17 & 19 Newhall Street, Birmingham

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17 & 19 Newhall Street

Warwickshire

Bell Edison Telephone Building.jpg
The Bell Edison Telephone Building
Type: Office
Location
Location: 52°28’54"N, 1°54’7"W
City: Birmingham
History
Address: Newhall Street, Birmingham B3 3PJ
Built 1887
By: Frederick Martin
Office
Information
Bell Edison logo in porch

17 & 19 Newhall Street is a red-brick and architectural terracotta Grade-I-listed building, situated on the corner of Newhall Street and Edmund Street in Birmingham 3, Warwickshire. Although its official name is 17 & 19 Newhall Street, it is popularly known as The Exchange, and was previously known as the Bell Edison Telephone Building.

History

Opened in 1887, the building was designed by Frederick Martin of the firm Martin & Chamberlain. It was constructed to house the new Central Telephone Exchange and offices for the National Telephone Company (NTC). Birmingham's central exchange had 5,000 subscribers and was the largest of its type in the country.

Originally having the postal address of 19 Newhall Street, it was known as "Telephone Buildings" within the NTC organisation but it was also popularly known as the "Bell Edison Telephone Building" – the NTC logo behind the wrought iron gates to the main entrance bears the names of Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison. The ground floor of the building was let out to shops.

In 1912, the NTC was taken over by the Postmaster General and ownership of the building transferred to the General Post Office. Whereas Telephone House accommodated the telex automatic exchange, 19 Newhall Street held a TAS exchange which was used by the GPO to route telegrams around the UK. It also housed the Birmingham office of the Post Office Engineering Union (located on the basement floor in Edmund Street).

During World War I, the building was used as the Midland headquarters of the air-raid warning system.

In 1936, the Central Telephone Exchange vacated the building and relocated to new premises (Telephone House) further down Newhall Street.

Modern era

17 & 19 Newhall Street is now occupied by Core Marketing (a marketing and PR company), Mitchell Adam (an accountancy recruitment firm) and GBR Phoenix Beard (a firm of property consultants). The basement is occupied by a bar called Bushwackers, which has its entrance on Edmund Street.

The building's full postal address is: The Exchange, 19 Newhall Street, Birmingham B3 3PJ. However, it occupies 17 & 19 Newhall Street as well as 103 Edmund Street.

References

  • A Guide to the Buildings of Birmingham, Peter Leather, ISBN 0-7524-2475-0
  • Hold the Line Please - The Story of the Hello Girls, Sally Southall, ISBN 1-85858-239-3
  • A History of the Birmingham Telephone Area, Tupling, R. E., 1978