Monday, 27 October 2025

Tales of the City - The Pen is Mightier Than the Sword

 

Last Thursday Liz and I caught the bus over to Birmingham.

We wandered down the magnificent Great Western Arcade...


And popped into 200 Degrees, opposite the cathedral, for a fancy coffee.


I'd booked tickets for The Pen Museum in Birmingham's historic Jewellery Quarter which you may remember Nikki and I visiting earlier this year. Liz loves pens and all things calligraphy so she was keen to see it for herself. 


At its peak Birmingham was home to over one hundred pen factories manufacturing 10,000 varieties of pens and employing over 8,000 people with women making up over 75% of the workforce. 


In the 19th century three-quarters of everything written down in the world was written with a pen made in Birmingham - get your head round that!!!


The Pen Museum is housed within a former pen factory, The Argent Works, built in 1863 in the Italianate style, on Frederick Street. 



The Industrial Revolution created a demand for affordable writing instruments. Birmingham's manufacturers were the first to adopt steel nibs, which were more reliable than the traditional goose quill pens and, from the mid to the late 19th Century, the city dominated the world's production of pens. It was estimated that three-quarters of the world's pens were made in Birmingham and the mass-production of pens which made them affordable to all, significantly impacted on the rise of global literacy in the 19th Century. By the end of the century the number of pen manufacturers in Birmingham declined to just twelve and, after WWII, the mass market success of the ballpoint pen made traditional pen nibs obsolete.


The female press operators were expected to produce a minimum of 14,000 nibs per day with fines incurred for less than perfect nibs and also for eating, drinking, toilet breaks and even singing during their average 12 hour working day. 




Like The Coffin Works (HERE) and The Silver Factory (HERE), the Pen Museum doesn't gloss over the hardships Britain's working classes endured, it's so important we're reminded of how awful the days were before Health and Safety regulations and Trade Unions. 
















There's an area when you can practice your calligraphy....


Liz's is the parsnips, mine's the sword.


There's a fascinting video as well as some recorded conversations with several nonagenarians who worked in Birmingham's pen factories in the 1930s and 1940s. 














And like last time, we had a go at making our own nibs.





18,750 nibs in a day - a single one took us about 15 minutes!


























After having our handwriting analysed, we ransacked the fabulous (and very competitively priced) gift shop.




By now we were ravenous so headed to the pub opposite, The 1000 Trades. 


Birmingham has been known as The City of A Thousand Trades since the 19th Century from the wide range of skilled manufacturing industries including metalworking, guns, jewellery and - of course - pens! 


Lunch was a Med Veg Posh Sandwich (menu HERE) served with vegetable crisps and homemade coleslaw along with the most delicious Goat's Milk IPA (don't worry, it wasn't really made with milk!)



We wondered if the saying, His Nibs, originated in Brum? I'll have to ask next time I visit.


The Pen Museum opens on Thursdays, Fridays & Saturdays from 11am - 4pm and on Sundays from 12pm - 4pm.

There's currently a Two for One deal if you book online so we paid a total of £8.50 - an absolute bargain! See HERE


18 comments:

  1. I mean, how dare women go to the toilet during the working day!
    Another fascinating visit. And I love your calligraphy. I'm always in awe of people who write beautifully - my own writing is just about legible. Xx

    ReplyDelete
  2. Absolutely fascinating. I'm putting it on my places to visit list. I have some beautiful glass pens and jars of coloured ink.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I LOVE your Midlands excursions, I’ve literally just done Birmingham Medicine Bakery - Ozzy Osbourne exhibit - The Indian Brewery tour, after your blog post recommendation. This’ll be my next reccy! Thanks Bab!!! (This is Sophia, sorry I can’t be arsed to log in)!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Lovely to see you both brightening the streets of Birmingham. Fascinating place to visit as well. Sending our love xxx

    ReplyDelete
  5. Wow, such a wonderful post of history and a look back at the test of times. Amazing work that so many survived. I have to wonder if this generation could stand an hour of it and then be ready to protest. Wonderful exhibit. I love the quotes. I had often wondered of these 'nibs'. Thank you so much for the wonderful write up and photos. Love the outfits you both wore šŸ’—šŸ’—šŸ’—šŸ’—šŸ’—šŸ’—šŸ’—Thanks for being here and thank you for your comments!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Gracefully! So many amazing vintages stuff to find.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Found this post so fascinating. The social history is mind blowing,how young they were. The production of over 18,000 a day is outstanding. Birmingham has such a wonderful history. Is there a new exhibition about the trades of Birmingham, I think I saw it on the news? Liz and yourself looked equally glamorous and your lunch looked very lush.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Found this about the saying His Nibs : especially in His Nibs "boss, employer, self-important person," 1821, of unknown origin; perhaps a variant of nob (n.2) "person of high position." And since that plaque says he 'opened' a works, that would fit, lol. Always enjoy your trips around the cities, countries! Dawn P. Albany, GA USA

    ReplyDelete
  9. How fascinating. Thanks for taking us on a tour.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I loved joining you and Liz on your visit to the Pen Museum, which I'm as impressed with now as I was when you visited with Nikki. Totally my kind of museum! My mind boggles at those women having to produce 14,000 nibs per day :-o
    Your lunch is looking mouthwateringly delicious, and I am loving that photo of you and Liz at the end. Both of your outfits are to die for as well, I'm swooning over Liz's green maxi! xxx

    ReplyDelete
  11. Your report on this expedition inspires me to upend the contents of my art supplies cabinet and have a closer look at those old pen nibs purchased at auction a very long time ago... Once upon that time, I doodled on rice paper alongside Japanese friends who wrote in kanji using brushes. Me, I wrote in Gregg's Shorthand using pens and pots of ink. (Haiku, we were having a haiku fad at the time.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's me, Beth from the American Midwest. Have no idea why I'm now anonymous.

      Delete
  12. Hello!
    I know the Pelikan brand, I used it when I was a student! And I learned that the pens all came from Birmingham! This museum is a real national treasure!
    You are all dressed beautifully, I love your coat! As always, your style is amazing!
    Have a great day! And your friend too <33

    ReplyDelete
  13. The Great Western Arcade is enchanting.
    It's incredible that in the 19th century, three-quarters of everything written was done with a Birmingham pen, because back then, most people still wrote by hand. You two look fantastic!

    ReplyDelete
  14. Fascinating! Amazing how much of the production of goods in the Industrial Revolution (and post-that) was done by women! Love your gorgeous coat, Vix! Thanks so much for sharing this with us!

    ReplyDelete
  15. What a hard life those children had back in the old days. When I was at school in the 1960s we did 'scripture' twice a week which was writing with a pen nib and dipping into the ink well, filled by bottles of Swan ink. My handwriting wasn't as good as you or Liz despite much practice as I am left handed and was made to write at school with my right hand. You both look very colourful in your Autumnal outfits. Never been to Birmingham but wouldn't mind, it looks fun. Betty

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I just googled when Swan ink went out of production, it was in the 50s, so I assume there was a lot of old stock around in my day, my dad had bottles of it too. I sort of wish we could bring back some of these lovely things as letter writing is I expressed myself far better in letters than I ever can over phone/text/whatsapp! Betty (again)

      Delete

Thanks for reading and for leaving a message. Please don't be anonymous, I'd love it if you left a name (or a nom de plume).

Lots of love, Vix