This place is a fascinating glimpse back to the dawn of the industrial revolution, and by extension the dawn of Birmingham as a city. It's a little known fact that the spot on which the back-to-backs sit was, at one stage, the very edge of Birmingham. One one side of the building the city was beginning to look like the place we know today. On the other side it was, literally, fields that would have stretched all the way down to the village of Stirchley.
This is a museum of the Birmingham slums, where the poor workers of the early industrial age found themselves living as they left the rural life for the city one. My Nan can remember being visited by relatives from the countryside in the 1920s who arrived by horse and cart - and the back to backs evokes this perfectly. How strange it must have been to have moved from the idyllic countryside to what was, by modern standards, an urban hovel. This place is well worth a visit if you want to get in touch with the early days of our city.
As an aside, the traditional sweep shop (which is on Inge Street and open to the public) is well worth a visit also. read more