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Wolverhampton
and World War II
Building a New
Britain
After the war ended there
was a need to replace bombed housing and also improve existing housing.
Across the country over 200,000 houses had been destroyed by bombing.
The collection of council contracts which survive amongst Wolverhampton's
archives reveal the scale of new housing requirements. Contracts
were signed in 1945 for over 250 houses to be built on the Willenhall
Estate, and over 160 houses on the Bushbury Housing Estate the following
year. In some areas prefabricated houses were erected as cheaper,
quicker alternatives in the need for improved housing. Here is an
example of post war prefabricated housing at East Park Estate:

East
Park prefabs, 1946 (N3/EAS/1)
In
Bilston the housing problem was particularly acute. Over 13% of
families in the town were living in overcrowded conditions, compared
to 3.2% in Wolverhampton:

Table
of overcrowding, Bilston Borough Council minutes, 1945 (LB352)
Local
politicians vented their anger at the lack of progress in providing
adequate housing:

Bilston
Borough Council minutes, 1945 (LB352)
The Council
even hoped to use German prisoners of war to help build the new
houses:

Bilston
Borough Council minutes, 1945 (LB352)
A great
deal of energy went into the planning for reconstructing and redesigning
urban areas. As early as 1943 Wolverhampton Council formed a committee
to look at ideas for the reconstruction of the town after the war.
Bilston also had a reconstruction committee, as did Wednesfield.
Opinions were sought
from the residents of Wolverhampton about what they would like their
town to look like. The surviving papers of the Reconstruction Committee
include a list of suggestions for improvements sent by residents
to the Express and Star. There were some ambitious ideas:
a subway from the railway station to Darlington Street, a new theatre,
demolition of the Market Hall to make way for a garden of remembrance,
and the provision of a tube railway. Other ideas included special
flats for spinsters, extra public conveniences, extra tree planting,
and provision at the back of houses for leaving groceries.
Another suggestion was
the removal of the Retail Market and the building of a civic centre.

Click on
the image to enlarge
Extract
from Express and Star, 25th January 1945
In June
1944 the Council produced its report which came up with a number
of recommendations. These included the building of a central ring
road, a central bus station, the removal to new sites of the wholesale
and retail markets, the building of a civic centre, a new central
library and extensions to the Queen's and Central shopping arcades.
An
exhibition entitled 'Wolverhampton of the Future' opened
at the Wulfrun Hall in January 1945. It showed the proposed developments
in the town, including details of new housing schemes.

Click on
the image to enlarge
Model
of proposed Wolverhampton town centre, 1946 (A8/CIV/5)
(shown are designs for St Peter's Square and Civic Centre)
Many of
the ideas were eventually put in place some decades later, including
the construction of the ring road and bus station.

Click on
the image to enlarge
Ring
Road, c.1960 (C4/6/2)
The
retail and wholesale markets were relocated and the Civic Centre
was built.
Though
the town lost some architectural gems in the second half of the
20th century, such as the Central and Queen's shopping arcades,
the Central Library was not rebuilt and remains to this day one
of the City's major public buildings.
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©
Copyright. Wolverhampton City Council, 2002
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