Inside Birmingham's Last Surviving Back-to-Back houses | England April 2022

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • Inside Bham Last surviving Back to Back houses & History of one the most controversial houses of all time.
    50-54 Inge Street and 55-63 Hurst Street
    NB: I probably made a mistake for the first house, the decoration may dates to the 1840s and not 1850s like I said in the video.
    www.nationaltrust-tickets.org...
    Video Timestamps:
    0:00 Music
    1:00 Intro
    1:30 The Origins of the Back-to-Back houses
    2:15 How do these houses work?
    11:04 Inside the Back-to-Backs
    20:00 The decline of Back-to-Backs
    26:00 Rehabilitating Back-to-Back houses
    27:09 Are Back-to-Backs the future for urban development?
    28:12 Music outro
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    Sources:
    www.nationaltrust.org.uk/birm...
    www.bbc.co.uk/insideout/westm...
    www.birminghammail.co.uk/news...
    www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/...
    www.birminghammail.co.uk/news...
    theironroom.wordpress.com/201...
    Health & Safety check:
    I did the full tour and you have to go up and down very narrow, steep stairs so if you have mobility issues I would advise you to do the ground tour instead.
    The tour lasts approximately 75 mins but I do believe that the one I did with Eric the tour guide lasted 120 mins!!! So bring a bottle of water with you.
    Devices & tools used to make this video:
    🛒 Iphone 11 Pro amzn.to/36WwWWm
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    🛒 Blue Yeti Microphone amzn.to/3uXmqrm
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    🛒 Vintage Washing Mangle amzn.to/4bWiDx5
    These are affiliate links so if you purchase a product with the links provided I will receive a small commission without additional charge to you.
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Комментарии • 217

  • @golden.lights.twinkle2329
    @golden.lights.twinkle2329 10 месяцев назад +39

    My mother used to boil our clothes and then put them through a mangle. She dried them on a washing line. Frequently, if it rained she would have to take everything inside and then put it out again when the rain stopped. She did this until the mid 1960s at which time she got her first washing machine and spin dryer.

    • @AndymacUK
      @AndymacUK 2 месяца назад +3

      Exactly the same for my mom.

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад

      Sounds like my nana...her and Granda had no inside water / toilet or bath .....we kids used to go down the the back yard and fill the enamel bucket up from the tap on the back wall ..... outside toilet /tin bath /washhouse (for clothes) air raid shelter got converted into a greenhouse after ww2 ......beautifully clean warm brick cottage.....lived there until 1972....south wick Sunderland Co Durham (as was)....

    • @fmcm7715
      @fmcm7715 2 месяца назад +1

      In the Uk and Ireland there were twin tubs after the mangle. Actually clothes dryers didn’t come in for years!

  • @razullah1986
    @razullah1986 Год назад +62

    Hi all the video was very good and pretty accurate , i was born and bred at 32 Clifton Road Aston in 1952 and we had back to backs down the entry behind us they were grim but people managed even without hot running water no central heating just one outside toilet and a tin bath, there was no mould in the house because it was too cold for it to live but even with all the poverty people had pride in their houses polishing the steps and sweeping up , it seems to me nowadays people have everything but won,t clean up and don,t have pride in their homes or cars . Raz

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +6

      Hello Raz Ullah for your feedback 🙂 I really appreciate it.

    • @karlkuttup
      @karlkuttup Год назад +7

      i used to live near the h.p sauce and police station ,rocky road and aston brooke green next to the underpass back in the 80s they were tiny houses as well

    • @robertandrews5640
      @robertandrews5640 8 месяцев назад +7

      These days they have no respect for anything or anybody

    • @royfontaine5526
      @royfontaine5526 3 месяца назад +3

      @Paxanglorumenrichment! Enrichment nooner asked for 😬

  • @gillianbrookwell1678
    @gillianbrookwell1678 3 месяца назад +23

    As a small child, I used to love feeding the clothes through a mangle when I stayed at my Grandma's house. She had a big copper in her washhouse, and her clothes used to look snow white and very well washed.

    • @Ihfmpw8
      @Ihfmpw8 3 месяца назад +3

      I fed my fingers through a mangle when I was
      A small. Child….it was painfull.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 2 месяца назад +2

      @@Ihfmpw8 Awww - this must have been so awful.

    • @lesleylovell8933
      @lesleylovell8933 2 месяца назад +3

      I remember c1971 enjoying feeding the clothes through the mangle in the garden 😮. Always a tad scared of the rollers and what they could do to my hand!!! Grief I now feel very old 😂

  • @sallybutton6237
    @sallybutton6237 10 месяцев назад +32

    Happiness isn’t where you live it’s having good & loving family & friends🙋🏻‍♀️🇬🇧

    • @annepoitrineau5650
      @annepoitrineau5650 3 месяца назад +6

      Where you live might not be that important, but how you live is. Life can be awfully hard without basic amenities. People had shorter lives and were less healthy. If trickle down economics worked, all the mine, factory, land workers of the past would have been wealthy.

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад +3

      @@annepoitrineau5650 people had the amenities they were just different not everybody lived in💩 in the old days...a new build can be a slum if it's not looked after....

    • @annepoitrineau5650
      @annepoitrineau5650 2 месяца назад +2

      @@azillliasmith2734 And that one too. Life in Manchester was also quite dire. There were bosses (quakers mostly) looking after their employees, but most were not. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Labour_and_the_London_Poor

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад

      ⁠@@annepoitrineau5650yes interesting wiki post..... of course there was not one overall condition for the entire population at any one time.....and some industrialists built villages for their workforce to a good standard........many worked well when they were being used the way they were designed to be used.......only became slums when they became overcrowded and had no proper upkeep or repairs....Leeds was another industrial town that built thousands of back to backs and some to a very poor standard...... the city continued to build this type of "dwelling" long after an act was past in parliament banning them .....interestingly there are thousands still standing being used as homes and going for a good price.....
      Can't help thinking of some of the new build with bedrooms that aren't big enough to get a wardrobe in and kitchens too small to open the fridge freezer door unless the kitchen door is shut....no where to air clothes....of course they are not all that bad...

    • @lilacscentedfushias1852
      @lilacscentedfushias1852 2 месяца назад

      @@annepoitrineau5650 thank you Anne, that link was very interesting 😁

  • @francisgeere1849
    @francisgeere1849 3 месяца назад +12

    My Grandmother lived in 2/93 Mansfield road.We visited her in the 1950 and 1960 Those houses have been pulled down!

  • @mohammednadeemanwar2213
    @mohammednadeemanwar2213 Год назад +14

    That's bloody luxury, my parent's house (mother from India father from Pakistan). We had 2 up 1 down (single room over passage). Living room/kitchen dining. Older sister and I in single room, and parents in bigger bedroom later younger sister in 1972. Coal shed and adjoining Toilet shared by 4 families! Basically a plank with a hole in it! Yes in 1969! Stone floor in kitchen ceiling joists no plastered ceiling. Heater/with stove top. Manual washing machine with mangle. So I know slum living!

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад +1

      Bless ❤ hope you're all more cosy now....

  • @basicallywellfed3453
    @basicallywellfed3453 Год назад +14

    I lived in a back to back in Leeds in 2015, there's thousands of them there, nothing unusual.

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah we had one when we were first married some surprisingly spacious inside often with a a cellar with a door with windows on both sides opening to a space where the bin lived (before wheelies) and an outside toilet and steps leading up to the garden ....great "little" home homes and brilliant community Spirit...those that had no gardens would put paddling pools on the pavement for the kids in the summer no bother really nice kind atmosphere ......my kids loved living there....😊

  • @davethewife7628
    @davethewife7628 3 месяца назад +9

    We bought a one up one down in 1991ish..it stood on a piece of land and had no other land with it at all. The living room and kitchen were combined with no back door and upstairs a tiny bedroom and a tiny bathroom had been put in and it was warmed with a fire downstairs. It was described as charming by the estate agent.it was certainly cosy 😆. I had it for about 3 years and then moved onto a bigger house but it helped get us on the property ladder and was all we could afford at the time x it was really tiny

  • @magesalmanac6424
    @magesalmanac6424 7 месяцев назад +13

    The windows and green paint is so charming!

  • @moaningpheromones
    @moaningpheromones 4 месяца назад +18

    I can't wait for future generations to look around an 80s house - oooo look at that - tapes, records, massive box television and VHS recorder.

  • @craftybarb6220
    @craftybarb6220 3 месяца назад +10

    I slept in a drawer on a visit to grandparents in Wolverhampton 1946. My mum told me that many years ago.

    • @Ihfmpw8
      @Ihfmpw8 3 месяца назад +5

      They put me in a drawer as a cot when I was a baby too

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Ihfmpw8this happened at my nanas when my baby nephew was babysittered if that's a word....😊....the drawer was removed from the chest thing of course 👍🏻...

  • @dianaward3239
    @dianaward3239 11 месяцев назад +7

    I spent my early years in the 1950’s in a back to back house in Barford Street. This video brought back many poignant memories.

  • @lindyashford7744
    @lindyashford7744 3 месяца назад +9

    There are still plenty of back to backs still left in Birmingham, they just have indoor loos in their kitchen/ bathroom extensions now. Most of which date back to the 70s. Fifty years ago! 😊

    • @peterwilliamallen1063
      @peterwilliamallen1063 15 дней назад

      Do you actually know what a back to back house is. apprently not.

    • @lindyashford7744
      @lindyashford7744 15 дней назад

      @@peterwilliamallen1063, yes lived in one myself for a number of years and could easily take you on a tour of places where they still exist. Some of them are in streets and adjacent to areas with far larger homes with gardens some of them are not and have only the tiniest of yards out back and are served by very narrow alleys. The housing density of the latter would be illegal now to build. I know of back to backs that had no toilets at all when built, but has to share outside facilities at the end of the street. They still exist, but with extensions as my first post stated. Mostly two up two downs, with a parlour and all purpose kitchen/living room downstairs, and one bedroom and a balcony room the latter for children no matter how many. Most with front doors that open onto the street. I remember women scrubbing the front door steps and the washing lines between the building. Some in my constituency were pulled down in the 60s, but many still exist in other parts of the city.

    • @peterwilliamallen1063
      @peterwilliamallen1063 15 дней назад

      @@lindyashford7744 As a Brummie I do believe you are living in fairy land as all Back to Back houses were eleiminated from Birmingham in the early 1970's, I worked as n apprentice Gas Fitter and latter a Gas Engineer and went in these houses to retrieve the gas meters before demolision and the last area they were removed from were Aston/ Lozells and these in Hurst Street are the only back to back slums owned by the National Trust in Birmingham. A Back to Back House is as it is called small badly built houses backing on to one another with a communial yard with shared toilet blocks in it and the hoses would have one parlour, a small kitchen and may be two bedrooms, what are left in Birmingham are ols terraced Houses in the inner City areas but these are not back to back houses

  • @sidetracked5044
    @sidetracked5044 3 месяца назад +5

    Millions of British houses still have unlit entries. My first house was a terrace from the 1930s and had one.

  • @MrDaiseymay
    @MrDaiseymay Год назад +9

    I visited this place, having seen it's opening on the BBC TV news. Having been born in Brum, and lived in 8 different house styles, newish to Victorian Terrace, but not Back to back. Facinated, I drove up from the West country. Having just started my Family Tree research. I discovered a great aunt had lived near by to Inge St. In the Courtyard, It was very interesting, but reminded me of a miniture prison Yard. The communal Toilet looked a lot cleaner than I think it would be in reality, obviously.

  • @carole5951
    @carole5951 3 месяца назад +4

    This was so so interesting, can’t wait to watch your next one. 🐞

  • @manorgardener8376
    @manorgardener8376 10 месяцев назад +10

    There's still more back to backs in lozells in Birmingham I lived in one in the 1990s nice and cosy it was two unusual because it was double fronted..two rooms down one bed and a bathroom upstairs 😊..what a lovely video thanks for sharing with us all 🙏😁

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  10 месяцев назад +3

      Really? Which road in Lozells? I will definitely have a look. Thanks for watching.

    • @manorgardener8376
      @manorgardener8376 10 месяцев назад +1

      It was near charleville road off the Soho rd ..i think it was wellington terrace I'm sorry it's a long time ago but it was a lovely little place and I may visit and make a Tiktok about it one day hopefully I still live in Birmingham

    • @manorgardener8376
      @manorgardener8376 10 месяцев назад +1

      Also if you had your back to the Soho rd .. walked down charleville road..turn left ..there was a pub on a corner...on the left ..but over the road in the pavement....turn left..and it was the next street on the right...walk along that and there was a square arrangement of little old houses. On the right it was lovely..and very quiet at night time

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you very much, I will have a look at it 🙂

    • @francisgeere1849
      @francisgeere1849 3 месяца назад +2

      When we stayed with Grandma at 2/93 Mansfield rd Birchfield...we had to go to school so my Mother walked us to the Lozels where we walked on our own to St Mary's Convent....meanwhile my Aunty Olivia lived in a house right on the main rd.in Lozels....

  • @johnbowkett80
    @johnbowkett80 10 месяцев назад +11

    I was raised in Lower Essex Street in 1956 ..... Just around the corner from these houses . A true and proper Brummie . 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @Ghostworld_
    @Ghostworld_ 2 месяца назад +1

    It's amazing how they recorded everyday life stuff back then and people couldn't understand why but we're now watching these things today.

  • @francisnewmarch6837
    @francisnewmarch6837 9 месяцев назад +13

    What a lovely and well produced film.
    Thank you and regards from London

  • @sams9744
    @sams9744 11 месяцев назад +6

    Can't believe people lived like that in those days. It was only in the previous century and in the middle of England. The British empire wealth was not seen there...

  • @abuismail9983
    @abuismail9983 2 года назад +15

    Very well made and very informative and professional. Respect 😊

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

      Hello Abu Ismail 99, thank you for watching the video. I'm glad you liked it 🙂

  • @rubydawn1
    @rubydawn1 4 месяца назад +5

    i love this Glad they kept this to show

  • @johngulliver6151
    @johngulliver6151 2 года назад +11

    Did anyone know Betty Green, I think she was involved with the opening of the back to back houses . She was a wonderful lady, I knew her way back.I have been searching for the footage of her telling the story of how she lived in the back to back house. If anyone can help me find, it would be fantastic to see her face again. Rest in peace Betty, you were such a lovely lady to have known .

  • @jamesg324
    @jamesg324 Год назад +10

    Really enjoyed that, thanks very much for doing it.
    My nan lived in a back-to-back in Birmingham when she was a child, and I took her here in around 2008. She loved it.
    My nan passed away a few days ago, and your video was a great reminder of the lovely day out we had.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +4

      I'm glad it brought back positive memories 🙂 My condolences for your loss.

    • @jamesg324
      @jamesg324 Год назад +2

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes thank you very much.

    • @zappababe8577
      @zappababe8577 11 месяцев назад +3

      My Nan grew up in a back-to-back house with a communal yard. She had to share a bed with her three sisters! She told me at the weekend, they had what they called "gypsy parties", dragged the piano out into the yard and had a sing-song!

    • @jamesg324
      @jamesg324 11 месяцев назад +3

      @zappababe8577 having to share a bed with 3 siblings sounds like a lot of people's experience back then!
      I bet the sing-song was one of the highlights of the week.
      I'm really glad the last few back-to-back houses in Birmingham were saved from demolition and people get to see what life was like for so many working-class people.

  • @evertonporter7887
    @evertonporter7887 2 года назад +12

    Hi Joseline, I watched this video this morning and found it to be a fascinating look at this often forgotten part of Birmingham history. Congrats on a well researched and educational piece.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

      Thank you Everton, I'm glad you like the video. Have a lovely Sunday 🙂

    • @FreyaRae1510
      @FreyaRae1510 Год назад +1

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes it’s not a tunnel it’s called an entry , you are correct you do not know what you are talking about , I suggest you do your research,

  • @pmrose18
    @pmrose18 10 месяцев назад +9

    dont worry they all got nice new shiny council houses and 50years later we had modern slums..which they demolished and built again........rinse and repeat

    • @everynewdayisablessing8509
      @everynewdayisablessing8509 3 месяца назад +2

      The manners and ways of living haven't changed even though the building was updated... oh well... In every country is pretty much the same.

  • @chrisarmour6634
    @chrisarmour6634 4 месяца назад +5

    There are thousands of back to backs still occupied in West Yorkshire - Leeds, Bradford, Halifax etc. Great Yarmouth had houses of this style as early as the 15th century, but they were called Row houses, not back to backs.

  • @tertur2957
    @tertur2957 9 месяцев назад +28

    To go to war for king and country, and come home to live in this poverty? WTF!

    • @williamegler8771
      @williamegler8771 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes!
      Imagine coming home from a devastating war that nearly bankrupted the country and destroyed untold numbers of homes and not finding a mansion waiting for you to move into with all the modern conveniences!

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад +1

      In their day these were cosy homes more spacious than you would think better than some of the cardboard mould ridden rabbit hutches slapped up today......

    • @jamesbomd3503
      @jamesbomd3503 2 месяца назад

      That's why they're built all those terrorist houses in the 1920s because the cat was out of the bag by that point and the king and the establishment had to repay the British public Think of all the council housing built pre Second World War If they wouldn't have done this they would have been a revolution

    • @janetpendlebury6808
      @janetpendlebury6808 Месяц назад +1

      @@azillliasmith2734 Those 'cosy' homes often had families of 8+ kids living in them, how much space would you have had?

  • @lonelytravelerproductions
    @lonelytravelerproductions Год назад +7

    Great work
    I enjoyed this totally professional production

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад

      Thank you so much for your comment. I’m happy to know you enjoyed the video.

  • @a310man
    @a310man 4 месяца назад +7

    It is an entry, not a tunnel!

  • @AndymacUK
    @AndymacUK 2 месяца назад +1

    I was born in a back to back in Arthur Street Small Heath in 1952.
    When we moved to the new housing estate of Kingshurst 7 miles away in 1957 it was like moving to the country!
    Small Heath has always been regarded with fond memories as the "Old End"!

  • @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui
    @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui Год назад +5

    Just sent my daughter a text to watch this video. She'll be flabbergasted to see where her mum lived in the 1950s. To be honest I only have fond memories of these times. My mom was very house proud and spotless. Our kitchen was only big enough for a sink and a cooker, where mom used to boil the white laundry and rinse and wring everything by hand. People used to talk to each other in those days. Wasn't until the moors murders that children were told not to talk to strangers.

    • @stevebuckley2429
      @stevebuckley2429 Год назад +1

      Our kitchen was a 'scullery'

    • @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui
      @ahambrahmasmi-qk9ui Год назад +2

      @@stevebuckley2429 we called it a kitchen even though it wasn't big enough to swing a mouse. A sink ,draining board and cooker. No work surfaces. We kept coal in the cellar. Folks next door kept chickens down there

  • @regstokes7171
    @regstokes7171 2 года назад +4

    1 back of 78 Goodrick st nechells that was my grandads place ! I’m 70 now but can still remember my visits there ! Your video brought back lots of memories ! Good job ! Don’t know why I can still remember the address

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад

      Hello Reg Stokes, I am pleased my video brought back happy memories. Thank you very much for watching 🙂

  • @zappababe8577
    @zappababe8577 2 года назад +7

    Excellent video again, Joseline! Well done, very enjoyable watching

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

      Hello Zappababe, thank you for your positive feedback. I really appreciate it 🙂

  • @mohammednadeemanwar2213
    @mohammednadeemanwar2213 Год назад +6

    I waa raised in back-to-back house. Outside privy shared with another family. End of garden. Ground floor, 1 room stone flag floor, one electrical socket one light hung from ceiling joist. There were never a plastered ceilings. Wooden Stairs to back of room with tongue & groove boarding. My parents bedroom neighbouring bedroom above passageway lino floor large frame bed shared by me and sister I was 6 sister being 10. My youngest sister in cot in parent's bedroom. So 1 socket each room. Metal wc pan under bed.
    So I'm 57, moved out of back to back in 1971 into a very large end terrace house. Still shared bedroom with older sister. Attic bedroom was rented out, basement room had it's own toilet and separate kitchen. Also rented out. My parents bought a very large house and rented out the mentioned. It was a massive upscale move. 4 bedroom house with first floor 1930s bathroom. Living room, drawing room, kitchen and huge hallway. Whilst in back to back, row of houses across road demolished. Eventually become social housing and flats.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +2

      It was a very interesting read Mohammed Nadeem Anwar. Thanks for sharing

  • @traceyjordan9284
    @traceyjordan9284 3 месяца назад +4

    We still have loads of back to backs in Yorkshire. I live in one myself

    • @azillliasmith2734
      @azillliasmith2734 2 месяца назад

      Don't live in one anymore but I loved my back to back in Leeds 🦉🦉😊 lovely warm little home👍🏻

  • @lilymcghee8363
    @lilymcghee8363 Год назад +6

    That was excellent! Thanks 😊

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад

      Thank you very much for watching 🙂 I'm glad you enjoyed the video.

  • @geoffpriestley7310
    @geoffpriestley7310 2 месяца назад +2

    I lived in one up one down back to back . There's thousands to back to back in bradford still being used the tunnel are called ginels or ginells in bradford. The old maid was called a poster where I lived

  • @annieains1
    @annieains1 2 года назад +2

    What a lovely video, thanks Joseline. This was so interesting and your videos are very professionally made. Well done!

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      Hello Ann, I don't know what happened but I missed a couple of comments including yours. Sorry 😢Thanks a lot for watching this video, I'm glad you enjoy watching my content.Take care!

  • @cliffjg
    @cliffjg 2 года назад +3

    I have visited the back to back houses some time ago and they are fascinating. Your video with additional information is excellent as usual. I am sure that many people will want to visit. They need to remember to book a time slot.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching the video cliffjg. I' glad you liked it. People should definitely pay the Backs a visit.

  • @karlkuttup
    @karlkuttup Год назад +3

    there was a row of back to backs on the side road of st pauls snowhill was blocked in by a big advert wood panel,a few folks used to squat in 2 of them ,there was 6 houses ,,3 of them were gutted to get the other 2 liveable in ,and a rigged electric cable from the sign lamp to get power ,water was running as well ,that was in 1978 till 1980s,then the sign advert panel got pulled down ,and all the land was rebuilt on for the metro

  • @edwardmiessner6502
    @edwardmiessner6502 Год назад +5

    Excellent video, 👍 and the story of how these squalid, fetid, pestilential slums can be remade into these cute little jewel boxes for 1 or 2 people! But as this row on Hurst Street took about £250k per back-to-back house, the 1970 municipal estimate of just £30 sterling per unit to bring them up to code sounds downright ludicrous!

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +2

      Hello Edward, sorry for the late reply. I need to up my game when it comes to replying to comments back-to back (sorry 😉). Thank you for watching the video, I'm glad you liked it. I wish I could live in one of those back-to-backs. If it wasn't for the long lease of the tailor, Hurst St last surviving back-to-backs would have been long gone...

  • @Normanskie
    @Normanskie 2 года назад +3

    Thank you, thoroughly enjoyed the history trip.

  • @jayneshorter5418
    @jayneshorter5418 7 месяцев назад +2

    I used to help my Aunty pull the sheets through a electric mangle and them she hung them on wooded bars and pull them up to the ceiling to dry in the winter

  • @joannehelenascough7573
    @joannehelenascough7573 Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for putting that together it was really interesting

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад

      Hello Joanne Helen Ascough, I apologise for the delay in replying to you. Thank you for watching the video, I'm glad you liked it. Take care 🙂

  • @gavinmillar7519
    @gavinmillar7519 Год назад +2

    Really well done video. Very interesting, thanks!

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      Thanks a lot for watching the video. I’m glad you enjoyed it 🙂

  • @kathbrosnan1052
    @kathbrosnan1052 3 месяца назад +4

    I don’t want to glamourise living in the back to backs which is what I did in the ‘50’s and 1960s, however, when you look at the ‘modernisation’ of Hurst Street , including the ‘upgraded’ Hippodrome, it looks awful. Even comparing your video at the beginning showing 1985 run down Victorian frontages, they look more lovely to me than that which replaced it. Even the street lighting is awful. Thank you 1:53 1:53
    1:53 National trust for returning this court 15 to its original beauty.

  • @asa1973100
    @asa1973100 5 месяцев назад +2

    I remember that when it was a Takeaway restaurant in the 90s

  • @missmuffet3874
    @missmuffet3874 Год назад +2

    Such an interesting video. Loved it x

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад

      Thank you very much for watching the video. I'm glad you enjoyed it 🙂

  • @BIJIHALAM
    @BIJIHALAM 2 года назад +4

    We are here to support all of you....• I wish you more success in your work, friends......

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

      Thank you for your support BIJIH ALAM, it is much appreciated.

  • @marklucas8795
    @marklucas8795 2 года назад +2

    Nice video and some good archive footage ! Did the tour some years ago and thoroughly enjoyed it !

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад

      Hello Mark Lucas, thank you for watching the video. I'm glad you enjoyed it. The tour is really worth it.

    • @marklucas8795
      @marklucas8795 2 года назад

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes My Mother was brought up in a back to back house in Hockley in the 30s . She always told me how life was then .

    • @sannytizer7772
      @sannytizer7772 2 года назад

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes When you said the buckets got emptied by dustmen that smelt terrible, was it the buckets or the dustmen that smelt terrible ?

  • @user-vd2fb3nh4x
    @user-vd2fb3nh4x 2 месяца назад

    We had a mangle for ages. My mum and her neighbour in the late 50s used to rent a washing machine between them, Mondays were wash days starting with the whites and then onto the darker wash. I remember the washing lines full of billowing laundry. My Nan had a scullery and a pantry. The floor in the pantry was slate to keep it cool and a shelf of slate to put your meat and diary on. My mum and dad used a draw as a cot for me when I was brought home from hospital as my brother was still in the cot as they couldn’t afford a new bed for him, but, it was only for a short time. I used to share these memories with my students who used to look at me as if I lived in the dark ages so, I had to explain this wasn’t that long ago as the Country was recovering from WWII and rationing went on for some considerable time. The vlog is very informative.

  • @chrisamies2141
    @chrisamies2141 2 года назад +2

    A very nice overview of the Back to Backs. I never got to go there - maybe next visit to Brum!

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

      Thank you Chris 🙂 I definitely recommend you to pay the Back-to-backs a visit. It is worth it. They were supposed to be demolished (the last ones in Bham) but George Saunders, the tailor, had a long lease until 2001. In the meantime the National Trust was able to save the Court.

  • @fionanelson614
    @fionanelson614 Год назад +2

    Really enjoyable and what a beautiful accent you have. 😊

  • @kenstevens5065
    @kenstevens5065 Год назад

    An excellent production Joseline, well done. To anyone curious book a visit, I've been twice and really enjoyed both times.

  • @sandraswift3489
    @sandraswift3489 2 месяца назад

    Thankyou.this is wonderful.i was blessed with two parents working.we were latchkey kids.

  • @karengozra5092
    @karengozra5092 5 месяцев назад +2

    My Nan was born in Summer Lane in a back to back terrace

  • @arronfrost2872
    @arronfrost2872 2 года назад +3

    Really enjoyable

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад

      Thank you for watching Arron Frost, I'm glad you like the video 🙂

  • @CharlotteJonesey
    @CharlotteJonesey Год назад

    Loved watching that! I want to try and visit. I was opposite in wetherspoons last month and I didnt even notice!

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      I really recommend this tour. I think the tour was over 2 hrs. The guide was very knowledgeable & funny.

    • @CharlotteJonesey
      @CharlotteJonesey Год назад

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes thank you for the info! 😍 some of my ancestors lived in similar style houses in Worcester. It’s good to see how the houses may have looked.

  • @gregbouchard414
    @gregbouchard414 Год назад

    See a rally good video on RUclips keep up the good work on RUclips hove a good day on RUclips hove on here mate

  • @TheDonnellymarie
    @TheDonnellymarie 2 месяца назад

    I love social history. My grand parents had to live and work in such nieghbourhoods and with such washing techniques. They are realalistic in thier attitudes back then. I could not survive without my washing machine personally. Thank you for sharing tis interesting video.

  • @sallybutton6237
    @sallybutton6237 10 месяцев назад +4

    Much better to do washing by hand, no electricity consumption, good exercise & got the clothes cleaner than an automatic washing machine. Also it was very common for babies to sleep in a drawer. I was born in the 60’s & my brother in the late 40’s & we would both sleep in a drawer as small babies.

    • @Fritha71
      @Fritha71 2 месяца назад +3

      What exactly is wrong with consuming electricity? They are, after all, trying to turn all cars into electric ones! Electric bicycles are the rage. So pray tell, why wouldn't I use a washing machine to wash my clothes?

    • @janetpendlebury6808
      @janetpendlebury6808 Месяц назад

      Washing by hand is fine if you have all day to do your washing and drying, most modern families do not have the time to do that. My grandmother was thrilled in the 60's when she moved into a modern flat with electricity, plumbing, indoor toilet and a kitchen.

  • @timeoftheyear5230
    @timeoftheyear5230 2 года назад +3

    Really interesting .

  • @ritaroad
    @ritaroad 2 месяца назад +1

    In 1973 I went to South Korea to live in a small town near to Camp Stanley where my husband was stationed. I washed my clothes like all the other Korean women. As a matter of fact they taught me. I had a big rubber basin and a wash board. I hung up my clothes to dry. That clothes came out bright and spotless.

  • @viewerabundzu6887
    @viewerabundzu6887 9 месяцев назад +2

    precious ❤

  • @jennytaylor3324
    @jennytaylor3324 Год назад

    Great job, young mademoiselle!

  • @marble204
    @marble204 8 месяцев назад +1

    I was born in a back to back house in Clark street, Ladywood in 1961

  • @aileenjackson1706
    @aileenjackson1706 10 месяцев назад +5

    So long before anything done for these poor people. Shame.

  • @sarahlouise7163
    @sarahlouise7163 3 месяца назад +2

    seven kids, and the one she is holding is wielding a sodding screwdriver 😬

  • @gillianbrookwell1678
    @gillianbrookwell1678 3 месяца назад +2

    I had a problem understanding you; had to use subtitles.

  • @lorrainemoore7807
    @lorrainemoore7807 2 месяца назад +1

    I spent my early yrs in a back to back happy days

  • @Zauchi
    @Zauchi 10 месяцев назад +2

    that kid had a screwdriver and a plug and was waving it in his mums face near her eyes. lol.

  • @usamasandhu2412
    @usamasandhu2412 2 года назад +2

    Good job

  • @clockwatch5222
    @clockwatch5222 2 месяца назад

    Marroway Street in Birmingham is a still full of back to back houses. White Dee from Benefits Street grew up there.

  • @hedgemist691
    @hedgemist691 2 месяца назад

    My cousin lives in a back to back terraced house in Lancashire. They still exist. A one up, two down. They do have an inside loo and bathroom of course.

  • @janetmurphy4124
    @janetmurphy4124 2 месяца назад +1

    My mum was put in a draw asxa babes and that was the 1960 in Glasgow

  • @barbaranneboyer7997
    @barbaranneboyer7997 Месяц назад

    lovely video..I enjoyed the tour very much ,although I'm not sure about the wisdom of LIGHTED candles Unless they're battery operated of course...cheers and thank you

  • @pobkin12
    @pobkin12 2 года назад +1

    What heppened to your Broad Street night walks? I enjoyed them. Be good to see another one soon.

  • @PontiacS.
    @PontiacS. 2 месяца назад

    "Peaky Blinders"? Interesting. Good Vid.

  • @senorra941
    @senorra941 6 месяцев назад +3

    Yes the tower blocks that replaced this kind of housing caused people to be isolated and there was no community spirit.

    • @janetpendlebury6808
      @janetpendlebury6808 Месяц назад

      My grandmother was thrilled to move into a high rise flat in the 60's, it had a kitchen with hot and cold water and an inside toilet, she thought it was wonderful. She did not miss her 3 tiny cold, damp rooms at all, certainly not the outside toilet and rats.

  • @KennethQuarrington
    @KennethQuarrington 2 месяца назад

    My grandmother lived in colville road i lived in duram road in 1940s remember the carlton cinema went to Dennis road school fond memories

  • @knowitall3503
    @knowitall3503 11 месяцев назад +3

    Please show this to any budding young mum/dad today and tell them you had to pay for yourself and your kids. I'm sure they will go " Whaaat!" .

    • @lucylane7397
      @lucylane7397 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah things improve unless you think people should live like this again

  • @amandahudson2038
    @amandahudson2038 2 месяца назад +1

    People of this country survived all this and worked to a better standard of living, through hard work, we are being dragged back now by people who can’t be arsed to improve their iwn country to a better standard, but they are happy to come here and drop our standards.

  • @arlenesigurdson6347
    @arlenesigurdson6347 2 месяца назад +2

    People are shocked they returned from war to live in poverty. In Canada indigenous soldiers were sent back to the reserve abd lived in abject poverty and not acknowledged for war efforts untill well into the 1990s. In the states the black soldiers were once again forced to use black only bathrooms etc. it’s unbelievable really.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 2 месяца назад +1

      You state that 100% correctly! The UK had an empire back then. Where did all the money go?

  • @Sharon-marie
    @Sharon-marie Год назад +2

    There are still hundreds of back to back houses in Leeds

  • @mabeluk6272
    @mabeluk6272 2 месяца назад

    I was born in one of those houses in Alexander street we moved to druids heath estate when I was 3 in 1968

  • @sandrasloan2339
    @sandrasloan2339 3 месяца назад

    Berners Street in lozells had backtoback houses my mother and her family lived there for year's

  • @Ihfmpw8
    @Ihfmpw8 4 месяца назад

    I used to live in a back house in Watery lane when I was about 12.we had no bathroom, we had a sink at the top of the cellar stairs and hah to have a wash there,so did mum and dad. (Not all at once)ha ha.

  • @simonyip5978
    @simonyip5978 Год назад +2

    I'm surprised that they were still occupied in 2001.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +4

      Hello, just the tailoring shop because the owner had a long lease. And that’s why the Council couldn’t demolish Court 15. And that gave enough time for Conservation groups to protect the last back-to-backs from city planners

  • @bevygaines
    @bevygaines 3 месяца назад +1

    The little boy who drank that dirty water! So sad.

  • @kevkonk
    @kevkonk Год назад +1

    We lived in identical house in the 60’s, Taylor St.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      Thanks for watching the video 🙂 Do you miss that house?

    • @kevkonk
      @kevkonk Год назад +1

      @@citiesthroughmyeyes Our neighbour there was unfortunate to have her daughter and son in law to be the first people killed in a road accident on the newly opened M1.
      The stairway had a door with a lock on the living room side, we were burgled by two people who got in through the outside cellar and they clocked us all upstairs and raided all the coins from the gas meter. No telephones then, dad was working nights and mom was awake but could do nothing.
      The Police found them later and said the culprits were armed with knives and it was a good job they locked the door in a way.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      Wow! That must have been a traumatic experience. I've never had someone breaking into my house. Burglars tend to be extremely violent...The Police is right, it's a good thing they locked the door...
      I am doing a project: Brummies Childhood Memories. Basically it's a Brummie only project in which people would recall their childhood memories on a wide range of subjects (school, neighbourhood, hobbies, anecdotes, etc.) and I will add the audio as a voice-over for my walking tours. Would you want to share more of your childhood memories with us?

  • @6463Dave
    @6463Dave 2 месяца назад

    God bless her!

  • @lindabrown0
    @lindabrown0 Год назад +4

    I think what you called a "tunnel" was called an "entry". Correct me if I'm wrong.

    • @citiesthroughmyeyes
      @citiesthroughmyeyes  Год назад +1

      Yes you are right 🙂 I used the word 'tunnel' because the entry looks like a tunnel when you walk inside it.

    • @limedickandrew6016
      @limedickandrew6016 Год назад +2

      Yes, we called them 'entry' too. I was born and brought up in Sparkhill, and there was a similar entry for our house and our neighbour. However, these were not back to back, they were relatively middle class houses in Phipson Road.

  • @itzjustmolly8509
    @itzjustmolly8509 6 месяцев назад +1

    Some houses that are built today living room kitchen and the dining room open plan they call it, they’ve gone backwards in their design, not improved match.

  • @jennifermeijer1975
    @jennifermeijer1975 3 месяца назад

    Does anyone recall Tower Court in this area?

  • @citiesthroughmyeyes
    @citiesthroughmyeyes  2 года назад +1

    Toecaps, your comment doesn't show here for some reason but I received the email notification. I was wondering if someone would recognise a family member in the video. Here is the actual video where your granddad appears at 1:09
    player.bfi.org.uk/free/film/watch-decent-place-with-hot-and-cold-1970-online

    • @pinkiesue849
      @pinkiesue849 2 года назад

      It won't play out of the UK.

  • @jim23mac
    @jim23mac 2 месяца назад

    Of course (as the end of this video shows) there is absolutley nothing wrong with back-to-backs in principle any more than side-to-sides. The issues they had were: the poor quality of the construction, inadequate drainage and sewerage, damp, over-crowding and the habits of some of the occupants. I like the idea that they were not properly ventilated given that now modern flats and houses are made almost air-tight to reach today's standards and, if the occupants aren't careful, fantastic places for mold to grow.

  • @SajidHussain-lj5mr
    @SajidHussain-lj5mr 3 месяца назад

    Wery nise Howse 👍

  • @thechannel7209
    @thechannel7209 2 месяца назад

    23:54 😮😮😮😮