Drains Wolverhampton [exclusive] Instant
There are men who know these drains by heart—not just engineers, but “flushers” (sewer workers) from Severn Trent. They speak of “The Grand Union” (a five-foot-diameter brick tunnel running under Queen Street that dates to 1872) and “The S-bend” (a siphon near the bus station where the drain dips under the Metro line).
In the 18th century, as Wolverhampton roared into the Industrial Revolution, everything changed. Iron foundries, lock-makers, and japanning works (producing the famous “Wolverhampton Ware”) sprouted along the watercourses. The brooks turned orange with iron oxide, black with coal dust, and foul with tannery waste. Cholera outbreaks in 1832 and 1849 were blamed on “miasma,” but the real culprit flowed openly through the streets: sewage. drains wolverhampton
The turning point came in 1858—the “Great Stink” had gripped London, but Wolverhampton’s own stench was no less deadly. Under the Public Health Act of 1848 , the town’s first proper Sewerage Committee was formed. The man tasked with saving the city was a self-taught engineer named . There are men who know these drains by
Once a decade, a guided inspection is made of the Lady Brook’s tomb. Using remote cameras on tracks, they film stalactites of fat and grit, the ghostly white blind shrimp that evolved in the darkness, and the graffiti left by Victorian workmen—names and dates scratched into the mortar. The turning point came in 1858—the “Great Stink”
Page’s plan was radical: don’t just clean the brooks—bury them. Between 1860 and 1875, thousands of navvies (manual laborers) dug deep tunnels beneath Cleveland Road, Darlington Street, and towards Bilston. They lined them with Staffordshire blue brick, so hard that modern drills still struggle against it. The Lady Brook was entombed in a massive interceptor sewer, nine feet high, large enough to walk through upright. Its waters, now mixed with factory waste and toilet outflow, were diverted away from the town centre towards a new treatment works at Barnhurst.