Between the wars
The next phase of Hazelwood Road's history occurs after World
War One. It produced a road largely built up, but with two tennis/bowling
clubs and two nurseries, in other words a very pleasant combination
of social green space and new middle-class housing. It appears
likely that the agricultural land belonging to Fox Green Farm
between Fox Hollies Road and number 27 was sold for building after
1918, while the farm became a dairy business, getting its milk
in from elsewhere. The land for the Methodist Tennis and Bowling
Club was bought in 1919, and was opened in 1920 as a private Recreation
Club. Financial difficulties led to purchase by the Trust, the
governing body of Acocks Green Methodist church. There was a great
increase in membership in the 1930s.
After the War the courts and green were refurbished, and the
club was popular again in the 1950s. However use had declined
by 1964, and the whole site was sold in 1968 for housing. The
other tennis club was on the south side of the road, as we have
seen. The second nursery adjoining it had its entrance at 90 Shirley
Road, and was owned by Arthur Jones from about 1944, and by A.
Laurence Jones in the 1950s. The last directory entry was in 1963.
Leonard Skan ran a small dairy from the garage of number 101,
with the horse stabled in the back garden. The garage/bottling
shed contained a table and a boiler for sterilising bottles. Churns
came from Chalmers in Henley - in - Arden or from Birmingham Dairies.
Mr Skan had worked for Miss Hastings of Fox Green Farm beforehand.
When he bought the dairy business from her he started to rent
the house. This was in 1937. The Skans could not have slabs in
front of the garage but had to have a soil path instead, in case
the sound of the horse's hooves disturbed the neighbours! Leonard
Skan put a sign up advertising his business facing Fox Hollies
Road, but a number of residents of Hazelwood Road complained,
and he had to take the sign down. To start with Mr Skan's milk
round included large houses with servants on the roads off Yardley
Road. However around 1944 the rounds were compulsorily zoned,
and he got Tyseley, where 'they only wanted stera'. So he gave
up the dairy business and went to work at Rover as a commissionaire.
Leonard Skan worked hard to raise money for St Mary's halls on
Summer Road, and also worked at the Conservative and Unionist
Club on Station Road on Saturday night. When he died, Painters
did him up with a dicky bow, because that was how they remembered
him.
Margaret Bryan (née Dalgetty), formerly of number
83 recalls:
Before the War, when I attended
Acocks Green Primary School, Mr Skan would sometimes give myself and two friends
lifts home from school in his milk cart if he met us walking along Westley Road!
this was a great treat.

Leonard Skan and his horse Peter
The housing that was built after World War One consisted not
only of pairs of semis, but also a good number of detached houses.
The semis numbers 29 - 31 were there by 1931, 37 - 43 by 1924
and 49 - 59 by 1925. Numbers 49 - 51 were set back from the road
because of several large trees. Number 33 was there by 1933, number
47 was occupied by 1925, and number 61 by 1924. Number 63 was
built by 1923, and briefly had the name Tennessee. Number 73 was
built by 1924, semis numbers 77 - 79 and detached numbers 81 -
89 by 1925 (with the exception of number 85, which according to Margaret Bryan
was built around 1937/8) and
number 93 by 1926. Numbers 95 - 97 were built by 1926. Numbers
99 - 101 (semis) were built by 1925. Both these pairs were built
by Philip Perks, who was Miss Hastings' brother - in - law. Number
99 was originally called Penrith, and number 101 Marston. Number
101 was built with stables, as said before, but without a loft
opening. According to Arthur Huckfield, the first owner did not
want the neighbours to be able to come down into her house! Number
64 was listed by 1934, number 74 by 1927, and number 104 by 1928.
Number 74 was built by the builder Philip Harris Perks for himself.
He also built the semis numbers 76 - 102 on former Clifton House
land. Numbers 76 - 80 were occupied by 1926. Their gardens are
shorter than the others. Muriel Thompson told us that the local
legend is that Mr Perks could visit his daughter directly from
his garden as she lived in one of the semis he built in the same
style on Olton Boulevard East. However, according to Kath Huckfield
his daughter lived in the detached house next to Clifton House.......so
perhaps Mr Perks just wanted a big garden! Numbers 88 - 90 were
also occupied by 1926, numbers 82 - 86 and 92 - 94 by 1927, and
numbers 96 - 102 by 1928.
The City widened Hazelwood Road in 1932, and bought a strip
of land in front of numbers 44 - 58 in 1931 as part of this work.
This straightened the bend in the road somewhat.


Hazelwood Road before straightening, April 1931. Number
63 is on the left.
The chimneys of number 58 can be seen on the right.
Photo courtesy Birmingham Libraries

A 1930s view after straightening, with number 63 on
the left again

The same view in 2003

Another view after straightening, this time looking
towards Fox Hollies Road, September 1932.
Photo courtesy Birmingham Libraries

Mr Brown, who built number 47, we believe (Photo courtesy
of Mr Frisby)
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