During its existence the district council provided public amenities for its populace in the form of two cemeteries, two swimming baths, several parks and recreation grounds, and a handful of free libraries. The council also ran a number of elementary schools, as well as being responsible for the local volunteer fire service:
District cemeteries Public baths Public parks Free libraries Proposals for the provision of free libraries in the district were first mooted in 1902, and following the adoption of the
Libraries Acts the next year, a scheme to establish libraries throughout its area was set up. Between 1905 and 1909 seven new libraries were built across the district, with the land being donated by local philanthropic businessmen and the building work funded through the benevolence of Dr
Andrew Carnegie.
Council schools Until the
Education Act 1902, elementary education within the district was provided through a combination of a number of
voluntary schools established by religious organisations, such as the
Church of England national schools and the non-denominational
British schools, together with those schools built and maintained by the local
school boards for King's Norton and Beoley, who had been set up in the wake of the
Elementary Education Act 1870. Under the 1902 act the urban district council was designated a
local education authority, and thereafter assumed the duties of the former King's Norton and Beoley school boards, which were accordingly abolished, inheriting their existing school buildings, as well as being given the power to establish new elementary schools within the area.
Fire service ==Abolition==