<H2> History West Midlands </H2> |
<H2> Forging Ahead: Austerity to Prosperity in the Black Country 1945-1968 </H2> |
<H2> The 1924 Ladywood Election: Neville Chamberlain faces Oswald Mosley </H2> |
<H2> Roman Wroxeter – a place of myth & romance </H2> |
<H2> Shock and Awe: The Roman Invasion of the West Midlands </H2> |
<H2> Black Country women civic pioneers </H2> |
<H2> How Birmingham and Shakespeare won the American Midwest </H2> |
<H2> Birmingham's Ambassador to America: George Dawson </H2> |
<H2> Maggie Andrews: Foster mothers - Episode 4 </H2> |
<H2> Maggie Andrews: The mother's who accompanied children - Episode 3 </H2> |
<H2> Maggie Andrews: The mother's who waved goodbye - Episode 2 </H2> |
<H2> Righting the Wrong - Mary Macarthur 1880-1921: The Working Woman's Champion </H2> |
<H2> Beyond 'The Peaky Blinders': The real Oswald Mosley </H2> |
<H2> Spanish flu comes to Birmingham </H2> |
<H2> The Birmingham Macbeth - Shakespeare and the Shelbys </H2> |
<H2> Interview with Katherine Scheil, Professor of English at the University of Minnesota & Director of the Citizen Shakespeare Project </H2> |
<H2> The Hereford Cathedral Chained Library: A unique survivor </H2> |
<H2> James Watt and slavery: The untold story </H2> |
<H2> Trailer - James Watt and slavery: The untold story </H2> |
<H2> History of women in 100 objects: Royal Shakespeare Theatre </H2> |
<H2> The House where the Weather was Made </H2> |
<H2> History of women in 100 objects: Lady Curzon's Peacock Dress </H2> |
<H2> Bovril, Whisky and Gravediggers: The Spanish Flu Pandemic comes to the West Midlands </H2> |
<H2> Vittoria Street: Encapsulating the Jewellery Quarter </H2> |
<H2> Professor Tobias Döring explains that the Shakespeare Library has holdings in no less than 93 languages </H2> |
<H2> Professor Tobias Döring reflects on the relationship between Birmingham, Shakespeare and Germany </H2> |
<H2> Professor Ewan Fernie introduces the only Shakespeare First Folio in the world owned by the people </H2> |
<H2> Professor Ewan Fernie introduces the 'Everything to Everybody' project </H2> |
<H2> Beautiful Birmingham: Art and Welfare </H2> |
<H2> A Shakespearean Commonwealth </H2> |
<H2> Birmingham and Europe </H2> |
<H2> Shakespeare, Nonconformity and Diversity </H2> |
<H2> Shakespeare, Inclusion and Working-Class Communities </H2> |
<H2> Bovril, Whisky and Gravediggers </H2> |
<H2> Vittoria Street - Encapsulating the Jewellery Quarter </H2> |
<H2> The Chamberlain Memorial Clock </H2> |
<H2> The Chamberlain Memorial Clock </H2> |
<H2> History of women in 100 objects: Home canning machine </H2> |
<H2> History of women in 100 objects: Three-legged milk stool </H2> |
<H2> History of women in 100 objects: Powick Asylum records </H2> |
<H2> Stories of women’s everyday lives in Coventry between 1850 and 1950 </H2> |
<H2> Beatrice Cadbury - the heiress who gave away her inheritance </H2> |
<H2> The story of the Birmingham brass trade </H2> |
<H2> Tristram Hunt talks about George Dawson </H2> |
<H2> Unlocking the World's first great Shakespeare Library for all </H2> |
<H2> Birmingham brass makers: Cut throat capitalism in the Industrial Revolution </H2> |
<H2> Mary Macarthur 1880-1921 The Working Woman’s Champion </H2> |
<H2> A difficult life - Coming of the Irish </H2> |
<H2> Highbury During the First World War </H2> |
<H2> Birmingham's Gun Trade: Did war shape the Industrial Revolution? </H2> |
<H2> Forgotten Birmingham suffragettes and suffragists </H2> |
<H2> Words and Deeds - Birmingham Suffragists and Suffragettes 1832-1918 </H2> |
<H2> A Philosophical Romance </H2> |
<H2> William Hazeldine (1763-1840) </H2> |
<H2> James Keir (1735-1820) - A Renaissance Man of the Industrial Revolution </H2> |
<H2> Business men and the politics of the brass industry - Duncan Frankis </H2> |
<H2> Law and order in the nineteenth-century Black Country - Policing, Prosecution and Court Procedures </H2> |
<H2> The West Midlands Nail Trade </H2> |
<H2> Letters from the Western Front - Episode 1 - Keeping the fires of love alive </H2> |
<H2> Hunger and Hardship - Carl Chinn's Birmingham </H2> |
<H2> Beyond the battlefields the Home Front in World War I in Germany - Photographs taken by Käthe Buchler </H2> |
<H2> Hidden Home Front: Episode 2 - Love Letters from the Front </H2> |
<H2> Restoring Chamberlain’s Highbury - Tristram Hunt </H2> |
<H2> Hidden Home Front: Episode 1 - Childhood Interrupted </H2> |
<H2> Spanish Flu epidemic comes to the West Midlands (1918-1920) </H2> |
<H2> Birmingham land earmarked for new world-class cultural centre - due to open in 2021 </H2> |
<H2> The Staffordshire Hoard - Unveiling the story so far... </H2> |
<H2> How Birmingham became Chamberlain's invincible fortress </H2> |
<H2> History West Midlands </H2> |
<H3> Featured </H3> |
<H3> Enjoying the content? </H3> |
<H3> Menu </H3> |
<H4> Exploring the rich and fascinating past of the historic counties of Herefordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire. We uncover the history of the people, ideas and events that shaped the West Midlands and the world beyond. </H4> |
<H5> The Spanish Flu Pandemic comes to the West Midlands (1918-1920) </H5> |
<H5> RIGHTING THE WRONG </H5> |
<H5> Forging Ahead: Austerity to Prosperity in the Black Country 1945-1968 </H5> |
<H5> The 1924 Ladywood Election: Neville Chamberlain faces Oswald Mosley </H5> |
<H5> Roman Wroxeter – a place of myth & romance </H5> |
<H5> Shock and Awe: The Roman Invasion of the West Midlands </H5> |
<H5> James Watt </H5> |
<H5> The Peaky Blinders </H5> |
<H5> World War I - How Birmingham remembered the dead </H5> |
<H5> 'Iron-Mad' Wilkinson </H5> |
<H5> The story of Iron Bridge, Shropshire: Part 1 </H5> |
<H5> Chance Brothers – Everybody's story </H5> |
<H5> The Lunar Society Trail: Following the men who made the modern world </H5> |
<H5> Maggie Andrews: Foster mothers - Episode 4 </H5> |
<H5> Newsletter Sign Up </H5> |
<H5> From Twitter </H5> |
<H5> Contact Us </H5> |
<H5> Resources </H5> |
<H5> Links </H5> |
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