|
Willenhall is situated
some 2½ miles (5km) east of Wolverhampton. According to the 1841
census the population was 8,695.
Willenhall was a place
of coal mining, iron production and the manufacture of metal goods,
chiefly lockmaking,
"Willenhall's
smiths were given the order to make all the locks required by Elizabeth
I's government departments".*
*Staffordshire
Encyclopaedia, page 663
Other products made in
Willenhall included guns, bolts, files,
traps, screws and
hooks

Click
on the image to enlarge
Map
of Willenhall c. 1850 (Map 88)

St
Giles Church, Willenhall (WIL/E1/STG/E2/ Willenhall)
One
of the earliest enquiries into public health was the Royal Commision
for the Inquiry on the Sanitary State of Large Towns & Populous
Districts, 1844 (or the Chadwick Report as it was also known).
In response
to the Chadwick Report, Wolverhampton sent a petition to the General
Board of Health signed by a tenth of the rated inhabitants of Wolverhampton,
as required by the Public Health Act (1848), for an enquiry into
the state of Wolverhampton, Bilston, Wednesfield and Willenhall.
The result
was the Report to the General Board of Health: 1849 written
by Robert Rawlinson (L614)
In the report
Rawlinson stated:

Extract
from Rawlinson Report page 31
The extract
lists:
No general system of
sewers or drains
Stagnant ditches
Middens and Pig
Sties are common throughout the town.
In the area of Willenhall
known as Portobello:
Click
on the image to enlarge
Map
of Portobello c.1850 (Map 151)

Extract
from Rawlinson Report page 31
The extract
lists that:
Portobello consists
of about 2,200 people, chiefly miners and their families
There are no effective drains or sewers
Many cottages without proper conveniences
Stagnant ditches,
pools of filthy water, dung
heaps
A household with all of its members suffering from fever
A child dying of fever
in another house
However there was cause
for optimism:
One block of cottages
with a neat and clean appearance Each house having a proper convenience
The surface of the yards covered with local blue bricks
An indication of what could be achieved
As for the water supply:

Extract
from Rawlinson Report page 43
The extract
lists:
Due to mining operations
water was scarce
Surface water was vitiated
Water drawn from ditches and a small brook
Brook choked with refuse,
even dead dogs
Water had to be carried large distances
Water had to be left to settle before use
However by 1862 things
had started to improve:
On 26th February, 1862,
the Management Committee of the Bilston and District Provident Society
heard an application for a mortgage by Mr Thomas Emery of New Road,
Willenhall for £200 to build ten new houses in Brickkyln Street,
Portobello, presumably for poorer members of the community to rent.

Extract
from Bilston and District Provident Society General Minute Book
1861-1875 (D-SO-44/1/1)
Click
on the image to enlarge
Map
of Portobello, 1887 Ordnance Survey Map Staffordshire, Sheet LXII.12
Since 1966
Willenhall has been part of Walsal. For further information concerning
the history of Willenhall please contact Walsall
Archives.
The area of Portobello remained part of Wolverhampton.


|