Farm, Bordesley

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Farm, the Georgian mansion built on the "Owen's Farm" estate within the manor of Bordesley, by Sampson II Lloyd (1699 - 1779). Still set within a ten acre remnant (a public recreation ground known as "Farm Park") of its former 56 acre grounds. Now surrounded by the urban landscape of Sparkbrook and the suburbs of Birmingham
Portrait of Sampson II Lloyd (1699 - 1779) an iron-master and co-founder of Lloyds Bank, who purchased the estate in 1742 and built the surviving Georgian mansion, which he called "The Farm" or "Farm". Collection of Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery

Farm within the former manor of Bordesley,[1] is an historic estate now situated in the area of Sparkbrook, a suburb of the city of Birmingham, England. It is the "focal point in family mythology"[2] of the prominent and wide-spread Lloyd family, Quakers, iron producers and founders of Lloyds Bank.

History

File:Blue plaque Sampson Lloyd.jpg
English Heritage blue plaque on the building

The former 56-acre "Owen's Farm"[3] with an Elizabethan farmhouse[4] in the manor of Bordesley,[5] now in the locality of Sparkbrook, was purchased in 1742 by Sampson II Lloyd (1699 - 1779) of nearby Edgbaston Street, Birmingham, an iron-master who later in 1765 co-founded Lloyds Bank. He was descended from the ancient family of Lloyd of Dolobran Hall in Montgomeryshire (now Powys) in Wales. He retained the Tudor farmhouse and built near it "Farm" an eponymous mansion house, which survives as a grade II* listed building known today as "Lloyd's Farmhouse, Farm Park, 139 Sampson Road, Birmingham", one of the most important of the rare surviving Georgian buildings in the city of Birmingham.[6][7] An English Heritage blue plaque is affixed to the building.

The original "Owen's Farmhouse" still stood in the grounds of the Georgian house in 1907, "a very beautiful piece of Tudor architecture", possibly then the oldest house in Birmingham.[8] Lloyd spent most of his time in his large town house in Edgbaston Street, Birmingham, returning to Farm, his rural retreat, at weekends. Over time the location became unfashionable and surrounded by housing, and the family moved to Edgbaston Grove, a home in a more fashionable location. Farm was donated to the City in the 1920s by John Henry Lloyd (1855-1944), of Egbaston Grove, Birmingham,[9] Lord Mayor of Birmingham in 1901-1902[10] (only son of George Braithwaite Lloyd (1824-1903) by his wife Mary[11] Hutchinson[12]) and the grounds laid out as a public park.[13] One of his four sons, Alan Scrivener Lloyd (d.1916), MC, broke the family tradition of pacifism and was killed in action at Ypres in World War I.[14] It is now a regional home for the Bromford Housing Group. "Farm Park" (bounded by Sampson Road, Kendall Road,[15] Dolobran Road and a row of terraces on Dearman Road[16] (all names connected with the Lloyd family)) within which "Farm House" stands today, is a public park consisting of part of the former grounds of the mansion, surrounded by a densely built urban landscape, referred to now as "The Capital of British Pakistan"[17] and the centre of Birmingham's "Balti Triangle".

Sources

Lloyd Family History

Leading authorities

The three main authorities on the Lloyd family are as follows:[18]

Other sources

References

  1. In historic documents the residence of this branch of the Lloyd family is generally given as simply "Bordesley", which was then a defined rural area, but is now virtually unknown by local residents and the name for the locality has altered to "Sparkbrook", named from a local stream
  2. Lloyd, Alan, p.1
  3. http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/whats-on/things-to-do/a-walk-in-the-park-farm-park-sparkbrook-124328
  4. http://billdargue.jimdo.com/placenames-gazetteer-a-to-y/places-s/sparkbrook/
  5. http://www.bgfl.org/bgfl/custom/resources_ftp/client_ftp/teacher/history/jm_jones/jmj_maps_1/page14.htm
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-217589-lloyd-s-farmhouse-farm-park-#.Vmixwb9w8qc
  8. Lloyd, S., 1907, p.36
  9. Venn, John, Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students ..., Volume 2 [1]
  10. http://birminghamhistory.co.uk/forum/showthread.php?t=40423&page=5
  11. Obituary George Braithwaite Lloyd (1824-1903) in Grace's Guide
  12. Alumni Cantabrigienses
  13. http://billdargue.jimdo.com/placenames-gazetteer-a-to-y/places-s/sparkbrook/
  14. Roberts, Sian, Great War Britain Birmingham: Remembering 1914-1918
  15. Kendall in Westmorland was the home of the Braithwaite family, a daughter of which became the wife of Samuel I Lloyd (1768-1849)
  16. Mary Dearman (d.1826) was the wife of George Braithwaite I Lloyd (1794-1857)
  17. The BBC sitcom Citizen Khan focuses on the life of Mr Khan and his family, Pakistani immigrants in the Sparkhill area, which it dubbed "The capital of British Pakistan" in the credits
  18. Per Lloyd, Humphrey, 1975, Preface

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.