In the early years of the 20th
Century, Hall Green began to grow from a sleepy hamlet to a bustling
suburban community, with the coming of the railway in 1912 accelerating
this change. A newly built house on the ‘Oldhouse Farm Estate’, situated
between Highfield Road and Robin Hood Lane could be bought in the 1920’s
for £550 – with mortgage repayments of ‘£3-2s-0d every lunar month’.
Soon there was an area between
the river Cole and the main Stratford Road, which housed some 12000
people where, although there were places of worship built for
Methodists, Baptists, Roman Catholics and the Society of Friends; there
was no Church of England. Colonel John Ellis Purfoy Jervoise, the owner
of a large amount of the land being built on, offered a field entirely
surrounded by houses, but with access from both Paradise lane and
Highfield Road, on which a Chapel of Ease could be built. Christ Church.
This land was part of the Parish of Christ Church, Yardley Wood. The
offer was gladly accepted and on September 24th 1923 Army
Huts bought for £80 was licensed to worship and dedicated to St Cadoc.
The building consisted of two huts; cleverly joined together to make an
L shaped structure. The long section was used for worship and the
smaller section was used as a hall for church community groups. There
were folding doors, which could be pulled either across the church – to
make the hall larger – or across the hall to make the church larger.
This building was used regularly for the next 30 years.
After the Second World War, it
became increasingly clear that a more permanent church was required and
in 1953, a curate was appointed specifically to investigate creating a
new parish within Hall Green with its own church building.
On June 29th1954, St
Cadocs Chapel of Ease became St Peter’s Church and fundraising commenced
to build a new, modern church. A fundraising leaflet published in 1957
said of the existing building -‘The exterior was dilapidated, the
interior dark and dreary and the roof leaked! Money was in short supply,
and to help financially, part of the building was used for a time as a
school’.
Space became more and more of a
problem, and whilst planning continued for a new church, a Nissen (again
an ex-military building) was bought to accommodate the thriving Scout
Group and the Sunday School. Little did any one dream that within two
years, this Nissen hut would need to be used for all church worship and
activities!
On April 18th, 1959 a
jumble sale was held in support of the building fund. Unfortunately, a
pile of unsold clothes were put too near to a heater, and by the time
that a group of ladies arrived in the evening for a Whist drive, the
building was a blazing inferno. With hymn and prayer books salvaged, but
smoke damaged, services were still held the next day in the Nissen hut,
where a small harmonium and children’s chairs were put to good use by
the congregation of some 164 people. As news report in the Evening Mail
said, the jumble sale, which raised £30, caused damage 0f £7000!
It was decided to erect a
pre-cast concrete building, which was relatively cheap, could be used as
a temporary church and, when no longer needed in this capacity, could
become the church hall. The first service was held in this building on
Easter Day 1960. As Bill Roberts, Warden Emeritus was to write of this
day ‘All Easter Day services were held in the new hall: without heat or
light, but who cared. It was a joy to know that matters had progressed
so far – but back into the Nissen hut the following Sunday. In fact,
later that year, the Lord Bishop of Birmingham was able to dedicate the
‘new Parish Hall’ for use as a temporary church.
With money hard to come by,
nothing was wasted. As the old, damaged building was pulled down, any
usable timber was salvaged and put to one side. From this timber a large
hut was erected, and whilst officially named ‘the Annex’, in recognition
that it should be available for all youth activities, it rapidly became
known as ‘the Scout Hut’.
Some 40 years later, the ‘Parish
Hall’ is still in daily use. Whilst it is structurally sound, it has
many deficiencies for modern day use. ‘The Scout Hut’ is still used for
Scouting and Guiding, but is totally inappropriate for this or any other
activity.
It is telling that for an
investment of £12,518, local parishioners have had the opportunity for
the last 44 years to serve the local community- a capital cost of less
than £290 per year.
Our challenge is now to have the
vision, generosity and drive which those first parishioners had, so that
we can renovate a develop a new facility, capable of serving the
community of Hall Green as it evolves and changes over the next 40
years.
( Acknowledgement : much of
this article is a summary of the History of St Peters Church, written
in 1988 by Bill Roberts, Warden Emeritus for many years)