Woodside, Dudley
Woodside | |
Woodside |
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OS grid reference | SO923883 |
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Metropolitan borough | Dudley |
Metropolitan county | West Midlands |
Region | West Midlands |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | DUDLEY/BRIERLEY HILL |
Postcode district | DY2, DY5 |
Dialling code | 01384 |
Police | West Midlands |
Fire | West Midlands |
Ambulance | West Midlands |
EU Parliament | West Midlands |
UK Parliament | Dudley South |
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Coordinates: 52°29′35″N 2°06′50″W / 52.493°N 2.114°W
Woodside is a residential area of Dudley in the West Midlands of England.
It was originally a separate manor from Dudley in a once rural area south-west of the town in the direction of Brierley Hill, but development along the main Dudley to Stourbridge towards the end of the 19th century saw it merged into Dudley County Borough.
It grew substantially after World War I, with significant private housing developments taking place along Stourbridge Road, as well as council housing in the 1920s and 1930s to rehouse families from slums. These including 220 "Homes for Heroes" which were built in the mid-1920s when council housing development in Dudley was in its early stages.
Since the mid-1980s, the main roads around Woodside have been plagued with congestion due to its close proximity to the Merry Hill Shopping Centre, and the fact that the centre's road links are very much the same to how they existed at the time of its opening.
The footballer William Ball was born at Woodside in 1886.
Duncan Edwards, who played for Manchester United and England, and died in the Munich air disaster of 1958, was born in a house on Malvern Crescent on 1 October 1936, but grew up two miles away on the Priory Estate.
Woodside was also the location of the Cochrane and Co. Ironworks and Foundry, which was responsible for much of the ironwork used in the construction of The Crystal Palace created for the Great Exhibition of 1851, as well as the production of the early Penfold-design pillar boxes.[1]
References
- ↑ "Cochrane and Co". Grace's Guide. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
- Black Country Bugle - 2 June 2005