Early occupation The earliest documented record of habitation in the rock houses dates from 1617, when the parish register recorded the death of "Margaret of the fox earth" on 8 June, who is believed to have lived in what is now known as Nanny's Rock. However, the caves may have been used for shelter for much longer, potentially dating back thousands of years to the
Iron Age, when hillforts were constructed at the top of Kinver Edge. One of the rock formations, Holy Austin Rock, served as a
hermitage until the
Reformation (see
Kinver Edge).
18th and 19th centuries In 1777, travel writer Joseph Heeley took refuge from a storm at the rock houses and was given shelter by what he described as a "clean and decent family". He noted that the rock houses made excellent homes, being "warm in winter, cool in summer". This account provides valuable insight into the living conditions and social acceptance of the rock house inhabitants during this period. By the 1861 census, 11 families were recorded as living in the rock houses at Holy Austin Rock. The inhabitants worked in various occupations, including as farm labourers, at the local Hyde Iron Works, in the
Black Country industries, and in
Kidderminster. Some residents were self-employed, with occupations including laundry women, boatmen, and at least one postman. The soft red sandstone allowed for relatively easy excavation and expansion of the dwellings. Rooms could be enlarged as families grew, and many rock houses took in lodgers. The interiors featured furniture, stoves, windows, and doors carved into or fitted within the sandstone. Despite having no running water or electricity, the rock houses offered advantages over urban housing of the period, including fresh air, open space, and freedom from the smoke and flooding risks associated with industrial towns.
Tourism and the Edwardian era The rock houses gained wider fame in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In 1903, artist Alfred Rushton RA visited to paint Mr and Mrs Fletcher in their home at Holy Austin Rock. Around the same time, photographer Sir
Benjamin Stone documented scenes at the rock houses, creating an important photographic record of the dwellings and their inhabitants. The opening of the
Kinver Light Railway in 1901, an electric tramway connecting Kinver to
Amblecote and the
Birmingham tram system, made the area more accessible to tourists. The rock houses became a popular tourist attraction during the
Edwardian era, with hundreds of visitors from across the
West Midlands and beyond coming to see the unusual dwellings. Residents capitalised on this tourism by serving teas to visitors from their rock homes. Margaret Handley, born in Kinver in 1911, recalled helping her aunt and uncle serve teas in the 1920s, watching for visitors arriving on the trams. Bill Reeves, another resident, remembered making cakes for weekend visitors from the age of 10 or 11. A café continued to operate at the site until 1967, long after the last permanent residents had departed.
20th century decline and abandonment As the 20th century progressed, the rock houses became less desirable as permanent residences. The closure of the Kinver Light Railway tramway service, combined with the lack of modern amenities such as running water and electricity, led families to seek more conventional housing. Most families had left by the 1930s, though some residents remained into the 1950s. Rose Novak, who lived in one of the rock houses until 1956, provided a detailed description of life there: "Once you got there, it really was nice. They were like three separate cottages, two-room cottages. There were quarry tiles on the floor, the sitting room had carpet down... the walls were sandstone, plastered over. We used to grow everything in the garden. We planted fruit trees, apple and plum and pear. We used to grow all sorts of vegetables, everything." The last residents left the rock houses in the 1960s (see
Kinver Edge). Following their departure, the structures fell into disrepair, suffering from vandalism, uncontrolled vegetation growth, and weather damage over several decades. ==Structure and layout==