Digbeth, in the lower
part of the town. On entering from London, either
through Coventry or through Oxford, the road, by a
stone bridge over the river Rea at Deritend, leads up an
ascent into an area called the Bull-ring, formerly used
as the market-place, in the centre of which is a statue
in bronze of Admiral Viscount Nelson, finely executed
by Westmacott, at an expense of £3000, raised by subscription.
The Old Library, in Union-street, originally established
in 1779, is a stone building, comprising a spacious depository for the books, of which there are more than 30,000
volumes: the New Library, instituted in 1796, and for
which the present building in Temple-row West was
erected about twenty years since, though upon a smaller
scale than the Old library, is similarly conducted. The
News-room, on Bennet's-hill, erected in 1825, is a neat
edifice: the interior comprises one large reading-room,
opening through folding-doors at one end into two
smaller apartments, and there is also a suite of rooms,
in which copies of the public records and books of reference are deposited. The press of this town attained
considerable eminence when Baskerville printed that
series of works which in typographical beauty have never
since been equalled. After his decease in 1775, his exquisite types could obtain no purchaser in Britain, and
were therefore sold to a literary society at Paris, and
subsequently taken to Kehl by Beaumarchais, to print
his edition of the works of Voltaire. The Philosophical
Society, in Cannon-street, was formed in 1800, and in
1810 the members extended their plan, and added to
their rooms a commodious theatre for the delivery of
lectures. A Mechanics' Institute was founded in 1825,
and there are several other literary and scientific institutions. One of these, an institution called the Polytechnic, for the instruction of the working classes and
others at a cheap rate, and advancing their moral and
intellectual character, was established in 1843; in connexion with it are a news-room, library, and baths. The
Botanical and Horticultural Society was instituted in
1828, when a spacious plot of ground in a delightful
situation at Edgbaston, granted on lease by Lord Calthorpe, was converted into gardens, in which have been
erected a conservatory and other requisite buildings.
The Society of Arts, in New-street, was formed in 1821;
the building is a chaste and elegant specimen of the
Corinthian order, comprising an exhibition-room (a
circle 52 feet in diameter, lighted from the roof), and
several smaller apartments for casts from the antique
sculptures, and other departments of the art, with a
well-assorted library. The Institution for Promoting
the Fine Arts was established in 1828, for the encouragement of artists resident within 30 miles of Birmingham:
it is now incorporated with the Society of Arts; and a
handsome building of the Grecian-Doric order, with
fluted columns supporting a rich entablature and cornice, which had been erected for its use on the south
side of St. Philip's churchyard, is now used for various
literary and scientific purposes.
The Theatre, in New-street, is a spacious and wellarranged building, consisting of a pit, two tiers of boxes,
and a gallery, together capable of accommodating 2500
persons. It was originally built in 1774: the interior
was destroyed by fire in 1792, and again, with the exception of the present front, in January, 1820; but it
was rebuilt during the same year, at an expense of
£14,000, subscribed in shares. Assemblies are held periodically during the winter, at the Royal Hotel; the
room, which is spacious and elegantly embellished, is
also appropriated to the subscription concerts, which are
supported by more than 300 members, and conducted
on a scale combining the first-rate talent of the metropolis with the professional skill of the town. The triennial musical festivals, for which Birmingham has become
so pre-eminently distinguished, originated in aid of the
funds of the General hospital, for which purpose the
committee, on its being opened in 1779, had recourse to
a performance of sacred music under the direction of a
London professor: the receipts are now very large.
The Town-hall, intended for the transaction of public
business and the holding of large meetings, and more
especially with a view to the efficient performance of
the music at the triennial festivals, was erected under
the provisions of the Street Commissioners' act obtained
in 1828, and was opened in 1834, at an expense of
£18,000, defrayed by a rate on the inhabitants. It is
a stately and magnificent structure of colossal dimensions, substantially built of brick, and cased with Anglesey marble presented to the town by Sir R. Bulkeley,
Bart., proprietor of the Penmon quarries: the design
was modelled by Mr. Harris from the temple of Jupiter
Stator at Rome, and the edifice was built by Messrs.
Hanson and Welsh, architects, of Liverpool. The interior of the hall is 140 feet in length, 65 feet in breadth,
and 65 feet in height from the floor to the ceiling; and
the result of the performances proves it to be the finest
room in Britain for musical effect. The organ was built
by Hill of London, at an expense of £6000, and in its
dimensions is unequalled even by those of Haarlem and
Rotterdam.
It is not easy to trace with accuracy the origin of the
numerous branches of trade and manufacture which,
in addition to those described by Leland, have been introduced into the town, and which, from their taste and
variety, as well as for the high degree of perfection to
which they have attained, procured for the place, from
Mr. Burke, the designation of the "Toy-shop of Europe."
The toy trade appears to have been adopted in the reign
of Charles II., brass-founding in that of William III.,
and the buckle trade about the same period; the last,
after exercising the ingenuity of the manufacturer in
every variety of form, pattern, and material, declined
about the year 1812, and is now nearly extinct. The
leather trade, which was carried on at a remote period,
has also experienced a very great diminution. It is uncertain at what time the button trade was first introduced, but it has continued to flourish from a distant
period, and, though much lessened, is still a source of
employment to thousands. The manufacture of firearms was commenced towards the close of the seventeenth century, and during the last war the government
contracts for muskets alone averaged 30,000 per month.
In 1813, the gun-makers of the town obtained an act
of parliament for the erection of a proof-house, in which,
under a heavy penalty, all barrels of fire-arms are subjected to a severe test; and though the manufacture of
fire-arms has necessarily diminished since the peace, it
is still carried on to a very great extent, and since the
erection of the proof-house the manufacture of fowlingpieces and pistols has increased. Among the almost innumerable branches of trade are, light and heavy steel
goods (here called toys), brass and iron founding, saddlery, military accoutrements, fire-arms, swords, and
cutlery of various kinds; jewellery; gold, silver, plated,
and japanned goods; buttons; medals; gilt, silver,
ivory, bone, and other toys; glass; wood-turnery; metalrolling; tools and implements of all kinds; mills; machinery of all sorts; and steam-engines on every known
principle. Casting, modelling, die-sinking, engraving,
and other processes connected with the various manufactures, have likewise been brought to the greatest
perfection; also the cutting of glass, of which there are
brilliant specimens in the show-rooms of the town.
With the manufactures is intimately connected the
celebrated establishment at Soho, about a mile to the
north of the town, and within the parish of Handsworth, under which head it is described. Collis
and Co.'s manufactory, in Church-street, has a splendid
suite of show-rooms attached to it, replete with costly
and elaborate specimens of workmanship in gold, silver,
plated-ware, or-molu, cut-glass, medals, bronzes, and
the crystallized bases of metals and semi-metals: among
the more massive productions is a statue in bronze of
George IV.; and in a suitable room built for the purpose
is a metallic vase of vast dimensions, a fac-simile in size,
form, and embellishment, of the Grecian vase of Lysippus in the gardens of Warwick Castle. The showrooms of Messrs. Elkington, manufacturers of plated
goods, also contain articles of exquisite design. The
pin-factories are very interesting, and give employment
to numbers of children; the manufactories for japannedware and papier-maché are considered the most beautiful
objects for tasteful inspection in the town, and improvements are continually being introduced by Messrs. Jennens and Bettridge, Mr. Lane, Messrs. McCallum and
Hodgson, Mr. Farmer, and Mr. Sutcliffe, all manufacturers of papier-maché. There are several extensive
brass and iron foundries; rolling and slitting mills of
great power; and three manufactories of metallic hothouses and conservatories, in one of which a hot-house
and conservatory were made for the Duke of Northumberland, at an expense of £50,000. The Cambridgestreet works, established in 1820 by Mr. R. W. Winfield,
and at which between 300 and 400 persons are employed
in the production of every variety of ornamental and
rough brass-founding, gas-fittings, metallic bedsteads,
and other useful articles, are justly celebrated. Beautiful bronze castings are produced by the Messrs. Messenger, and fine brass-work for lamps, &c., by the
Messrs. Ratcliff. The manufacture of glass has greatly
increased within the last twenty years, during which
period five or six glass-houses have been erected; also
numerous mills for cutting and polishing it. The
Islington glass-works, erected in 1814, are capable of
employing nearly 500 hands in the various departments,
and are conducted by Mr. Rice Harris, whose attention
has been directed for several years to the pressing or
stamping of glass, and who has so far succeeded in his
attempts at improvement in this respect, that it is difficult to distinguish the articles thus produced from the
richest cut articles. The Park works, first erected
about 1785, were then the only glass-works in the
neighbourhood, and have been carried on ever since for
the manufacture of flint-glass; they now belong to
Messrs. Lloyd and Summerfield, and the Soho works,
erected in 1803, to Mr. Samuel Shakespear. Companies
have been established for supplying materials for the
different works, among which are the Birmingham
Copper Company, the Birmingham Mining Company,
the Brass Company, and the Brades' Iron and Steel Company. There are chemical laboratories on a large scale,
for the production of articles necessary in the processes
of manufacture; a distillery; and several breweries, of
which the Wharstone, Deritend, and New breweries are
the chief.
The trade of the town is greatly promoted by numerous Canals, of which Birmingham may be regarded as
the common centre; namely, the Birmingham, constructed in 1768, and for the supply of which a reservoir
of 19 acres was excavated to the depth of 20 feet, near
the town; the Birmingham and Fazeley, constructed in
1783; the Worcester and Birmingham, in 1791; the
Warwick and Birmingham, in 1793; and the Birmingham and Liverpool Junction, in 1826. The town
is also a grand centre of railway communication. A
railway was opened to London Sept. 17th, 1838: the
present station here, which is 250 feet above the level
of the London terminus, is at the north-eastern extremity of Birmingham, adjoining the station of the Liverpool line. The Liverpool line is carried over Lawleystreet by a viaduct 1000 feet in length, supported on 28
segmental arches of 30 feet span: the principal depôt is
at Duddeston, about half a mile from the terminus.
These two important lines now belong to a joint company called the London and North-Western; and the
Birmingham and Derby railway, opened Aug. 5th, 1839,
and the Birmingham and Bristol railway, completed in
1844, both belong to the Midland company. An act
was passed in 1845, giving power to the London and
North-Western company to make a railway from their
London line to the centre of Birmingham, nearly one
mile long; and in 1847 the works were commenced:
the extension runs from the present station, across the
adjacent canal, by St. Bartholomew's churchyard, then
through Park-street, and under High-street, to the rear
of the grammar school, where a new station will be
erected, upon an "end" of ground extending from
Worcester-street to Navigation-street. The Midland
company, also, received power in 1846 to improve their
line at Birmingham, by making an extension a mile and
a quarter long, and forming a new junction with the
London railway. Other acts were passed in the same
year, for the construction of a railway to Lichfield; a
railway to the Oxford and Rugby line near FennyCompton; another, called the Birmingham, Wolverhampton, and Dudley, joining the Oxford and Wolverhampton
line after a course of 11 miles, and having a branch to
Dudley 3½ miles long; and a fourth, called the Birmingham, Wolverhampton, and Stour Valley, which runs to
Wolverhampton, and to the Liverpool railway in Bushbury parish, with a branch of 3¼ miles to Dudley.
The principal market is on Thursday, for corn,
horses, cattle, sheep, and pigs. There are also markets
on Monday and Saturday for provisions, and on Tuesday
for hay and straw; and two fairs, for three days each,
are annually held, one commencing on the Thursday in
Whitsun-week, and the other on the last Thursday in
September, which is also a great fair for onions. The
market was for many years held in the open air, in the
wide area fronting St. Martin's church, till the year
1834, when the present market-place was erected by act
of parliament, at an expense of £20,000, on a more commodious site obtained by taking down the houses on
one side of the area: it is a handsome building, fronted
with Bath stone, and forms a conspicuous object on
ascending the hill from Digbeth. The market for cattle
and horses, and also that for hay and straw, are held in
Smithfield, a spacious area. Birmingham is supplied
with bread, at, perhaps, a cheaper rate than any other
town in England. From the great scarcity of wheat in
1795, and the difficulty to the small capitalist of obtaining a foreign supply, bread became so dear as to induce
a number of gentlemen to form a flour and bread company, which soon became very flourishing. Their
example was followed by the millers, who became
bakers also, and the competition was so great that the
ordinary bakers could not sell at the same price as the
mills; which have continued since that time to possess
nearly the whole of the trade, the bakers existing principally by making fancy bread. It is customary, also,
for many of the inhabitants to buy the flour, to make it
up at their own homes, and have it baked by hire.
The town was formerly
governed by a high and a
deputy constable, but has
been incorporated by charter under the 5th and 6th
of William IV., cap. 76. The
borough comprises the parishes of Birmingham and
Edgbaston, and the hamlets
of Deritend with Bordesley,
and Duddeston cum Nechels;
and is divided into thirteen
wards, viz., Lady-wood, containing 8787 inhabitants; All Saints, 13,719; Hampton, 11,037; St. George's, 19,648; St. Mary's, 14,685;
St. Paul's, 8973; Market-hall, 13,014; St. Peter's,
16,773; St. Martin's, 13,325; St. Thomas's, 18,254;
Edgbaston, 6609, Deritend and Bordesley, 18,019; and
Duddeston cum Nechels, 20,079. Each ward returns
three members to the town-council, with the exception
of Duddeston cum Nechels, Deritend and Bordesley, and
St. Peter's, each of which sends six councillors. Thus,
the total number of councillors is forty-eight; and
there are sixteen aldermen, out of whom, or the councillors, a mayor is chosen. The manorial officers consist of a high bailiff (who is also clerk of the market),
a low bailiff, two constables for Birmingham, a constable
for Deritend, a headborough, two ale-conners, two
flesh-conners, two affeirers, and two leather-sealers;
who are chosen annually at the court leet of the lord of
the manor, at Michaelmas. By the act of the 2nd of
William IV., cap. 45, Birmingham was constituted a
parliamentary borough, with the privilege of sending
two members; the mayor is the returning officer. The
powers of the county debt-court of Birmingham, established in 1847, extend over the registration-districts of
Aston and Birmingham, and part of those of King's
Norton, Meriden, and West Bromwich. The court of
bankruptcy, established in 1842, and held daily in
Waterloo-street, embraces several counties. The public
office, in Moor-street, is a commodious building with a
handsome stone front, and comprises a well-arranged
court-room, in which the magistrates hold their sittings,
with apartments for the street commissioners and other
officers for the internal regulation of the town: behind
is a prison for the confinement of offenders previously
to their committal to the county gaol at Warwick. A
new borough gaol was commenced in 1846. The superintendence of the police is entrusted to the council; the
paving and lighting of the streets, and the general improvement of the town, are under the direction of 100
commissioners, and the management of the poor is
vested in overseers and guardians. Large baths for the
working classes were established in 1846; and in the
same year an act was passed for a public cemetery.

Corporation Seal.
Prior to the year 1715, Birmingham comprised only
one parish, and for all civil purposes it is still so considered; but in its ecclesiastical arrangements it at
present comprises the five parishes of St. Martin, St.
Philip, St. George, St. Thomas, and All Saints. The
living of St. Martin's is a rectory, valued in the king's
books at £19. 3. 6½., and in the gift of Trustees; net
income, £1048. The parochial church is an ancient
structure in the decorated English style, with a square
tower having pinnacles at the angles, and surmounted
by a lofty and finely-proportioned spire, with the exception of which the whole building, originally of stone,
was cased with red brick in 1690; the interior contains
several monumental effigies, of some of which the details
are finely executed. St. Mary's church, in the parish of
St. Martin, erected by subscription in 1774, on a site
given by Miss Weaman, is an octagonal brick building
with a small steeple of stone: the living is a perpetual
curacy, in the gift of Trustees, with a net income of
£350. St. Paul's church, in the same parish, built by
subscription in 1779, on a site given by C. Colmore,
Esq., is a handsome edifice in the Grecian style, with
a steeple, which was added to it in 1820, and is much
admired for the beauty and lightness of its character;
the interior is elegantly arranged, and the altar-piece
ornamented with a painting, in glass, of the Conversion
of St. Paul. The living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £170; patron, E. Latimer, Esq. St. Bartholomew's,
built in the year 1749, is a plain brick edifice with a
cupola, and has been recently enlarged; the interior is
a good specimen of the Tuscan order, and the altar-piece
is richly carved. The living of St. Philip's is a rectory
not in charge; patron, the Bishop of Worcester. The
church, erected in 1725, unfortunately of a perishable
kind of stone, is a handsome building combining the
Corinthian and Doric orders, with a tower supporting a
dome surmounted by a cupola; the churchyard, which
is very spacious, is surrounded with elegant buildings of
modern date. Christ-church, in the parish of St. Philip,
erected by subscription at a cost of about £26,000, and
usually called the "Free church," was consecrated
July 6, 1813, and is a neat structure of stone, with a
portico of the Tuscan order and a spire: the living is a
perpetual curacy, with a net income of £200; patron,
the Bishop. St. Peter's, Dale-end, also in the parish of
St. Philip, erected by grant of the Parliamentary Commissioners, at a cost, including the site, of about
£19,000, and consecrated Aug. 10th, 1827, is a building
of stone, with a handsome portico of the Doric order,
and a small lantern tower surmounted by a dome. It
was partially destroyed by fire in 1830, but in 1837 was
re-opened for divine service, having been restored by
subscription, at the cost of nearly £5000. The building will accommodate 2170 persons, and is much admired for its chaste simplicity, beautifully decorated
roof, noble organ, and handsome stained-glass window
at the east end, representing the Ascension. The living
is in the gift of the Rector of St. Philip's. The living of
St. George's is a rectory not in charge, in the patronage of Trustees; net income, £550. The church, erected
in 1822, by grant of the commissioners and subscription
of the inhabitants, at an expense of £12,735, is a fine
specimen of the early and decorated English styles, with
a square embattled tower. The living of St. Thomas' is
a rectory not in charge, in the patronage of Trustees;
net income, £150. The church, erected in 1829, by
subscription, aided by the commissioners, is a chaste
and elegant structure of the Ionic order, with a tower
and cupola surmounted by a double cross, and having
the tower connected, in the lower stages, with the sides
of the building by elegant Ionic quadrants; the interior
is neatly arranged, with galleries supported on plain
Doric columns. The expense of its erection was £14,222.
The living of All Saints' is a rectory not in charge, in
the patronage of Trustees: the church, built in 1833, at
a cost of £3817, by subscription, aided by the commissioners, is a neat brick edifice of later English architecture, with facings of stone.
Bishop Ryder's church, built in commemoration of the
late prelate of that name, was consecrated Dec. 18th,
1838; it contains 1574 sittings, of which 813 are free,
and the expense of erection was £4300. The living is
in the gift of Trustees. The want of adequate accommodation for the increasing population, lately induced an
appeal to the wealthier inhabitants for the erection of
ten additional churches, for which purpose a meeting
was held in the town-hall, at which the Bishop of Worcester presided, when it was resolved to open a subscription, and within three months the sum of £20,000
was subscribed. Five of the churches have been consecrated: the first completed was that of St. Matthew,
Duddeston, in the parish of Aston. St. Mark's church,
the second, cost £4405, including an endowment of
£1000, and was consecrated July 29th, 1841; it is a neat
building with lancet windows, contains 1000 sittings,
and has schoolrooms in connexion with it, erected at
an expense of £1250. The living is in the gift of
Trustees. St. Luke's church, which cost about £3700,
was consecrated Sept. 28th, 1842, and is situated on the
Bristol-road; it is in the Norman style, has 1100 sittings, and some schools were built in connexion with it
in 1843, at a cost of £1140. The interior is well fitted
up, partly by means of special gifts made by several
gentlemen; there are a handsome organ, a pulpit and
desk of oak, a painted window, and other fittings up of
appropriate design. The living is in the gift of Trustees.
St. Stephen's church, in the parish of St. George, situated in Newtown-row, cost £3200, and was consecrated
July 24th, 1844: the living is in the gift of the Crown
and Bishop alternately. The fifth church is that of St.
Andrew, Bordesley, consecrated Sept. 30th, 1846. A
church district called St. Jude's was formed out of the
parishes of St. Martin and St. Philip, and a benefice endowed, in 1846, by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners,
under the act 6 and 7 Victoria, cap. 37: the incumbent
is appointed by the Crown and the Bishop alternately;
and at present, divine service is performed in the national school, Pinfold-street. In the spring of the year
1847, the foundation-stone was laid of a new church at
the Church of England cemetery, Birmingham. Other
churches are described in the articles on Edgbaston,
Deritend, Bordesley, Duddeston, and other places adjacent. There are places of worship for Baptists, the
Society of Friends, Independents, Primitive and Wesleyan Methodists, Swedenborgians, and Unitarians; a
Scottish church, and two Roman Catholic chapels. Of
these, Zion chapel, the Baptist and the Carr's Lane
meeting-houses, Ebenezer chapel, and one or two of the
Methodist meeting-houses, are spacious and handsome
structures.
The Queen's College,
established in 1828 by the
indefatigable exertions of
William Sands Cox, Esq.,
F.R.S., and incorporated by
royal charter in 1843, and
again in 1847, already takes
a high rank among similar
foundations in this country.
It is, pre-eminently, a college of medicine and surgery, but combines a thorough course of classical
education. The institution is under the direction and
management of a council, and professors in surgery and
medicine; and, in the classical department, of distinguished teachers in the various branches of learning, and
the arts and sciences. Clinical lectures are delivered in
the theatre every week; other lectures are given on regulated days, and examinations take place weekly: the lectures qualify for examinations for the medical diplomas
of the University of London, the Royal College of Surgeons, and the Society of Apothecaries; and the council
grant certificates also for the degrees of B.A., M.A., B.C.L.,
and D.C.L., to be conferred by the University of London
upon the students. The interest of £1000 is applied to the purchase of two prizes, called the Warneford
Gold Medals, either in equal or unequal amount; the
compositions for them to be of a religious as well as
scientific nature. The Jephson prize, of twenty guineas,
is awarded to the student who passes the best public
examination in all the branches of medicine and surgery; and besides various other prizes, and medals in
gold and silver, are certificates of honour, to induce
emulation in proficiency and good conduct. Four resident scholarships, also, have been founded by the Rev.
Dr. Warneford, of £10 each, to be held for two years,
and are conferred upon students who have resided in
the college at least twelve months, and have distinguished themselves for diligence, and for regular attendance on divine worship, and the religious instruction of
the warden. Dr. Warneford's gifts altogether amount
to £5000. Connected with the college are a museum
of human and comparative anatomy, containing upwards of 2000 preparations; and an extensive museum
illustrative of zoology, geology, and other departments
of natural history. The library contains upwards of
2500 volumes, and receives the quarterly, monthly, and
weekly periodicals of medicine, surgery, and general
science. The foundation stone of a new building for the
institution was laid on the 18th August, 1843: St.
James's chapel, attached to the college, was consecrated
in November, 1844.

College Seal.
The Free Grammar School, in New-street, was
founded in 1552, by Edward VI., who endowed it by
charter with the revenues of the dissolved guild of the
Holy Cross, which occupied the site of the present
buildings; and vested the management in twenty inhabitants of the manor. The annual value of the property was then £21; but the whole of the estates being
in Birmingham, the increase of houses has led to a vast
increase in the income, which is now about £7000 per
annum, and in a few years will be doubled. The buildings having become dilapidated, and the enhanced
resources demanding enlarged usefulness, an act was
passed in 1831 authorising the governors to take the
school down and erect new premises, and, after fully
providing for the greater efficiency of classical learning,
to establish an additional school "for modern languages
and the arts and sciences," and elementary schools for
the poorer children of the town of both sexes. This act
was amended by another, obtained in 1837, when more
extensive powers were given; and an edifice has been
completed, which, for magnificence and extent, is almost
unequalled, and may fitly be named a college. It is a
beautiful structure in the later English style, erected
under the superintendence of Mr. Barry, and presents
one of the finest specimens of modern collegiate architecture in the kingdom. The extremities, from north
to south, consist of the houses of the head and second
masters; the intermediate space is occupied with the
schoolrooms, library, corridors, &c. The entrance, from
New-street, leading into a corridor, has the library on
the left hand, in which has been erected a chimneypiece, an interesting relic of the former school, of marble,
finely sculptured, and surmounted by an exquisite bust
of Edward VI.: the corresponding room, on the right
is appropriated to lectures. A noble stone staircase,
under a lofty pointed arch, leads into a corridor of great
beauty, with stained windows, and forming a communication between the two schoolrooms. The grammar
school on the south is a spacious apartment of striking
appearance, eighty-six feet in length, and of proportionate width and height; the wainscot fittings are of massive oak, and the lofty roof, of stained wood, much conduces to its effect. The room for the commercial school,
on the north, is of similar length and height, but narrower, and is embellished with the arms of Edward VI.
and William IV., carved in stone. The establishment
consists of a head master, whose salary is about £1000
per annum, independent of the privilege of taking
eighteen boarders; a second master with a salary of
£400, and the power of taking twelve boarders; three
classical assistants, a mathematical master, a chief and
two assistant masters of English literature, and masters
in modern languages, drawing, writing, &c. There are
ten exhibitions of £50 per annum, tenable for seven
years at either University, and for which the sons of
inhabitants of the town and manor have a preference;
the other benefits of the school are open to boys of
Birmingham and the vicinity, and to the boarders of the
head and second masters. The number of boys exceeds
450. The governors have erected five elementary
schools, for the instruction of the poorer classes, in
different parts of the town, where about 750 children are
educated, under the superintendence of the head master,
the Rev. J. Prince Lee.
The Blue-coat school was founded in 1722, upon land
belonging to the rectory of St. Philip's, and conveyed,
by the bishop and the trustees for erecting that church,
for the purpose of maintaining children of poor members
of the Church of England, and instructing them in her
principles: by the accumulation of benefactions it is
now possessed of property to the amount of £1000 per
annum. The buildings, which were enlarged in 1794,
and are well arranged, have an extensive stone front in
St. Philip's churchyard. The Asylum for deaf and dumb
children was founded in 1812, and a commodious building in the antique style was erected on a site of ground
in Calthorpe-street, Edgbaston, granted on liberal terms
by Lord Calthorpe. There are also numerous national,
Lancasterian, infants', and other schools, supported by
subscription. The Magdalen Asylum, of which the
bishop of the diocese is patron, is a noble institution;
the chapel attached to it was opened April 28th, 1839,
having cost about £1400, raised by subscription. The
General Hospital, first established in 1779, has since
been much enlarged, and the buildings, consisting of a
centre and two wings, handsomely erected of brick, now
comprise 19 wards, capable of admitting 200 patients.
The foundation stone of the Queen's Hospital, Edgbaston,
was laid on the 18th of June, 1840: this institution is
in union with Queen's College; the building occupies an
elevated site, and consists of a centre and two wings
called respectively the Victoria and Adelaide wards, the
whole containing 150 beds. The Dispensary, in Unionstreet, was established by subscription in 1794, and
affords medical relief to about 4000 patients annually;
the building consists of a centre and two wings of stone,
with four lofty pilasters supporting a triangular pediment, in the tympanum of which is a basso-relievo of
the "Good Samaritan." The Self-supporting Dispensary, on the plan of Mr. Smith, of Southam, is maintained by small annual subscriptions of the poor, aided
by those of honorary members. The Infirmary for the
cure of Bodily Deformity, established under the patronage of the Earl of Dartmouth in 1817, and the Infirmary
for Diseases of the Eye and Ear, established by Mr.
Hodgson, surgeon, in 1823, are liberally supported.
Another important institution is the Asylum for Infant
Poor, forming an excellent school of industry, in which
300 children are maintained, clothed, and employed in
platting straw and heading pins, and other kinds of
work suited to their age. The Licensed Victuallers'
Asylum, commenced in the spring of 1847, is designed
in the Elizabethan style, to accommodate ten families,
and is situated in the Bristol road. There are several
charitable endowments, which lapse of time has greatly
enhanced in value, and of which the chief is Lench's
trust, bequeathed in the reign of Henry VIII., by the
trustees of which many almshouses for aged females
have been erected.
About a mile from the town is a chalybeate spring,
which, though known to possess highly medicinal properties, is not much noticed. Three miles to the west,
and within a few hundred yards of the Ikeneld-street,
are the remains of a large quadrangular encampment
surrounded by a triple fosse, which, from the extent of
the area (more than thirty acres), is supposed to be of
Danish origin: pieces of armour, broken swords, and
battle-axes, have been ploughed up in the vicinity.
Some inconsiderable vestiges of an ancient priory are
still visible in the cellars of some houses in the square
which now occupy its site; and great numbers of human
bones, and skulls with teeth having the enamel perfect,
have been found in the immediate neighbourhood, parts
of which still bear the names of the Upper and Lower
Priory. At the western extremity of the town was an
hospital dedicated to St. Thomas the Apostle, the revenue
of which, in the 26th of Henry VIII., was £8. 5. 3.