Sinopsis
HWM On Air - the audio channel of History West Midlands tells the enthralling stories of the people who shaped the heart of England and the world beyond. These programmes introduce you to fascinating people and events - from Anglo Saxon warrior kings; to radical thinkers driving forward the Industrial Revolution; and, the great political orators of the 19th and 20th centuries, in the historic counties of Herefordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire. Let us take you on a journey onto battlefields; into cathedrals; and, through the forests where Shakespeare walked as well as those cradles of modern industry Birmingham. Stoke-on-Trent and the Ironbridge Gorge.
Episodios
-
Worcester Moments - Religion: The dissolution of the monasteries and the effect on the religious life of Worcester - Programme 1
03/03/2020In this programme, Andrew explains how the Dissolution of the monastaries at the hands of Henry VIII and Thomas Cromwell had a profound impact on the religious life of the city and the welfare of its residents and led directly to the foundation of the Kings School. He talks to the publisher of History West Midlands, Mike Gibbs. Keywords: Worcester, Dissolution, River Severn, Henry VIII, Thomas Cromwell, Andrew Reekes
-
How Birmingham and Shakespeare won the American Midwest
28/02/2020In this second of two podcasts on the voyage to America made in 1874 by Birmingham’s lost philosopher, Professor Ewan Fernie, Director of the ‘Everything to Everybody’ Project, and the project’s American Lead, Professor Katherine Scheil, continue their discussion with the Publisher of History West Midlands, Mike Gibbs. In this episode, they discuss how Dawson and Shakespeare reached the American frontier. They bring out the wider impact of Birmingham’s nineteenth-century culture on the developing cultural identity of the United States. They unfold a range of intimate relationships between American Shakespeareans and Dawson. And they discuss how Dawson’s quiet right-hand man, the industrialist and bibliophile, Samuel Timmins, was also a major influence on American Shakespeareans. Overall, this programme evokes an energetic transatlantic scholarly community reaching from Birmingham across America, an international Shakespearean fellowship who were working out a new culture for new times. The podcast ends
-
Birmingham's Ambassador to America: George Dawson
28/02/2020In 1874, Birmingham’s most famous politician, Joseph Chamberlain sent George Dawson across the Atlantic as ‘Birmingham’s Ambassador to America’ – almost as if Birmingham were a cultural power in its own right. Dawson went down a storm in America, and his trip was enthusiastically reported back home. But Dawson’s embassy to America has since been almost entirely forgotten in Birmingham and in the United States. Now the ‘Everything to Everybody’ Project has started to uncover the traces. In this the first of two History West Midlands podcasts, the Director of the ‘Everything to Everybody’ Project, Professor Ewan Fernie, and the project’s American champion, Professor Katherine Scheil of the University of Minnesota, piece the story together for the Publisher of History West Midlands, Mike Gibbs. They talk about where Dawson went, who he spoke to, what he talked about, what he thought of America and Americans, and what they thought of him. It is a story which begins to unlock a forgotten and special relations
-
The James Watt diaries
25/11/2019Historians have extensively studied the achievements of the Scottish engineer James Watt Jr, seen by many as the father of the steam engines that powered the Industrial Revolution. However, despite their efforts Watt the man often remains a mysterious figure. Now researcher Eleanor Beestin has explored Watt’s personal notebooks and correspondence, preserved in the Wolfson Centre for archival research at the Library of Birmingham, to reveal Watt’s state of mind, his relationships with family and friends and his unspoken fears. She talked to History West Midlands publisher Mike Gibbs. Keywords: James Watt, Eleanor Beestin, Industrial Revolution, Library of Birmingham
-
Maggie Andrews: Foster mothers - Episode 4
25/11/2019Groups of young evacuees, standing on railway stations with gas masks and cardboard suitcases have become an iconic image of wartime Britain, but their histories have eclipsed those of women whose domestic lives were affected. In her new book, “Women and Evacuation in the Second World War”, University of Worcester Historian and Author, Professor Maggie Andrews, explores the effects of this unparalleled interference in the lives of women, looking at the impact on their everyday experience, and on ideas of femininity and domesticity. She shows that evacuation changed views of motherhood forever. In this programme, Professor Andrews tells History West Midlands Publisher, Mike Gibbs, the stories of some of these women. In other programmes in this series, Professor Andrews reveals the experiences of mothers who waved goodbye to their children as they were evacuated; those who left their homes and families to travel with their young children; and of the women who became foster mothers, sometimes for years. Professo
-
Maggie Andrews: The mother's who accompanied children - Episode 3
25/11/2019Groups of young evacuees, standing on railway stations with gas masks and cardboard suitcases have become an iconic image of wartime Britain, but their histories have eclipsed those of women whose domestic lives were affected. In her new book, “Women and Evacuation in the Second World War”, University of Worcester Historian and Author, Professor Maggie Andrews, explores the effects of this unparalleled interference in the lives of women, looking at the impact on their everyday experience, and on ideas of femininity and domesticity. She shows that evacuation changed views of motherhood forever. In this programme, Professor Andrews tells History West Midlands Publisher, Mike Gibbs, the stories of some of these women. In other programmes in this series, Professor Andrews reveals the experiences of mothers who waved goodbye to their children as they were evacuated; those who left their homes and families to travel with their young children; and of the women who became foster mothers, sometimes for years. Professo
-
Maggie Andrews: The mother's who waved goodbye - Episode 2
25/11/2019Groups of young evacuees, standing on railway stations with gas masks and cardboard suitcases have become an iconic image of wartime Britain, but their histories have eclipsed those of women whose domestic lives were affected. In her new book, “Women and Evacuation in the Second World War”, University of Worcester Historian and Author, Professor Maggie Andrews, explores the effects of this unparalleled interference in the lives of women, looking at the impact on their everyday experience, and on ideas of femininity and domesticity. She shows that evacuation changed views of motherhood forever. In this programme, Professor Andrews tells History West Midlands Publisher, Mike Gibbs, the stories of some of these women. In other programmes in this series, Professor Andrews reveals the experiences of mothers who waved goodbye to their children as they were evacuated; those who left their homes and families to travel with their young children; and of the women who became foster mothers, sometimes for years. Professo
-
Maggie Andrews: Introduction to Evacuation - Episode 1
25/11/2019Groups of young evacuees, standing on railway stations with gas masks and cardboard suitcases have become an iconic image of wartime Britain, but their histories have eclipsed those of women whose domestic lives were affected. In her new book, “Women and Evacuation in the Second World War”, University of Worcester Historian and Author, Professor Maggie Andrews, explores the effects of this unparalleled interference in the lives of women, looking at the impact on their everyday experience, and on ideas of femininity and domesticity. She shows that evacuation changed views of motherhood forever. In this programme, Professor Andrews tells History West Midlands Publisher, Mike Gibbs, the stories of some of these women. In other programmes in this series, Professor Andrews reveals the experiences of mothers who waved goodbye to their children as they were evacuated; those who left their homes and families to travel with their young children; and of the women who became foster mothers, sometimes for years. Professo
-
The mistress o f Joseph Chamberlain's Highbury - Mary Endicott Chamberlain
25/11/2019Joseph Chamberlain was one of the dominant figures of political life in Britain and its Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, famously described by a young Winston Churchill as ‘the man who made the political weather’. But less attention has been given to Chamberlain’s personal life which was scarred by tragedy when his first two wives died in childbirth. Then, after more than a decade, Joe surprised everyone when he met and proposed to the beautiful American Mary Endicott, the much younger daughter of a member of the US cabinet. Mary became Joe’s third wife and the step mother of his children including Austen and Neville who would later become Chancellor of the Exchequer and Prime Minster respectively. At Chamberlain’s homes at Highbury in Birmingham and in London, Mary was a famous hostess who, for more than two decades, was at the very centre of the country’s political and social life. Then after Joe suffered a stroke in 1906 she remained at his side until he died in 1914. Intrigued by Mary
-
Mary Macarthur: The Working Woman's Champion
21/11/2019The author Cathy Hunt talks to publisher of History West Midlands, Mike Gibbs about Mary Macarthur and what she achieved in such a short life, dying at the age of 40 in 1921. Mary's incredible activism and leadership was responsible for raising awareness of women’s poor working conditions and encouraging them to speak out against injustice and inequality. Mary Macarthur is perhaps best known for the prominent part she played in the women chain makers’ strike in Cradley Heath, Staffordshire in 1910. The dispute, which lasted two months, ended in success with the women receiving the country’s first minimum wage. It was a triumph but it was by no means an isolated event and Mary Macarthur, as leader of the country’s first all-female general trade union, the National Federation of Women Workers, travelled the length and breadth of the country making sure that women were strengthened by better pay and working conditions and union membership. Cathy explores Mary Macarthur, who was such an extraordinary individual
-
Unique Politician Oswald Mosley and his Birmingham Political Career
01/11/2019The latest series of the highly acclaimed BBC One drama “Peaky Blinders” introduces us to a new “villain” – Oswald Mosely - one of Britain’s most enigmatic and controversial figures of the 20th century who played prominent role in the political life of Birmingham and the West Midlands between the first and second world wars. He began conventionally as a Conservative MP but became disillusioned by their lack of action to reduce unemployment so moved to the Labour Party but gave up the established party system entirely to form the British Fascist Union – the Blackshirts - where he abandoned democracy for demagoguery and street violence. Like the “hero” of a classical Greek tragedy, Mosley’s glittering career of great promise ended in shame. He and his wife were interred in Holloway prison throughout the war, and in the post-war years they were widely reviled and marginalised. Andrew Reekes, historian and author looks back at Mosley’s most constructive years were spent in Birmingham in the 1920s when, as a br
-
Spanish flu comes to Birmingham
21/10/2019In 1918, amidst the turmoil of the First World War, a new deadly threat swept through Europe and beyond. Spanish Flu, infected and killed tens of millions over the next two years. In Birmingham, three separate waves of the disease hit the city, causing massive disruption to the life of the city which was in Italy still at war and then trying to recover. This was a time of additional grief as returning servicemen who had survived years of war suddenly died soon after getting home while others returned to find loved ones dead or dying. Now Justine Pick from the University of Birmingham has investigated the records to discover how Spanish Flu affected the people of Birmingham. Here she talks to History West Midlands publisher Mike Gibbs. Keywords: Spanish Flu, First World War, Birmingham, Justine Pick, University of Birmingham
-
The Birmingham Macbeth - Shakespeare and the Shelbys
04/10/2019More than six million people watched the first episode of series five of the BBC’s Peaky Blinders – the mesmerising drama of violence, moody characters and intrigue. Among them was internationally recognised Shakespeare expert Professor Ewan Fernie of the Shakespeare Institute of the University of Birmingham, Director of the high profile ‘Everything to Everybody’ project to unlock the city’s Shakespeare Memorial Library. Professor Fernie tells the publisher of History West Midlands he found himself seeing strong parallels with Shakespeare’s masterpiece – Macbeth. Keywords: Shakespeare, Peaky Blinders, Macbeth, Professor Ewan Fernie
-
James Watt and slavery: The untold story
21/08/2019Recently History West Midlands has sponsored researchers led by Dr Malcolm Dick of the University of Birmingham, in an exploration of different, and previously unreported facets of the complex life and personality of James Watt; the Scottish engineer who became an icon of the Industrial Revolution. Searching voluminous archives at the Library of Birmingham one of them, Dr Stephen Mullen of Glasgow University, went beyond the “heroic figure” of Watt the engineer and developer of the steam engine, to investigate the time before Watt moved to Birmingham to join Mathew Boulton in their historic partnership. Dr Mullen spent months delving into more than 50 years of little-studied correspondence from Watt; his father James Watt Senior; and his brother, John, about their extensive involvement in transatlantic mercantile trade with the North American colonies and the sugar plantations of the Caribbean. Dr Mullen's research reveals a dark side to the story of the Watt family. For the fist time it provides evidence tha
-
How Birmingham and George Dawson reached the other side of the world
25/07/2019Professor Holbrook of the University of Queensland formerly President of the International Shakespeare Association, recently visited Birmingham to explore the Birmingham Shakespeare Memorial Library: the first great Shakespeare Library in the world, and the only great Shakespeare Library which truly belongs to all the people of the city. In this podcast he discusses the global impact and legacy of the Library’s founder, George Dawson, who pioneered a visionary new civic culture in Birmingham. It reveals an extraordinary connection between Dawson’s Birmingham and the only Australian copy of the historic 1623 First Folio of Shakespeare’s collected works which was donated to Sydney’s Free Public Library in 1884 by Richard and George Tangye from Birmingham. He also discusses connections between Dawson’s ‘civic gospel’ and nineteenth-century Australian politics. Professor Holbrook talks with Professor Ewan Fernie, Director of the ‘Everything to Everybody’ Project, a pioneering collaboration between Birmingham Ci
-
Bovril, Whisky and Gravediggers: The Spanish Flu Pandemic comes to the West Midlands
26/06/2019‘Spanish Flu,’ killed more than 50 million people and affected millions more, across the globe during 1918 and 1919. Soldiers, POWs and the workers in war-industries all fell victim to this pandemic which brought fear and death to villages, towns and cities on the home front, even after the guns of the First World War battlefields had fallen silent. A failure to recognise and deal with the magnitude and threat the virus posed was exasperated by a wartime shortage of trained doctors and nurses and led to an inadequate medical response to the crisis. There were long queues outside pharmacies and doctors’ surgeries. The despairing population turned to charlatans, patent medicines, food supplements even alcohol to prevent or cure any symptoms of the flu. Keywords: Spanish Flu, Worcester, Pandemic
-
Vittoria Street: Encapsulating the Jewellery Quarter
20/05/2019Just a few yards from the Chamberlain Clock at the heart of the Jewellery Quarter is a street that encapsulates the social and economic history of this distinctive and important district. It is Vittoria Street. Seemingly a quiet backwater in the midst of this busy area, yet does Vittoria Street have an intriguing history that tells us much about the stages of development of the Jewellery Quarter, its historical buildings, its manufacturers and the lives of its residents, poor as well as wealthy. Keywords: Vittoria Street, Carl Chinn, Birmingham, Jewellery Quarter
-
Professor Tobias Döring talks about the treasures held in the Birmingham Shakespeare library in the German language
16/04/2019Birmingham’s Shakespeare Library has always held more materials in German than in any language other than English. There are now thousands of German holdings, including some utterly unique treasures. In this film, Professor Tobias Döring of Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, presents perhaps the most extraordinary and iconic German book in Birmingham’s Shakespeare Library and reflects on the important relationships between Birmingham, Shakespeare and Germany. Keywords: Professor Tobias Döring, Shakespeare Library, Everything to Everybody, Shakespeare, Birmingham
-
Stories of women’s everyday lives in Coventry between 1850 and 1950
07/03/2019Listen to stories of women’s everyday lives in Coventry between 1850 and 1950. This was an extraordinary century of change and women, as always, were strong, resilient and resourceful. Here we glimpse aspects of their lives at close quarters, drawing on their experiences of growing up in this industrial city as they went to school, started work and grew into womanhood. Dr Cathy Hunt is the author of ‘A History of Women’s Lives in Coventry’, published by Pen and Sword. Keywords: Coventry, Women, Cathy Hunt
-
Birmingham brass makers: Cut throat capitalism in the Industrial Revolution
21/02/2019The world of the brass makers of the industrial revolution Birmingham is as a world or powerful elites, industrial espionage, propaganda, deceit and political influence to create cartels and monopolies. Keywords: Brass, Industrial Revolution, Watt, Boulton, Birmingham