The journey to the site
History of Warley Woods
Just beyond Harborne and outside the Birmingham boundary, Warley Woods were administered as a Birmingham park from 1906.
The district known by that name originally stretched northwards as far as Bristnall Fields and Londonderry. Warley appears in the Domesday Book as Werwelie. The second element of this placename is clearly Old English leah meaning 'a clearing' or 'a farm settlement in a clearing in a woodland area'.
Aspen Leaves. Image from Wikipedia by copyright holder Hugo.arg who allows its reuse under GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or later.
The first element is less easy to interpret. In the 13th century the name was written as Wervelegh and Wervesley, in the 14th century as Wervelegh. This element may derive from Old English waroth meaning a (river) bank, though which river here is uncertain. Or it may derive from wafre, a word that sometimes meant 'wavering' and may be a reference to the quaking of aspen leaves.
In 1792 the Birmingham Quaker gun-maker Samuel Galton II of Barr Hall in Great Barr bought the Warley estate to build a new home. The grounds were designed by landscape architect Humphry Repton and the house built in gothick style by the Scottish architect, Robert Lugar. It was known either as Warley Hall or Warley Abbey.
The Galtons had gone by 1841 and the house passed through the hands of various owners. About 1902 the house and much of the estate was bought by a building contractor, William Henry Jones as a speculative venture. Before and after World War I streets north of the hall were laid out and houses built. Bearwood was also encroaching from the east.
The philanthropic efforts of Alexander Chance of Chance Glassworks fame had resulted in 1902 in saving Lightwoods Park from the developers and its gift to Birmingham City Council. He now co-ordinated a campaign with local people to raise enough money to buy Warley Woods by public subscription. Although beyond the City boundary, the park was given to Birmingham City Council in 1906 and dubbed by Chance 'The People's Park'.
Before World War II this was a major Birmingham park set out with elaborate flower beds and supplying plants and flowers form its walled garden nurseries to various City Council sites. The glasshouses were demolished in 1996.
The park had become badly neglected by the late 20th century and in 1997 a community trust was set up to restore the site. Some 40ha in area, the park is now Grade II Listed on the English Heritage Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
Part of the park had been let to Edgbaston Golf Club in 1896. Their lease was not renewed in 1906 and the club moved to Ridgacre in Harborne and later to their present site at Edgbaston Hall. In 1921 the City Council reinstated the golf course as a municipal venture using the Abbey as the clubhouse. The building was demolished in 1957.
The district known by that name originally stretched northwards as far as Bristnall Fields and Londonderry. Warley appears in the Domesday Book as Werwelie. The second element of this placename is clearly Old English leah meaning 'a clearing' or 'a farm settlement in a clearing in a woodland area'.
Aspen Leaves. Image from Wikipedia by copyright holder Hugo.arg who allows its reuse under GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or later.
The first element is less easy to interpret. In the 13th century the name was written as Wervelegh and Wervesley, in the 14th century as Wervelegh. This element may derive from Old English waroth meaning a (river) bank, though which river here is uncertain. Or it may derive from wafre, a word that sometimes meant 'wavering' and may be a reference to the quaking of aspen leaves.
In 1792 the Birmingham Quaker gun-maker Samuel Galton II of Barr Hall in Great Barr bought the Warley estate to build a new home. The grounds were designed by landscape architect Humphry Repton and the house built in gothick style by the Scottish architect, Robert Lugar. It was known either as Warley Hall or Warley Abbey.
The Galtons had gone by 1841 and the house passed through the hands of various owners. About 1902 the house and much of the estate was bought by a building contractor, William Henry Jones as a speculative venture. Before and after World War I streets north of the hall were laid out and houses built. Bearwood was also encroaching from the east.
The philanthropic efforts of Alexander Chance of Chance Glassworks fame had resulted in 1902 in saving Lightwoods Park from the developers and its gift to Birmingham City Council. He now co-ordinated a campaign with local people to raise enough money to buy Warley Woods by public subscription. Although beyond the City boundary, the park was given to Birmingham City Council in 1906 and dubbed by Chance 'The People's Park'.
Before World War II this was a major Birmingham park set out with elaborate flower beds and supplying plants and flowers form its walled garden nurseries to various City Council sites. The glasshouses were demolished in 1996.
The park had become badly neglected by the late 20th century and in 1997 a community trust was set up to restore the site. Some 40ha in area, the park is now Grade II Listed on the English Heritage Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
Part of the park had been let to Edgbaston Golf Club in 1896. Their lease was not renewed in 1906 and the club moved to Ridgacre in Harborne and later to their present site at Edgbaston Hall. In 1921 the City Council reinstated the golf course as a municipal venture using the Abbey as the clubhouse. The building was demolished in 1957.