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English Heritage collection shows region from above

New exhibition of Aerofilms photographs at Library of Birmingham features images of West Midlands after body bought catalogue spanning almost 90 years

University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, October 1938(Image: English Heritage - Aerofilms Collection)

A new free photography exhibition giving a bird's eye view of the region and country from yesteryear launches at the Library of Birmingham tomorrow.

The Aerofilms Collection has 40 images from both the West Midlands and across the country and is one of a series running across Britain celebrating English Heritage's project to save and make available historic aerial photographs.

Aerofilms was founded in 1919 and was the world's first firm of commercial aerial photographers, marrying fledgling flight technology with the skill of photography.

English Heritage purchased the Aerofilms collection, which spans 1919 to 2006, through a partnership with the Royal Commissions on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland and Wales.

It consists of more than 1.2 million glass and film negatives, albums and flight registers, with many images collated for a new book called 'Aerofilms - A History of Britain from Above'.

The exhibition at the Library of Birmingham runs until August 31 and is accompanied by a series of events and activities including lectures, aviation stories and paper aeroplane making.

A complementary display of Aerofilms' images of the West Midlands can be seen inside the library's 'Spotlight' space from July 1.

Mike Evans, head of archive at English Heritage, said: "The Aerofilms Collection embodies all that is exciting about aerial photography.