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Immanuel Parish Church was consecrated
in 1940 and so the year 2000 is very special to us, being not only the
Millennium but also our Diamond Jubilee.
At the end
of the First World War the Maypole / Highters Heath area was very much a rural
area, lying outside the City of Birmingham boundary. However, the war had
brought more industry to Birmingham and with it an inflow of population.
Consequently, in the 1920's Birmingham was compelled to push out its boundaries
and the city boundary was placed at the Maypole.
At this
time there was a small community centred on the crossroads where Druids
Lane, coming from the west, met the Alcester Road. There was at one
time a 'maypole' erected at the crossroads, but this had disappeared many years
earlier. There was a timber yard on one corner and a smithy on another, which
was kept busy shoeing farm horses and repairing agricultural
equipment.
Quite soon
a large estate was commenced to the east of the Alcester Road. The great
proportion of the land to the west belonged to Canbury and Monyhull Colony and
was later declared a green belt area. People began to move in and a bus service
was established with its terminus at the crosswords, as the corporation trams
only ran as far as Alcester Lanes End. The area on which this estate was
built was then in the parish of Christ Church, Yardley Wood; the west
side of the Alcester Road being in the parish of Kings
Norton.
It was
soon apparent that Yardley Wood church could not cope with the large
number of people who were now living in the area, so that in the early
1930's the Bishop and the Diocesan authorities decided to create a new parish
to be called 'Highters Heath' and to build a new church.
A plot of
land was acquired in Highters Heath Lane large enough to accommodate the
church, the hall and the vicarage. It was not long before a temporary wooden
building was erected at a cost of £1,100.00 to serve as a church and hall
and on the 26th March 1938 the new parish of Highters Heath came into
existence, separate from Yardley Wood. The new building was dedicated by
the Bishop of Birmingham, the Right Reverend E W Barnes and the Reverend
Gilbert Cope was installed as Priest in Charge to serve the new
communit
Life in
the new parish began with services held in the hall. Essential furnishings were
generously provided by local churches and a modest sum was borrowed to purchase
other requisites such as curtains and cupboards. Plans for the new church were
drawn up in 1938, and in 1939 building began, with the sum of £5,500.00
being granted by the Bishop's Appeal Fund to complete the first phase of
building.
However,
the clouds of war descended and when the nave was completed in 1940 a
temporary wooden wall and a small wooden vestry were erected at the east end.
The nave was consecrated by the Bishop on Saturday 25th May 1940 and
Immanuel Parish Church was in being.
During the
course of the war, the work of the new church was pushed forward inthe area,
and continues to this day.
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