Six generations of a British family

Tag: Birmingham

Pioneering athletes in Birmingham

Most spectators at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham would have been unaware of the city’s lengthy role in promoting athletics competitions. The Birmingham Athletic Club (BAC), one of the first British multi-sport clubs, was established in 1866. And 155 years ago, just one year after its launch, the BAC hosted the National Olympian Games in Birmingham, a precursor of the international Olympic games.  

The German Gymnasium, London, 1866

The club’s success was due in large part to the energetic efforts of two outstanding local athletes, Clement Davies and Joseph Hubbard.  Clement Davies was the son of John Birt Davies, professor of forensic medicine at Queen’s College and the first coroner of Birmingham. Educated at King Edward’s grammar school and Cambridge university where he developed his athletic skills, Clement excelled at jumping. At a sports day organised by the Birmingham Rifle Volunteers in May 1865, Clement, aged 23, won first prizes for the highest standing jump, longest running jump, vaulting the bar, and the sack race. He was also a keen boxer.

At another military sports display a few months later, participants were astonished to see a muscular young man push through the crowd of spectators into the arena. Uninvited, he proceeded to perform a series of elegant exercises on the horizontal bar, the like of which no one had seen before. The crowd, hugely impressed, demanded to know who the interloper was. His name was Joseph Hubbard, an employee of a local manufacturing firm, who had taught himself to perform astonishing athletic feats. Members of the BAC committee were so impressed that they sent him off to the German Gymnasium in London for training.

These two young men took the lead in getting the nascent athletics society off the ground. With Clement Davies as honorary secretary and Joseph Hubbard as chief trainer, or ‘professor’, the BAC organised its first gymnastics display in July 1866, drawing on advice from Ernst Ravenstein of the German Gymnastics Society.

Held at their makeshift gymnasium at Bingley Hall, the performances included running, leaping, vaulting and sack races, and exercises on the parallel bars. The club leased premises at Portland Road and the Kent Street baths, and other sports were added to their repertoire, including boxing, swimming and foxhunting. They recruited 250 members in their first year, as well as organising private classes for women and special sessions for schoolchildren.

The BAC was affiliated to the National Olympian Association (NOA), enabling members to compete in national contests. When the association was looking for a venue to hold its second national games, they were delighted to receive an offer from Birmingham. Clement Davies was appointed secretary of the NOA alongside his role at the BAC, with responsibility for organising the national competition.  Held over three days in June 1867, the NOA’s festival of sport began with a procession and ended with a grand ball. Competitors came from London, Manchester, Norwich, Derby, Newcastle, Leeds and elsewhere.

Various prizes were on offer, including ‘tilting at the ring’, in which horse riders galloped towards a cross-bar on which hung two small rings that they had to carry away on the end of a pointed lance. There were also running and jumping contests, wrestling and boxing, athletics, cricket, gymnastics and swimming. The event was considered a huge success and Clement Davies was commended for his ‘indefatigable energy’ in directing the proceedings.

Joseph Hubbard’s long career as an athlete and ‘professor of muscular science’ was still going strong in 1888. On the horizontal bar, parallel bars, and on horseback he was said to be ‘wonderfully good and no professional trapeze performer has been able to teach him anything’, so said the Birmingham Mail.

Clement Davies, my great grandfather, was too busy running his hardware factory to continue competing at a high level, but he remained actively involved in the BAC, being elected its vice-president and then president, a post he held until 1886. His interests expanded to include more sedentary activities, such as the card game whist, on which he published a book, but his support for the athletics club continued. He was a familiar figure at the annual gymastics displays at Birmingham Town Hall until the end of his life in May 1911.

Amateur athletics competition, 1865

Birmingham heritage

Just back from a trip to Birmingham to do more research for my forthcoming biography of John Birt Davies, Birmingham’s first coroner. The Wolfson Centre archives at Birmingham Central Library yielded some fascinating material, including microfilms of the register kept by Davies of the 30,000 inquests he presided over from 1839-1875.

I hadn’t been to the new library before. It’s extraordinary on the outside with its grey and gold layers covered in metal filigree rings – not my taste I have to say – but inside it’s stunning, with a circular design spanning ten levels. And almost every study space in the huge library was occupied, mainly by students, so it’s obviously providing a really useful service for young Brummies.

Tracing the coroner’s footsteps was more difficult. He arrived in Birmingham in 1822 after completing his medical training at Edinburgh University. He set up his first medical practice at 19 New Street, but no trace of the original building remains in this central shopping street. After his marriage to Sarah Redfern, the family home and medical practice moved to 25 Newhall Street where they lived until his retirement. Disappointingly few buildings from that era remain. Their last home was at 280 Hagley Road, Edgbaston, but that building has gone too.

Birmingham suffered greatly from bombing during WW2, but much of the destruction has happened since the 1960s. Those responsible for the mid-twentieth century developments favoured motor cars over pedestrians, but there’s been a change of heart since. Redevelopments at New Street Station and the Bullring are more successful, and the pedestrianisation of Centenary Square will be a triumph if it’s ever finished.

Most museums and galleries were shut at the time of our visit (Feb 2022), including the main museum in Chamberlain Square that I had very much wanted to see. It was undergoing renovation and there were signs of frantic activity to get everything ready in time for the 2022 Commonwealth Games, due to open in Birmingham on July 28th.

In Victorian times coroner’s inquests were held in pubs, often with the dead body present. I had hoped to find some of the old pubs still standing, particularly the Grand Turk in Ludgate Hill where many inquests took place, but sadly most have disappeared. I found just one where Davies had presided – the George and Dragon on the corner of Albion Street and Carver Street, now lovingly restored and renamed the Pig and Tail.

Old George and Dragon pub, now the Pig and Tail

Despite the wanton destruction of Birmingham’s heritage, I did make a few more exciting finds. These included the original site of the Birmingham and Midland Eye Hospital, that John Birt Davies helped to set up.

Old Birmingham Eye Hospital, now a hotel

The Davies family tomb in Edgbaston Old Church, with memorials to my great great grandfather, great grandfather and father is still there, as is the tomb of Clement and Ann Cotterill, my fourth great grandparents, in the graveyard of St Philip’s Cathedral.

Davies tomb at Edgbaston Old Church

And it was great to see once again the clocktower erected in honour of John Birt Davies still standing by the Five Ways roundabout. The clock had stopped, though, and it was in desperate need of a new coat of paint. Birmingham City Council – please wake up!

Clocktower at Five Ways, Birmingham, erected in honour of John Birt Davies

The life of John Birt Davies (1799-1878)

Having published mini-biographies of some of my ancestors, I’ve now got the family history bug. My next project is a full-length biography of John Birt Davies, Professor of Forensic Medicine at Queen’s College and Birmingham’s first coroner. A fascinating character, I could only scratch the surface of his remarkable achievements in A Stream of Lives. He definitely deserves more, so now I’m seeking to fill the following gaps in my knowledge.

Born in Hampshire, John spent most of his adult life in Birmingham, but his family roots lay in Cardiganshire, mid-Wales. Descended from Cardiganshire families on both his father’s and mother’s side, the family moved back there after his father’s death in 1812.

John was only 13 when his father, Thomas Davies, died. He was the eldest of seven children. They lived in the rural parish of Nately Scures and Newnham where Thomas was the rector. Finding herself a widow with seven small children, Martha, his mother, decided to move the family back to Wales to be close to her father, Alban Thomas Jones Gwynne, at Aberaeron.

Gap number one: I know Thomas died in December 1812, but when exactly did Martha and her children move to Wales? I believe they lived in a house called Tyglyn Aeron, very close to Alban’s house at Tyglyn Mansion. Did Alban own both these houses, or did he rent/buy Tyglyn Aeron specially for Martha and her family?

I know nothing about John Birt Davies’s early education. His family were English-speakers and Anglicans. Not a problem in Hampshire, but once they moved to Cardiganshire many of their neighbours would have spoken Welsh and attended non-conformist chapels.

Gap number two: Where did John Birt Davies go to school? Where were most English-speaking children educated in that part of Cardiganshire? Is it likely that John and his siblings learnt Welsh?

At some point John decided to train to become a doctor. He began his formal training at Edinburgh University in 1819, eventually graduating with an MD in 1822. In those days it was usual to take up an apprenticeship before undertaking formal medical training. Conveniently, Martha’s sister, Jane, was married to Christopher Arden, a surgeon/GP in Dorchester, Dorset. So John moved to Dorchester to become Christopher’s apprentice, but I do not know when he took up this position or how long he worked there.

Gap number three: When and for how long did John work for Christopher Arden in Dorchester? What was the usual length of time medical apprentices were expected to serve? Did they have to pay for their apprenticeship or did they earn a wage?

In addition to running the town’s medical practice, Christopher was a magistrate, a bailiff and six times Mayor of Dorchester. He also held an appointment as surgeon to Dorchester gaol. Clearly this busy man needed all the help he could get, so a bright apprentice must have been a boon. It seems possible that John helped look after the prisoners in Dorchester gaol and that his interest in forensic medicine stemmed from this period.

Gap number four? What duties were medical apprentices expected to take on? Is it likely that John was responsible for the medical care of prisoners in Dorchester gaol?

If you know the answers to any of these questions, or indeed have any snippets of information about John Birt Davies, please do get in touch. I’ll be hugely grateful for any suggestions that can help me move forward.

John Birt Davies

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