thanks for your input on Eliezer Edwards, Anne, very informative and adds much of interest. His Christian name is apparently from old testament Hebrew - although that doesn't necessarily mean he was Jewish........ in the C19 it was commonplace to give biblical fore names to children.
So it seems we have two addresses for Mr. Edwards - both overlapping in date ............. one in B'ham and the other in Worcestershire - the former being a business address and Kings Norton his domestic residence, perhaps.
But can we rely on the accuracy of the 1861 census showing that he was a manufacturer - and not simply a wholesaler/agent - perhaps he thought it gave him better status to say he was a manufacturer.
I realised that about Eliezer being a biblical name, Paul, as several of my family had them too.
I also found another RD by him to add to Fred's list:
Reference: BT 43/61/104379
Description:
Registered design number: 104379.
Proprietor: Eliezer Edwards.
Address: Birmingham, Warwickshire.
Subject: Wasp and insect trap.
Class 3: glass
Note: Description created from this document and the register in BT 44/7
Date: 1856 Apr 17
(I wondered if this was the same item as Fred's listed one below but in glass?
Useful Registered Design Number: 3826 registered April 10 1856. Subject: Insect trap. Category: Traps for Birds, Vermin, Insects. (Class I, Metal). Remarks: 699 provisional registration.)
And a reference in other Nat.Archive documents DR 149/126 & DR 149/127 "Tenancy agreements between John Lord's executors and his tenants in St Paul's Square" to his being "Eliezer Edwards of Birmingham, wholesale perfumer" and "Assignment of leasehold messuages in St. Paul's Square, Birmingham, from the executors of John Lord to Eliezer Edwards of Birmingham, manufacturer, 24 June 1851," so he seemed to have been an archetypal entrepreneurial businessman! In addition to his RD's he also registered several patents.
Yes the Kings Norton address would be Mr. Edwards' home address in 1861. I hadn't found him in 1851 but have done so tonight with a bit of sideways thinking. He has been mis-indexed as Eliza, female, a "Retired Mansas" (whatever that might be!

) but looking at the original sheet it's clearly a transcription error as he is actually listed as
Eliezer Edwards, aged 35, of 49 St Paul's Square, Birmingham, an inkstand manufacturer employing 10 men. In 1871 he is again listed at the Reservoir Road, Edgbaston, Kings Norton, Worcestershire address, this time described as,
"Glass manufacturer, employing 15 men, 9 boys, 20 females". I've had a look at Reservoir Road and it's a mix of older and modern houses but no indication of a glassworks of any kind there. The residents in the Census are almost all merchants or manufacturers of some kind, so clearly a prosperous neighbourhood. The addresses on the Census are always residential addresses (including hotel, inn, club, institution or vessel etc.), so he may well have had (as many big industrialists did) two houses and it would depend on where the family were on each Census night which address they appear on.
In the
Birmingham Daily Post 31 August 1871 there was an article about the failure of Eliezer Edwards' glass manufacturing business, which was wound up with debts of over £3,000.
Incidentally, by the 1881 Census he was listed as an "Author general literature", which is perhaps an understatement, as he was the author of several books, and the magazine
Edgbastonia, as well as writing columns for the
Birmingham Post and
Birmingham Daily Mail newspapers! According to his brief obituary in the
Birmingham Daily Post Feb 23, 1891, he began writing in 1876.