What war would this be .... Crimea, Napoleonic?
The OP has a 1930s semi, there will be adequate foundations for a beam, otherwise the house would be a post war pile of rubble.
Woody, I thought you were supposed to be an expert on all things building related. Obviously you are not else you would know that many pre *second world war* houses have tiny foundations. But I suspect you design beams all the time with no consideration of loads to the masonry or foundations.
I don't understand why a house on small foundations would be a pile of rubble post 1945 (assuming
you are talking about the second world war.) As we both know traditional building techniques are more forgiving to movement than modern due to the use of lime mortars, so foundation depth was less critical with regard to frost action and building near trees. It doesn't make these foundations more capable of carrying high loads to the soil.
Also, what you tend to see when an over overenthusiastic engineer gets involved is lots of fancy masonry and concrete calculations, but not a single soil test
I've honestly never known a soil test be carried out on a small domestic foundation. Building control generally know the bearing capacity in a given area. 100kN/m2 is pretty standard for clay in London at least
As for returns, a 2.1m high solid or cavity wall will be adequately braced by the first floor or the return wall above the opening. Goalposts, smoleposts
2.1m high is one thing, the width of the remaining masonry is quite another. In this case, 665mm is probably OK for lateral stability, but much less wouldn't be acceptable by engineers or BC.
The first floor might adequately brace the building if it is sufficiently tied in and able to act as a diaphragm. No engineer I've ever met would rely on that from an old property when removing a huge chunk of wall and significantly reducing structural integrity.
Hey Woody, don't envy you when Birmingham is hit by a repeat of the 1987 gales