Birmingham but not as you know it! View from Bradford Street, 1816. This engraving shows a heavily industrialised area with St Martin’s church in the middle ground and Christ Church, near what is now Victoria Square, in the far distance. You can see the toll gate in the street.
Collection-based workshop - Birmingham's Gun Trade: The Global Context @BMTMCC 13 June.Through this workshop we will consider Birmingham’s gun trade during the 18th and 19th century in both a local and global context. Booking essential. https://t.co/eItVOTkK1r @Eventbrite
@BCLMCurators @BMT_Photo@BMAGcurators Out tilt hammer started its life in the Black Country in the 18th century, before being moved to A.&F. Parkes in Aston in the 19th century and having another 100 year life making tools.
@Circa1350BC@sciencemuseum We have some old biscuit moulds, but the earliest actual biscuit I can find is from WW1 (with scribbled message and date). You win this time Science Museum
Join @artsatbham for The Centre for Modern and Contemporary History's Annual Lecture on 13 June. From 17:00, we welcome Professor Satia as she explores Galtons of Birmingham, the biggest gun-making firm in 18th century Britain owned by a Quaker family https://t.co/T9UcD2ZRaN
'Cast your mind back to a time when big hair was all the rage and there was this crazy new thing called the World Wide Web.' This was the age of beige...
Assistant Curator @shazhussain93 discovers why early PCs were all so beige. Read more on our blog https://t.co/RqtIJakQDm
NEW blog post! Read about how Birmingham Manufactures Project were able to photograph some of the very big and heavy machines in our Museum Collection Centre! https://t.co/8zjgY8jeOO
'I was yellow, all over' Hear first-hand accounts from female munitions workers about some of the dangers and difficulties they faced: https://t.co/xMSvdSDDXl #womenMW
NEW blog post! Get to know more about some of the items in our collection made by Alfred Birds & Sons at their Digbeth factory! https://t.co/qnTTnWsOFk