Well put Mike. Most of south-west Coventry (Canley, Tile Hill, Eastern Green - basically from the Kenilworth Road through to Allesley Brook)) was, prior to 1926, part of the Leigh (of Stoneleigh) Estates. It was dotted with small farms and cottages for agricultural workers. But, the bicycle and car factories of Coventry were attracting immigrants - from all over Britain
I seem to have read somewhere that Coventry City council bought the land from Lord Leigh at about £125 an acre - quite a large debt to settle on its citizens. From research I know that Lord Leigh's Warwickshire lands brought him an annual income of over £22,000 per annum in the 1880s. I'll never know why my mother (1904-1975) held such reverence to Lord Leigh - though I presume it was drilled into her during her formative years which were spent in various tied cottages on Lord Leigh's land.
Though some of the former Leigh lands were built upon during the 1930s it was the house-building boom of the late 1940s and 1950s that saw much of the rest of it swallowed up by council estates at Canley and Tile Hill in a bid by the council to house its citizens. At least in Canley and Tile Hill the housing didn't abutt the Coventry to Birmingham rail line, so residents didn't have trains passing within feet of their bedroom windows. I believe there's still a green swathe on the southern side of the rail track. Also there was very little use of high-rise accommodation in the area which cannot be said for areas like Hillfields. And, many of the woodlands in the area have been retained.