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Bickenhill

Bickenhill
Bickenhill is located in West Midlands county
Bickenhill
Bickenhill
Bickenhill shown within the West Midlands
Population 12,456 (2011)
OS grid reference SP1882
Civil parish
  • Bickenhill
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SOLIHULL
Postcode district B37 B40 B92
Police West Midlands
Fire West Midlands
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
UK Parliament
Website Welcome to the Bickenhill Parish website
List of places
UK
England
West Midlands
52°26′20″N 1°43′30″W / 52.439°N 1.725°W / 52.439; -1.725Coordinates: 52°26′20″N 1°43′30″W / 52.439°N 1.725°W / 52.439; -1.725

Bickenhill is a village, civil parish and ward in Solihull, West Midlands, England, on the eastern fringe of the West Midlands conurbation. Bickenhill is home to Birmingham Airport.

The manor of Bickenhill was held by Edward the Confessor, by Alward, and then by Turchil. It is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. The descendants of Turchil, the Arden family, settled in the area and adopted the surname 'de Bickenhill,' though spelt differently. The name developed into de Bickenhill in the 13th century. In 1295, Alice de Langley gave herself the title Lady of Bickenhill. A manor then developed in Bickenhill and by the 15th century, there were two manors. It is believed that both manors shared rights by the end of the century. The manors were no longer existing by the end of the 16th century.

The parish was rural in the 19th century but began to develop in the early 20th century into a populous area.

Many changes to the area were made during the nineteenth century. Solihull parish received a detached part of Bickenhill parish, known as Lyndon Quarter, in 1874. The area had been known as Lyndon or Ulverley, after the Ulverlie family who were the original land-owners in the area. When they constructed a new town at a nearby crossroads, which was to become Solihull, old Ulverley became the Old Town, later corrupted to Olton. Though Elmdon parish lay between Olton and Bickenhill proper, the area was administratively Bickenhill until transfer to Solihull, and finally independent with the building of St. Margaret's parish church. The area had been rapidly suburbanising because of the opening of a railway station at Olton, which allowed those who worked in Birmingham to live there and commute. It soon became a suburb of Birmingham. Marston Green, in the north of the parish proper and now the other side of the airport, suburbanised similarly due to having its own station.

Bickenhill proper, however, was not to benefit from the railway boom, despite having what is now the West Coast Main Line running very nearby. No station was opened near the village until Birmingham International at Birmingham Airport in the 1970s. The M42 motorway and the busy A45 road run close by to the East and North of the village respectively.


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Wikipedia

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