Bearwood, West Midlands


Bearwood is the southern part of Smethwick, Sandwell, West Midlands, England, and north of the A456 Hagley Road. Bearwood Hill was the original name of the High Street from Smethwick Council House to Windmill Lane. The border at the Shireland Brook where Portland Road becomes Shireland Road is signed "Bearwood".
The part of Bearwood to the west of Shireland Brook is included in Abbey Ward in Sandwell Metropolitan Borough. The smaller part of Bearwood to the east of Shireland Brook is in the North West Edgbaston ward in Birmingham. In 1903, Bearwood Ward in Smethwick extended from Hagley Road to Smethwick High Street and included part of Cape Hill.
The Bearwood telephone exchange area marked out by the 0121-429, 420, and 434 numbers extends as far east as Harborne Walkway.
Bearwood, like many areas of the West Midlands conurbation, has a local sense of place, although it has become absorbed into Smethwick proper. Many locals still use the term "The Bear" especially referring to "The Bear Hotel" located in Bearwood. An old map of the 18th century mentions 'The Bear of Smethwick'.

Description

Modern Bearwood centres around the Bearwood Road, and especially the crossroads with Sandon Road and Three Shires Oak Road. Historically, Bearwood extended as far north as Smethwick High Street by Victoria Park east of the Council House. The 1899 Smethwick Borough surveyor's map of Smethwick shows Bearwood Ward as including Cheshire Road from its junction immediately opposite the Council House. Bearwood Hill is the old name for the High Street south of Victoria Park. The approach to Cape Hill from Birmingham via Portland Road still has a sign saying Bearwood.
Bearwood has a series of shopping parades along Bearwood Road, including a small indoor market, and a number of other local amenities such as banks, supermarkets, bakeries and pharmacies. There are several opticians and a large NHS dental practice situated on this road. The Birmingham Outer Circle bus routes, which link Birmingham's suburbs, have stops here. Bearwood also has a number of restaurants serving a range of different cuisines.
Bearwood Road leads northwards to Smethwick High Street, and at the southern end joins Hagley Road, one of the main arterial routes into Birmingham from the M5 at Junction 3. If the plans for the West Midlands Metro extension along the Hagley Road are realised, Bearwood will also have a tram stop.
Between 1923 and 1973, Bearwood was the headquarters of the Birmingham & Midland Motor Omnibus Company - or "Midland Red" - based at the company's depot in Bearwood Road. Although most of the company's innovative buses were built at its Carlyle Road workshops in nearby Edgbaston, they were all registered at Bearwood and as such carried the Smethwick 'HA' prefix on their number plates.

History

The origin of the name is debated, suggestions ranging from simply "Beor's Wood", or the fact that Bearu might be translated as 'grove', with the implication that this was open woodland used as pasture; wudu simply means a 'wood'. Certainly there was a wide area of dense forest in the West Midlands in Anglo-Saxon times.
Maps of the Bearwood area up to the mid 19th century show the area as being rural, with farms, mansions such as Lightwoods House, and two small hamlets near the main crossroads. Bearwood Road was an important route linking the growing industrial area of Smethwick with Harborne, Selly Oak and King's Norton, with crossroads at Sandon Road and Hagley Road. From about 1880, there was quite rapid growth with a mixture of "ribbon development" and planned streets. This development ignored the county boundaries, and covered the Staffordshire central section along Bearwood Road, and spread into Warwickshire, Shropshire and Worcestershire. By 1903, the entire area of Bearwood between Barnsley Road and Wigorn Road, north of Adkins Lane, and as far north as Rawlings Road had been developed in an orderly manner.
Also by 1903, most of the northern section of Bearwood Ward had also been developed. The north-east part included the M&B Brewery, and a substantial housing estate for the brewery workers. In 1903, Beakes Farm retained open country from Rawlings Road to Waterloo Road. The older terraces in Willow Avenue, Poplar Avenue and Dorset Road has also been built.
The early 20th century before World War 1 was marked by a number of ornate landmark buildings. One example is the 1908 structure opposite The Bear Tavern on the corner of Sandon Road and Bearwood Road. Built in 1907 for the Co-operative Society, this imposing building with terracotta ornaments is now divided into a number of separate shops.
The Merrivale Road housing estate south of Hadley Stadium was built from 1905 to 1908.
Some of the Birmingham conurbation's older properties can be found in the roads adjoining Bearwood Road. A traditionally upper working class area of Victorian terraced houses, this has more recently become much sought after, as house prices in neighbouring areas such as Harborne have moved out of the range of first time buyers.
During the 1918 General Election Bearwood came close to having two women MPs from amongst the first 17 to stand at the first opportunity following changes in the election law. The boundary between the Stourbridge, Worcestershire constituency and the Smethwick constituency roughly runs along what are now known as Wigorn Road and Thimblemill Road. In Stourbridge Mary Macarthur was the Labour candidate, in Smethwick Christabel Pankhurst fought as a Women's Party candidate on behalf of the coalition. Both lost, but had they won Bearwood would have been the first community in the country, possibly the world, to be represented at parliamentary level by two women.
In 1967 Bearwood Primary School appointed Tony O'Connor as head teacher. He was the first Black head teacher in the UK having been born in Jamaica and came to Britain with the RAF in 1943. The day after the announcement of his appointment racist slogans and swastikas were daubed around the school. O'Connor was well liked by both parents and children and retired in 1983. Local historian David Hallam is currently researching his life.

Commerce and industry

Until the main era of house building in the 20th century, the main industry was agriculture. By 1903, Beakes Farm between Rawlings Road and Hadley Stadium was the last farm. Bearwood has had very little manufacturing industry, the most important being the William Mitchell Pens factory at the northern end of Bearwood Road.
The main commercial activity is shops and other service sector businesses.

Landmarks

For completeness, landmarks up to the 1899 Bearwood Ward boundary, and those associated with the Bearwood area, both on the Birmingham side of the border, and west of Thimblemill Brook, may be included.

Northern

This section is now thought of as Cape Hill rather than Bearwood, but it was in the original Bearwood Ward of Smethwick Borough Council as surveyed in 1889.
The Edward Cheshire Nurses Home is near the most northerly point of the old Bearwood Ward in the time of the old Smethwick Town Council.
For convenience, this is taken as the area south of the junction of Waterloo Road and Bearwood Road, to the north side of the junction of Bearwood Road with Sandon Road and Three Shires Oak Road.
Sandon Road has two church buildings which are locally associated with Bearwood.

West of Thimblemill

Abbey Infant and Junior schools, on the peak of Abbey Road by Warley Woods, serve the Bearwood area.

Transport

Bearwood is well served by major bus routes, with the Bearwood Interchange at the crossroads of the Hagley Road and Bearwood Road. Some other bus routes cross the Bearwood Road by The Bear.

Parks & Green Spaces

is located to the west of Bearwood, on the north side of Hagley Road. It consists of Lightwoods House and grounds. In 1902, following the death of Caleb Adkins, the house and grounds were put up for sale, with the risk that it would be demolished for building houses on the estate. A. M. Chance led a committee which by public subscription purchased the estate and handed it over to Birmingham Corporation as a public park. By 1905, further public subscriptions enabled more land to be bought and added to the park.
The bandstand and other features have the Birmingham City crest with the motto, "Birmingham Forward" in recognition of the former 'ownership' of the park by Birmingham City Corporation, although the park itself has never been within the city boundaries.
The most recent tenant of Lightwoods House was the Hardman company, which makes stained glass windows. In November 2010, by agreement between the two Councils, Lightwoods Park was handed over to Sandwell MBC.
Features include a skateboard ramp and bowling green. "The Shakespeare Garden", a walled garden alongside the house, was planted with every identifiable plant in Shakespeare's plays. The bandstand. A drinking fountain also has City of Birmingham inscriptions. The historic Lightwoods House, a Grade II listed building, underwent extensive renovation in 2016, and now houses a cafe and meeting rooms for a range of local activities.
On 14 September 2012 it hosted a Drive-in movie for the viewing of 'Grease', one of the first Drive-In movies in the United Kingdom for many years.
Warley Woods is grade II listed on the English Heritage Register of Historic Parks and Gardens. It covers and includes a meadow, woodland and a public golf course.
Every year Warley Woods hosts a music festival entitled Picnic In The Park - to promote local bands & artists and to raise funds to maintain the parkland. The woods are run by a Trust:

Schools

Primary

is the main school in Bearwood, located on Bearwood Road on the corner with Ethel Street. above average size, serving 479 pupils, it is a mixed sex school for children aged of 3 to 11 years.
on Park Road, between Abbey Road and St Mary's Road, is a mixed school for children aged 3 to 11.
and lie to the west, overlooking Warley Woods at the junction of Abbey Road and Barclay Road.
is in Clent Road, on the Oldbury border to the west.

Secondary

At the northern end of the Bearwood area is Shireland Collegiate Academy, on Waterloo Road.
On the southern border, in Harborne, Lordswood Boys' School and Lordswood Girls' School take a substantial number of students from the Bearwood area.

Places of worship

The local Church of England parish church is , which stands at the junction of Bearwood Road and St Mary's Road. The parish was originally part of the parish of St Peter's, Harborne.
There is a Roman Catholic church on Three Shires Oak Road.
is on the corner of Bearwood Road and Rawlings Road.
is set back from Bearwood Road opposite the Bearwood Primary School.
The is now in the former Church of Christ Scientist on the junction of Sandon Road and Poplar Avenue.
The original Wesleyan Methodist Church building on the corner of Sandon Road and Barnsley Road is now used by the Redeemed Christian Church of God.
is the Assembly of God Pentecostal church, located on Pargeter Road near to Thimblemill Road.

Local entertainment

Bearwood has a small range of local restaurants, including:
The King's Head,
Mt Nemrut,,
Purnima,
Butler Dosa,
Haweli,
The Why Not Cafe,
The Edge,
Local pub The Bear Tavern hosted comedy nights in the 1980s hosted by local comedian Frank Skinner and many TV comedians appeared there, including Sean Hughes, Ed Byrne and some of TV's "The Fast Show". It now stages a monthly clubnight, Club Mojo, and hosts an annual charity Music festival entitled Bearwoodstock. Thin Lizzy played there New Year's Eve 1970 and Judas Priest April 1971. , a real ale pub, opened in July 2014 at the site of the old Midland Bank, and a opened on the Bearwood Road in 2019. Further along the Hagley Road is the
Bearwood's main musical claim to fame lies with Christine Perfect, who grew up in Bearwood and studied sculpture at art college in Birmingham. She joined Fleetwood Mac and married John McVie in 1970 and, as Christine McVie, went on to become one of the outstanding members in the band's long and illustrious career. Keith Law member of the bands, Velvett Fogg and 'Jardine', lived in Park Road, Bearwood, in the mid-1980s. Other musical claims to fame include the now defunct "Little Nibble" cafe getting a mention on Dexy's Midnight Runners "Don't Stand Me Down" album and local -ish band The Twang rehearsing at the Sandwell Snooker Centre in the town. Award-winning actress Julie Walters is from Smethwick and lived in Bishopton Road as a child.
There are many local musicians in the area and until recently there were regular acoustic performances at Atticus Bar, which closed its doors in November 2008. Until his death in 2012 saxophonist Andy Hamilton performed weekly gigs along with his sons and Blue Notes band at the Corks Club on Bearwood High Street.
Since 2015 a theatre group, called The Bearwood Players, was set up by a local resident to raise money for charity. In November 2015 their first production, a version of the traditional pantomime, Cinderella, was performed at the Bearwood Corks Club raising money for BBC Children in Need. A total of just over £3,800 was raised. In July 2016 they performed Hairspray - The Musical, again at the Corks Club and raised £20,000 - again for BBC CiN. Since July 2016 the Bearwood Players have moved venues to the Windsor Theatre Bar on Bearwood Road.
The Bearwood Street Festival launched in 2017 and reprised in 2019. An ambitious and vibrant multi-venue event, run by, with and for local people, it features three stages, a street food area, a family area with extra provision for SEN children, a street market and much more. The Festival is organised by local residents through the community group 'We are Bearwood'.
In 2011 a group of local people began to stage free music events at the bandstand in Lightwoods Park, these events are known as the Bearwood Shuffle and have attracted large crowds with an eclectic mix of local acts both established and unsigned.

Notable residents