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The
name Acocks Green comes from the Acocks family who built a large house
in what would have been a hamlet at the time. In fact there were three
hamlets in the 17th century comprising of two inns, some scattered
farms and a tollgate in 1725. The earlier Acocks Green House was
recorded as having been given by a Richard Acock to his son. The first
mention of Acocks Green dates back to 1604 which lists it under the
Yardley Parish Register. This is an old established site and was once a
medieval settlement.
With
the arrival of the 19th century, the Birmingham to Oxford railway
opened a station in Acocks Green in 1852. Acocks Green, like its
neighbour Yardley now became the wealthy retreat of the city gentry. A
place to get out of the smoke of the city and relax in the semi rural
atmosphere of Acocks Green. This was not to last. In 1911 Acocks Green
was incorporated into the city of Birmingham. New housing, commercial
and municipal development brought great expansion. Trams lines were in
place in Broad Road from 1916 and later came to the Green in 1922.
Today
Acocks Green is fully integrated within the city of Birmingham although
retaining its much loved sixty five year old island, fondly referred to
as 'The Green'. Like many areas around Birmingham and the West
Midlands, Acocks Green strives to find its new identity as the old is
blended with the new in the race for regeneration and improvement.
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