Large scale quarrying took place at Rowley Regis
and nail making, coal mining and the manufacture
of chains have been prime providers of employment
over the centuries. There is still a working quarry
which is one
of the areas top leisure attractions.
Other places of interest in Rowley Regis include Haden Hill Park in Old Hill which dates back some 900 years. Covering over 50 acres this an impressive parkland. There is also Haden Hill House a grade II listed building that was built in 1876 by George Haden-Best and which is open to the public and an older Tudor Hall is situated alongside. These buildings were restored recently to their former glory by Sandwell Council. Ownership of the land and estates by the Haden family can be traced back some 600 years. The Tudor House which has been altered considerably dates back from 1570.
Another interesting building of merit is Corngreaves Hall which dates back from the late 18th century and was the home of James Attwood the ironmaster whose son John built the Congreaves Iron Works in 1818. Interestingly in 1825 the iron works and the estate were offered to the British Iron Company for £600,000 but ended in dispute between Attwood and the Company which made legal history at the time.
World famous engineering firms have a history in Rowley Regis, the most notable of these being Samuel Woodhouse & Sons Ltd, Benjamin Priest & Sons Ltd, Joseph Penn & Co. Ltd and William Griffin & Sons Ltd.
Famous people from Rowley include Ambrose Crowley, ironmaster ( 1682 - 1728 ), James Woodhouse, the poet ( 1735 - 1820 ), Joseph Parkes the chainmaker and composer of hymns and the Rev. George Barrs, curate at Rowley ( 1800 - 1840 ).
The old
village of Rowley had to be demolished due to
subsidence and the Rowley Regis of today is primarily
residential with industrial units and retail outlets.