Author: Richard Gullick

  • New Carl Chinn podcast aims to build a living archive of the West Midlands

    New Carl Chinn podcast aims to build a living archive of the West Midlands

    Our Lives, Our Stories launched at Nortons in Digbeth on Thursday 12 February 2026. Social historian Carl Chinn describes it as a living archive – built around personal histories from Birmingham, the Black Country and beyond.

    Some of the most important parts of Birmingham’s story were never written down. Not because they were unimportant, but because they looked ordinary at the time. The routines, the graft, the family life, the setbacks, the humour. The things that shape a place from the ground up.

    That is what Our Lives, Our Stories is trying to hold onto.

    The podcast launched at Nortons in Digbeth on Thursday 12 February 2026, with guests gathering to mark the start of a project Carl Chinn describes as a living archive for the region.

    Ordinary lives, taken seriously

    The principle behind the series is simple: the record should not only be filled with the loudest voices or the most visible names.

    “It’s really important that we grab hold of people whose stories are not normally recorded.”

    Recognisable figures will always draw interest. People listen to names they already know. But the aim here is wider than that.

    “Every person has a story to tell.” Chinn also pointed to the “democratisation of history”, and the belief that history should be “egalitarian”.

    It is an idea that runs quietly through the whole project. Not polishing a version of the region. Recording it, as it is, in all its variety.

    What these episodes are meant to capture

    Chinn set out an ambition to collect stories across Birmingham and the Black Country, with the option to reach further afield over time.

    The scope is grounded, and deliberately broad: “stories about work… the streets… housing… family… sports… music… everybody’s lives.”

    It is a list that makes sense to anyone who knows the West Midlands. This is a region shaped by industry, movement, neighbourhood identity, and family networks. The podcast is built to preserve those everyday forces, through the people who live with them.

    When memories are complicated

    Personal history rarely arrives neat. People carry emotion alongside detail. Two people can recall the same moment differently.

    “Memories can be very complicated,” Chinn noted. In oral history, “somebody’s got a memory that’s very different to somebody else’s of the same events”.

    For Chinn, that difference is part of the work. It “doesn’t invalidate that memory”. Instead, it becomes something to assess and understand, including why a memory might differ.

    That matters because so much everyday life was never formally recorded in the first place. For many families and communities, what survives is what people can still describe, still place, still feel.

    Birmingham, as locals recognise it

    Chinn also talked about how Birmingham and the wider West Midlands are often viewed from the outside.

    “The problem we have… is that outsiders tend to just drive through. They pass us, they don’t stop.” He also argued that negative stereotypes are repeated “on the television and through the media”.

    Then came a line that landed as both pride and reminder: “There are many peoples in Birmingham. But there is only one Birmingham.”

    It fits the podcast’s wider purpose. If a place wants to be understood properly, it needs a record that reflects its full human reality – not just the parts that fit a storyline.

    A project made for the long view

    Thinking decades ahead, Chinn’s hope is that listeners will gain “a more rounded appreciation” of “the lives of a wide variety of people in Birmingham, in the West Midlands”.

    That is what a real archive does. It keeps the detail that usually gets lost: how people lived, what shaped them, what they were proud of, what they endured, what they laughed about, and what changed around them.

    If Our Lives, Our Stories stays true to that promise, it will not just document the region’s past. It will preserve its human texture – while the people who can tell it are still here.

  • Pulse West Midlands headlines: 9 February 2026

    Pulse West Midlands headlines: 9 February 2026

    Two West Midlands Police identification appeals in Birmingham, the annual review hearing for the Black Country street racing injunction, and rail engineering works that will disrupt services into Birmingham later this month.

    Colmore Row: appeal after phone snatched near Christmas Market

    West Midlands Police are appealing after a woman had her phone snatched from her hand on Colmore Row, shortly before 3.10pm on 14 December.

    Police say she was taking photos of the Christmas Market when she was approached and the phone was taken. Officers have released an image of a man they want to identify after CCTV enquiries.

    Police describe him as around 5ft 7in tall, with brown curly hair. The appeal was published on 8 February.


    Digbeth: CCTV appeal after assault at Nortons

    Police have issued a CCTV appeal after an assault at Nortons bar in Digbeth.

    West Midlands Police say a man was punched in the face at around 8pm on Boxing Day, 26 December, at the Meriden Street venue. Police say the punch caused him to fall, leaving him with a broken ankle and bruising.

    Officers want to speak to the man shown in the footage as part of the investigation. The appeal was published on 8 February.


    Black Country: street racing injunction review hearing set for 26 February

    City of Wolverhampton Council says the High Court will hold the annual review of the Black Country street racing injunction on Thursday 26 February 2026, in Birmingham.

    The council says the injunction covers Wolverhampton, Dudley, Sandwell and Walsall, and already bans “street racing” or “car cruising” in the area. It says the order applies between 3pm and 7am, and covers drivers, riders and passengers in or on vehicles, as well as organisers and spectators.

    The council says the injunction has a power of arrest attached, and that breach is contempt of court, with penalties that can include imprisonment, a fine, or asset seizure. It says the original order was granted on 27 February 2024 and is reviewed annually.


    Trains: February engineering works affecting services into Birmingham

    West Midlands Railway has published a list of engineering works that will disrupt services into Birmingham later in February.

    From Monday 9 to Thursday 12 February, the late-evening 22:58 service from Birmingham International to Rugeley Trent Valley is listed as amended.

    On Sunday 22 February, buses are due to replace trains between Shrewsbury and Wolverhampton, affecting services that run through to Birmingham New Street.

    And over the weekend of Saturday 28 February and Sunday 1 March, there are due to be no trains between Shrewsbury and Birmingham New Street, with changes also listed on the Transport for Wales corridor.

  • Pulse West Midlands headlines: 8 February 2026

    Pulse West Midlands headlines: 8 February 2026

    Two West Midlands Police identification appeals in Birmingham, an update in a Handsworth death investigation, and Metro service changes that affect travel into Birmingham city centre later this month.

    Heartlands Hospital appeal after racist abuse and threats

    West Midlands Police are appealing for information after an incident at Heartlands Hospital in Bordesley Green.

    Police say that at around 4pm on 14 January, a man entered the hospital and shouted racist abuse at several people and made threats. Officers say they want to speak to the man pictured in their appeal as they investigate what happened.


    Perry Barr robbery appeal after woman pulled to the floor

    Police have also issued an identification appeal after a robbery on Walsall Road, Perry Barr.

    West Midlands Police say a woman was robbed at around 5pm on 29 December. Officers say she was approached by a man who grabbed her handbag, pulling her onto the floor, before leaving with the bag, which contained money.


    Handsworth: investigation after man dies following serious injuries

    West Midlands Police say they are investigating after a man died after being found with serious injuries in Handsworth.

    Police say they were called just after 12.45pm on Monday 2 February to reports of a man in cardiac arrest on a supermarket car park on Soho Road. Officers say the man, aged 40, later died in hospital. Police say they believe he was involved in disorder in the Soho Road/Holyhead Road area before he was found.

    Police say a 34-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and has been bailed pending further enquiries. A second 34-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of assault and has been released under investigation, police said.


    Metro: February service changes and mid-month tie-in works

    West Midlands Metro has published its February service changes, including works that will affect travel into Birmingham city centre.

    Metro says Wolverhampton St George’s stop will not be in use from Saturday 7 February while signalling equipment is replaced.

    Metro also says that from 21:15 on Monday 16 February until the end of service on Wednesday 18 February, trams will run only between Wednesbury Great Western Street and Wolverhampton Station. Metro says there will be no services between Wednesbury Great Western Street and Edgbaston Village during that window, before normal service resumes from the start of service on Thursday 19 February.

    Metro says ticket acceptance will apply on specific alternative services during the works, including National Express bus routes and West Midlands Railway services between Wolverhampton and Birmingham for season ticket holders only.