Erdington
is situated on the north side of Birmingham City. Once a rural village,
Erdington has grown from a population of 9000 in 1891 to its present
day high density population and urban environment.
Erdington
has it's own Abbey
built in 1850 (A church really) but an outstanding example of Gothic
Revival architecture. Travelling from the centre of Birmingham towards
Erdington you can't miss one of Birmingham's major landmarks -
Spaghetti Junction. You travel round it on your way.
Erdington
has been around since before Anglo Saxon times and is a well
established area of the city. Much of the housing is from the Edwardian
and Victorian era. Prior to the rapid expansion of Birmingham this
would have been a village and the Domesday Book shows Erdington as
belonging to Edwin the Earl of Mercia.
Erdington takes its name from the De Erdington family whose tomb is at
Aston Parish Church. Erdington used to have a manor which dated back to
the 1600's and which was demolished in 1912 with the making of the
Tyburn Road.
We had
quite a problem getting any information on Erdington and there is a
distinct lack of web sites about the area.
Email
from James: About the Abbey. It was a Benedictine Monastery,
then a Redemptorist Seminary, and is now Highclare School. The church
has always been SS. Thomas & Edmund of Canterbury. Yes,
popularly, both buildings were known as 'The Abbey', so that now the
abbey is a school, it appears that people are calling the church an
abbey! (I still say I'm going to the Abbey, when I mean I'm going to
the church.) Though people will quite often say The Abbey Church to
make the distinction. So you can see Erdington still has it's own
abbey; it's just used as a school. But it *is* the church which is the
outstanding example of Gothic Revival architecture.
Email
from Peter: General Comments. This is more of an observation
really. I just wanted to draw your attention to a couple of mistakes on
the page about Erdington, where I live. Firstly, you state that
Erdington has been around since before Anglo Saxon times. This is
incorrect. There may well have been pre-English folk living in the same
area but they would not have lived in a village called Erdington as
this is a purely Anglo Saxon name. It owes nothing to the Welsh who
would have lived there beforehand.
Secondly, and following on from this, your assertion that Erdington
takes its name from the De Erdington family is quite incorrect; it
would have been the other way round. "De" is a French word meaning "of"
or "from" and the name "De Erdington" would therefore have denoted
someone from a place already named Erdington. Erdington owes its
existence to the English (aka Anglo Saxon) settlers who most likely
settled here in the late sixth century and who would have been the
ancestors of most of the population of the village until it was
swallowed by Birmingham. It would be nice to have some reference to
this on our page.