About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 61. Chapters: People from Castle Bromwich, People from Marston Green, People from Olton, People from Solihull, Jeremy Brett, Felicity Kendal, Richard Hammond, Mike Bullen, David Benson, Frederick W. Lanchester, John Eustace, Johnnie Walker, Martin Johnson, Craig Gardner, Jamie Ward, Terry Cooke, Zat Knight, John Deehan, Ian Clarkson, Matt Murray, Matthew Croucher, Ashley Sammons, Stephanie Cole, Edwin Boston, Alan Cox, Darren Carter, Imraan Mohammad, Michael Buerk, Justin King, Bernard Quaife, Mat Sadler, Colin Brazier, Roy McDonough, Roger Taylor, Guy Russell, Mark Burke, Lucy Davis, Terry Fleming, Simon Black, Jeremy Bates, Albert Bloxham, Tom Whitehouse, David Prentice, Nikki Sudden, Edward Bolton King, Edith Holden, Graham Potter, John Mark Taylor, Jowe Head, Mike Le Han, Adrian Tonks, Darren Blenkiron, Jamie Spires, Ritchie Neville, Ian R. MacLeod, Celia Rees, Malcolm Prince, Denis Howell, Baron Howell, Phil Hawker, David Jennens, Amii Grove, Richard Turpin, Alfred Hill, Miles Hunt, David Jamieson, Jim Smith, Elizabeth Bower, Charles Bateman, Peter Murray-Willis, Fred Harris, R. A. Stradling, David Sparrow, Marc Silk, Andrew Brookes, Russell Leetch, Bill Atkins, Robert Short, Jessica Brown, Paul Griffiths, Maud Watson, Richard Wolfson, Paul Jones, Mohammed Amjad, Epic Soundtracks, Sandy Allen, Gabriel Pippet, Haydn Thomas, Stephen Kettle, Jill Ellison, Robert Mutchell, Fred Mason, Alexander Allen, Dave Hunt. Excerpt: Richard Mark Hammond, nicknamed "Hamster," (born 19 December 1969) is an English broadcaster, writer, and journalist most noted for co-hosting car programme Top Gear with Jeremy Clarkson and James May, as well as presenting Brainiac: Science Abuse on Sky 1. Hammond was born in Solihull (then Warwickshire, now West Midlands) and is the grandson of workers in the Birmingham automobile industry. In the mid-1980s Ha...