The issue (as @postashin said) was the backticks.
As of Laravel 5 (not sure about Laravel 4), you could have done this:
DB::statement('ALTER TABLE `users` MODIFY `age` DATETIME');
In fact you didn't even need the back ticks as they don't need escaping. So you could have just written:
DB::statement('ALTER TABLE users MODIFY age DATETIME');
You do not need this in the closure either if you are just executing a database statement.
However a better approach to what you are doing is as follows:
Schema::table('users', function(Blueprint $table) {
$table->dateTime('age')->change();
});
Note the last solution can sometimes raise an error due to a bug in Doctrine, which usually occurs if you have an enum in the table (not just the column you are changing).
For more information, see Laravel Database Migration - Modifying Column
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