Posts Tagged ‘Roy Thornton’

Victorian Buildings of Birmingham by Roy Thornton, a book review

Sunday, March 28th, 2010
Click here to see the book on Amazon

Click here to see the book on Amazon

I really can’t resist a book laden with old photographs of Birmingham – which is why I bought Victorian Buildings of Birmingham by Roy Thornton.  I’m sure we’ll end up reviewing, or perhaps describing, many more like it.

The publishers descriptions says:

Birmingham’s Victorian heritage is still surprisingly well preserved, despite much demolition during the twentieth century, and major redevelopment in the last few months and years. In this book Roy Thornton looks at a selection of the city’s Victorian architecture, some of the lost buildings as well as the survivors to illustrate the range of building that took place during Birmingham’s most prosperous decades. A wide range of old and new photographs, maps, plans, drawings and paintings are also included. Public buildings, churches, houses, industrial buildings, schools and hospitals are all discussed, together with a special study of Corporation Street – arguably the city centre’s best-preserved Victorian thoroughfare.”Victorian Buildings of Birmingham” will appeal to anyone interested in the history of Britain’s second city.

Roy Thornton was born and brought up in Birmingham and has lived and worked in the West Midlands ever since. He trained as an architect and ran his own architectural practice for over thirty years. Roy has now retired but is still an active member of many local groups, clubs and societies.

My favourite with these books is rootling through to find places I know.  This book organises the images in the following chapters:

  1. Martin & Chamberlain
  2. Public Buildings
  3. The Colmore Estate
  4. Colmore Row and Victoria Square
  5. The Original Buildings of Corporation Street
  6. New Street and the Rest
  7. Board Schools & Others
  8. Hospitals
  9. Residential Buildings
  10. Religious Buildings
  11. The Jewellery Quarter & Surrounds
  12. Public Houses
  13. A Miscellany

Despite the grandeur of most Public buildings and the commercial streets I enjoy the domestic buildings.  Detail after detail of Victorian Houses in Edgbaston, Moseley, Sutton Coldfield, Sparkbrook, Highgate and Handsworth.

Enjoy, I did.

Click here to buy this book on Amazon.

Lost Buildings of Birmingham by Roy Thornton

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010
Click above to view this title on Amazon
Click above to view this title on Amazon
I was able to go to The Victorian Society‘s Saving a Century exhibition at the Central Library just before it moved on to the next city. It was completely engrossing with some fantastic photography and stories both dispiriting and uplifting.
It made me realise that I know little of the buildings that Birmingham itself has lost, because much of them were lost before my time. I remembered Roy Thornton’s Lost Buildings of Birmingham being published a year or so ago, treated myself to a copy and found a great book full of atmospheric photographs and illustrations under various different catagories – public buildings, religious buildings, etc. I was suddenly nostalgic for buildings I had never known!
While brief, the text accompanying the images is informative, and interestingly, for the most part doesn’t include the reason for a building’s demolition – maybe this information wasn’t always available to the author, but rather than have us puzzle and rage over the politics and unfairness of city planning, Thornton allows us to appreciate the former glories of Birmingham for what they were.  And quite right too.