Best Regards Ken Berry. You can see in the second picture the curved building which still sits on the corner with Westminster Road. Trying hard to find something of the history of the Palatine pub on Dale Street as I’m told my grandfather was the licensee from about 1917 until his death in 1925. The 1891 Ordnance Survey map shows a Victoria Hotel at the top of Compton Road, at the junction with Whitefield Road. You can see a detailed map of the area here: https://www.old-maps.co.uk/#/Map/336567/389640/13/100871. Many thanks. Can you help? Family there in 1886. If you’re not sure this is the type of dairy, then do let me know (especially if you know anything specific about the location) and I can have another look around. The label reads “Dorothy Rimmer 108a Bold St. L’pool” I know that Bold St was the center of bespoke dressmaking in those days but can’t locate anything about her or her business. I’m putting a map here in case anyone else might come across it and need to know where the street it. He was Peter Lynch the Licencee of ‘The Scotland’ public house in 1881 and the ‘Masons’ public house, 22 Richmond Row in 1887 and then a Provisions merchant in 2 Pownall square in 1911 but for many years in between as he is listed in early telephone books. Can you help me locate an old street? Thanks in advance to anyone who can help!! It also was by a school called Gateacre Compresensive school.so it could be in Gateacre Liverpool.Thank you from Christine. Thank you…David, I wonder if you have any info on the origins of Shaw’s alley L1, my nan’s great grandfather was brought up there around 1900’s. There are a lot of new houses around there, and new street layouts. With no photos and no as yet found record of this building that literally changed my life, I feel a part of me has been amputated. It is the last entry on this web page. http://liverpoolpictorial.co.uk/jackson_street.gif, Sorry. i was broughht up by my gran alice ellis ended up in cottage homes fazakerley w http://www.scottiepress.org/projects/remember.htm I can’t find any reference to it now, although there us a modern day Mill Lane, and it would have been no surprise to have had a mill or mills in the area. 09 March 2021. Cheers, can you tell me anything about Medlock Street? I’ve found a couple of pages with photos of Arley Street on (use your browser’s Find… tool to get to the specific photos): To handle the dramatic population explosion within its county boundaries, the Church of England created hundreds … This Plan of Liverpool North Sheet is centred on an area with many things labelled: https://historic-liverpool.co.uk/old-maps-of-liverpool/plan-of-liverpool-north-sheet-1890/#5/82.109/-111.489. These last two streets named led on. Bennett Street, if I’ve got the right one, is in Garston, just off St. Mary’s Road. Can you point me in the right direction? The map: https://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/side-by-side/#zoom=17.408816872525154&lat=53.40096&lon=-2.96541&layers=168&right=ESRIWorld. My Gt, Gt, Gt. I’ve exhausted my resources and my eyes trying to find it on old maps, to no avail. Their name was Rourke/O’Rourke and they were in the 1861 Census. Good luck with your research. There were two chapels and a school, but the rest were houses with large gardens. While it’s certainly possible that a residence was in the same building as a small business like a drapers (just like today a grocer’s or newsagent’s might have a flat above or a house behind and above) by the look of the maps of the streets in the area the houses look like standard terraces. Makes me appreciative of how a lot of us live today! So it looks like Buckles Nurseries has a long pedigree! I have tried the Liverpool Records Office but without any success. interested in history of old custom house in canning place. Some of the conditions right into the 1960s and beyond still surprise me. Hi Yvonne They were on the site of the current Cathedral Gate, east of Great George Street. Or photos? There aren’t maps for many years between 1920 and 1950, but the 1951 map shows all the courts gone as far as I can see. There are good maps for the 1950s at https://www.old-maps.co.uk/#/Map/342500/387500/13/101329 (just click on the date in the left hand column). Drag and zoom around a range of maps showing Liverpool from the 17th to the 20th century. Also, a regular correspondent Phil D has passed on a photo of 61-63 Cockerell Street, which I’ve pasted below. Can you help me I’m am looking for information on building that existed in Luton grove off walton road at present there stands a retirement home called walton manor, my parents live in the next street to this and work had been done to rebuild the supporting wall and when it was stripped back to to original wall the was lower ground window shown bricked up we are trying to find out was stood there before it was all filled in Any info? It might be of interest to know that Prescot was actually a bit of a centre for horology. Darn those generic placenames! 18th century (1724) Herman Moll's Detailed and highly decorative early antique old maps of English and Welsh counties. There is (or was) a Jackson Street running between Mill Street and Hyslop Street (formerly Heath Street), pretty much exactly here: 53.390969, -2.973213 (use Googlemaps). Have you any maps that show the name of this now extinct road? Can you help? William Terrace was probably a row of terraced houses on a longer street. Your help would be much appreciated. Hello, There is actually one (derelict) house still standing on Denbigh Street. Swan Street was in a position which is now opposite Crown Street Park. Hi Martin, I’m searching for my father’s parents they had a dairy in Walton in the early 1900s there surname was Raw my fathers name was Arthur Raw he was born in North Yorkshire 1911 but moved to Walton Liverpool when he was a boy still in school, I remember story’s of him delivering milk as a child with a horse and cart but cannot remember his father’s name would love to find out more of their dairy and life at that time in Liverpool, any information would be welcome many thanks Viv James. My grandfather ran the pub we beieve in the late 1920s we have a picture of him outisde. I am intrigued as the why the archway existed. For ease of reference we have divided them into ten regions. 18th Century Old Map of Cornwall (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Cumberland (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Denbighshire and Flintshire, Wales, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Derbyshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Devon (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Dorset (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Durham (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of East_Yorkshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Essex (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Gloucestershire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Guernsey (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Hampshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Herefordshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Hertfordshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Huntingdonshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Isle of Man (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Jersey (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Kent (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Lancashire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Leicestershire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Lincolnshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of London (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Monmouthshire (1724), Wales, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Norfolk (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of North_Wales (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of North_Yorkshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Northamptonshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Northumberland (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Nottinghamshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Oxfordshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Roman Roads and Roman Towns in Britain (1723), England, United Kingdom (UK) according to the work of William Stukely and drawn the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Rutland (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Shropshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Somerset (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of South Wales (1724), Wales, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Staffordshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Suffolk (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Surrey (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Sussex (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of English and Welsh Counties (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Warwickshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of West Yorkshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Westmorland (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Wiltshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Worcestershire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Yorkshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, ARCHI OLD MAPS: English County Maps, 1724, Worldwide Archaeological, Historic and Cultural Sites. Liverpool did have a busy little watchmaking trade at one point, with a few workshops dotted around the town centre and just to the south (so your own apprentice is in the right place). I recently read your wonderful book about Liverpool’s landscape history. My mum got married from there in 1935. . I know the street , off Smithdown Lane still exists but cant find any information about what this place was. Hi Martin, I was wondering if you could point me intend righ direction to discover more of my local area, Tuebrook/Clubmoor area. Looking at the old maps of the time, Shaws Alley (then called Shaw Alley) looks mostly to be large buildings, probably warehouses. There’s a picture of a Sandhills Hotel on the Liverpool Picturebook website’s North page. I can’t see anything that’s obviously a dairy or other business, but it might give you clues on where to go next. Feature archeological and historical illustrations. It was a row of seven , -two up -two down terraced houses with a dead end.. I’ve found a map of the area from the period you’re talking about, but can’t see the Institute on it. With no photos and no as yet found record of this building that literally changed my life, I feel a part of me has been amputated. Cubbin Street is no longer with us, but the name lives on in Cubbin Crescent, which sits on the same site in Kirkdale. This building has now been demolished along with the road and replaced by the Cathedral Gate development. I have enjoyed looking at your site and reading some of the interesting posts. She lived in Adlington Street, which I believe is still there but obviously now it will look nothing like it did when she was living there. Tom Slemen’s probably a name you’ll see coming up again and again. The area was a victim of the Blitz, and a Welsh chapel and Malta Road were badly damaged. I recall a family story about a Tommy Duggan who was a professional footballer. Any suggestions? Do you have any maps of the pre-fab estates at Gatacre from the 1950’s? I’ve looked at a few old maps in Gloucester Street and Gascoyne Street over the course of the 20th century and can’t see it marked. Many thanks, Walt. You might be better able to find it yourself if you explore those maps. I wonder if you could help-I’m trying to find old maps of the Halewood area. I would be grateful for any help. I’ve done a little research and found that the road once sat where North Park now is, directly opposite the entrance to Delaware Road. The site of Ballington Street now has industrial units, including a gym, on it. Is it available from the Liverpool Central Library ? I was wondering if you may be able to help me. Hi David, my father was a director of garners timber….i have a couple of photos of were the timber yards used to be….the timber yard was going for over a hundred years and was family run until it went bust 30 years ago…ive got quite a bit of info from my dad who is still alive…it sounds like the same family to me…i know the name of the company in the 30s was called s garner and sons….i think andy garner contacted me on twitter….if this sounds familiar you can email me for any info you may need, Hello and thank you for all your hard work here! Love this site, it is addictive. The watch I have was made in 1879 (indicated by My great grandmother lived there when she was a child. Glad you like the site! Hi Gloria, I have also been trying to find details and photos of this pub and was lucky to receive a scanned copy of a photo taken in the 70’s. We lived in Tillotson Terrace which was one of 3 Terraces (courts) on Grafton Street near to the corner of Park St. Atterbury Terrace may have been one of these but I cant remember. My building was on the corner of Upper Duke St. and St James street (which has now been built over by the cathedral gate development. I can’t seem to find either on the maps. Would appreciate any recommendation you can send my way and thanks in advance. If you look at this map of Liverpool in 1898 you’ll see Oldham Street in the middle. Feature archeological and historical illustrations, Old Map of Old Map of Bedfordshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Berkshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll, 18th Century Old Map of Buckinghamshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll. He loves stuff like that! It seems like a lot of families have a story passed down from previous generations. I can’t find any photos of this area myself. Liverpool had a large number of suburban dairies in the early to mid 20th century. Hi, Tariff Street had some courts nearby, but the street itself looks like it was mostly industrial, with a few terraced houses nearby. I can’t see it on the index on your 1890 map. http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/wml/collections/horology/results.aspx?&name=bramwell&startyear=1810&endyear=1900&town=liverpool&trade=&page=0 I see J Bramwell is in the census in Everton. In particular the history of Lakhill Gardens? Lancashire is probably the closest place, as the main other one will be the National Archives in London! I’m looking at my mother’s Irish ancestry and as par of this I’m trying to find her birthplace which was Paton Street Kirkdale. I have been looking for some old pictures of Heath street Liverpool 7/8, ran parallel to Bedford street south and across Myrtle street. Are there any maps of the foundry in Arley Street or old photos you kno of. Thanks. I actually remember going to this pub in about 1946/47. i know it was built around 1825 when the old dock was filled in and demolished after the war. Is there a register of pub landlords that I can browse for that time? I can’t find any information about what was there at the moment (I haven’t got access to recent enough directories) but I wonder whether it was an admin office either for a forerunner of the university or a boarding school (was the Collegiate ever a boarding school?). Great site Martin. I have looked in a book of street names of Bootle and Hawthorne Avenue is not listed , sorry. Looking at the 1950 map (I know it’s later but the numbers seem to remain consistent) 79 and 90 would have been right on top of where the extended platforms are, while 121 would have been way up the hill past Seymour Street. Try the 1:500 city plans, though they have very limited coverage. Probably the result of excessive Guinness intake. Many thanks These were embedded in suburban streets which allowed milk to be delivered fresh to the nearby houses. They had lived in Burlington Street, Tichfield Street and Arley Street. Hi Martin Your email address will not be published. The Map. Mike. I haven’t seen any photos of the street itself, but there’s a great map that shows that your Mum was right in saying that one side of the north half had the walls of the Bedford Street South houses on it. The whole shape of Sefton Park was undefined in 1895, but by 1898, the familiar kidney shape is there, and all the rows of housing are in place down Smithdown Road. My maternal grandmother cam from Liverpool, with ancestors from Ireland, Cumbria and Scotland. We are trying to find old maps of Harthill & Calderstones Park, preferably showing Harthill as being part of Calderstones Park. Your own knowledge of your ancestors’ lives may shed more light on what the houses actually looked like. Its not owned by the Buckels family now so any information would be appreciated. Can anyone help me with a query about a location on Shaw Street, an area now dominated by Liverpool Hope University? Here’s another map for you, showing the road junction in 1927, as well as the house and a couple of the glasshouses (with the cross-hatching): Hi, for your information George Buckel is alive and well, and runs/ works at Tal Coed nurseries, in Glan Conwy, North Wales. does any one know if their was a Church of that name in the area of Gascoigne St? watchmaker “J. These houses were often inhabited by those who worked in city centre offices, or the docks, but were slightly higher than the bottom rung of casual labourers – such as clerks, messengers and the like. Hi martin been trying to find my husband grandfather we know he was born in Warrington 1897 .he ended up in Liverpool we know he worked as a Barman in the .boundr y public house in edge lane Liverpool but can not find him he died in 1939 some time after falling down the hatch into the cellar, I’m not much of a family historian, unfortunately, but I wondered whether you’d found his death certificate? Can you please tell me where i could get a copy of the 1953 map showing Kirkdale / Walton. Carson Street is the one running south from the second ‘O’ in Roscommon, and I think Haddon Street is the one running east of that, north of the U-shaped buildings. The Vaughan St image is at http://liverpoolpictorial.co.uk/vaughan_street.gif. As far as I know, the landscaping of Chevasse Park, which was removed in the last few years to be replaced with Liverpool One, was that landscaping which was put down in place of the Customs House, though if anyone else knows better I’d be glad to hear from them! Yes, you’re right, they weren’t demolished straight away. Looking for any information on my family from Liverpool and North Wales (Eaton/Abbinnett – variations of spelling I.e. ARCHI OLD MAPS: English County Maps, 1724. Or something else like that? Do you have any info on a Thomas Lorenzo, who was running a business as a diver, in Liverpool, in the 1920’s through to about 1939. It’s been a while since you asked, but (since someone else was recently on here and asked about Ballington Street) I’ve been able to locate the road you’re after. just seen your address 19 cubbin st dated at time of cencus in 1911,my ancsestors lived at 17 cubbin st at the time of that 1911 cencus,they were called the langgards. Great place to grow up just off the city centre with fabulous memories of the docks, the markets and Scotland Road. Shaw (whether Samuel or another Shaw) may have owned the land that the street was built on, or had his home, office or warehouse here. Whinhurst was a long road but Joseph Williams was quite near one end of it. They lived in the Everton/West Derby area throughout the 19th century – showing Compton Street in 1911. 18th Century Old Map of Cambridgeshire (1724), England, United Kingdom (UK) by the German cartographer Herman Moll. Could you point me to a specific road? I’m looking for one map of Liverpool with street level detail for the period around 1850 to 1880-1890. Is that the kind of thing you’re after? My grandmother was Eveline Dickinson, from what I have been able to find out so far, she lived in Medlock Street during the 1901 Census, but has moved to New Brighton some time between 1901 and the next Census in 1911. Medlock Street is just a tiny stump of road now, leading north west from Westminster Road, but it once ran right through to Rumsey Street before the park was created. If he was not the business owner, then perhaps his place of work address was not associated with his name. I have a newspaper clipping which states that his house in West Derby – Mill House – was up for sale with 10 acres of land. If it’s one of those windows which is half buried then that would match with an industrial use, where perhaps cellars were used (e.g. Martin. My mum said only one side had houses on it. Re: Margaret Burnett query about her fathers birthplace, I was born at 9 Village Grove in 1958, the houses were 2 up 2 down the front door opened straight into the living room, a door opposite the front door led to a tiny kitchen from which a staircase led to 2 bedrooms upstairs. i am trying to find an old map of strawberryfields, little woolton. Hello – thanks for this site and the wonderful maps.
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