I agree, fantastic views :handclap:
Printable View
I agree, fantastic views :handclap:
Thanks.
Some more pics of Bootle.
Yesterday in Ulveston, the birthplace of Stan Laurel as Arthur Stanley Jefferson, Ken Dood unveiled a Laurel and Hardy statue at last. Is this Bootle's very own tribute on Oriel Road. 'Oriel and Hardie house'.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/8954/...hardyhouse.jpg
A barge being brought out of a warehouse after restoration in Bedford Place. Is that a prediction of today's scoreline I see there - or was it done in 95?
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/646/b...placebarge.jpg
So after going over the canal, we come to the Bedford Road underpass taking us under the rail line and road.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/7553/bedfordrdtunnel.jpg
Looking from Keble Road across to Hertford Street.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/4229/...hertfordrd.jpg
Looking up Keble Road.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/1239/kebleroad.jpg
The corner of Stanley Road and Wadham Road.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/1184/stanleyrd.jpg
The row of shops and flats from Wadham rd looking South.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/6731/...ockfromwad.jpg
The row of shops and flats from Wadham rd looking North.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/1891/...locklkgnth.jpg
More old and new together.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/2949/wadhamrd.jpg
New foundations go in where it stood on the South East side of Wadham road across the other side of Stanley Road.
http://img6.imageshack.us/img6/6290/...ionstostan.jpg
Looking down from Stanley Road.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/942...fbootlel20.jpg
Old property on Lodwick Street, just down from the Woodhouse pub.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/771...ropertyl20.jpg
Old Georgian stock still in use on Raleigh Street.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/940...ropertyl20.jpg
The Bootle Irish club on Derby Road.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/249...eirishclub.jpg
And down Howe Street to the docks.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/7562/howestl20.jpg
Likewise, down Effingham Street.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/828...nghamstl20.jpg
Norton Scrap, Derby Road.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/307...rapderbyrd.jpg
A few oldies taken a while back to finish off.
The Strand Tavern.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/823...rnstrandrd.jpg
St. Georges Tavern.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/759...ernmarshln.jpg
The Bedford.
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/4776/bedford.jpg
.
Excellent pics, Ged.
U've taken more photos of the area than I have, and I live here !!! lol
Cheers Scouse. Nice weather + cheap camera + pleasant stroll = Keep fit + nice scenes = enjoyment. :PDT11:PDT_Piratz_26:
I'm just too self conscious to take pics most of the time, it's only when I'm on holiday or somewhere strange that I really do it lol
Wear a beret, striped jumper and string of garlic around your neck and people will just think you're a tourist. ;)
You've done a really interesting and comprehensive set of Bootle pics there,
Ged. Many thanks.
Although living off Melrose Road, Kirkdale, which was only a stone's throw
away from Bootle, I can't say that I was familiar with it. The railway in
between effectively cut off all contact, the only means of access being at
the Kirky Station end to the north and Stanley Road to the south. The
result we never got any further into Bootle than the Commodore at one end
when we went to the pictures or Hawthorn Road Rec every Saturday
afternoon when we went to play footie in the winter and cricket in the
summer. I can also remember the Bedford Road area because I had to go through it four times a day for 5 years to get to Alsop HS.
The only vivid memory I have of it was of an area of wasteland we called
the 'brickies' which provided an alternative path to get to County Road and
a huge Fairground set up there one summer which kept us distracted for
what seemed ages. Anybody remember it? It's probably long since been
built over by now.
And one other thing about it, I always thought it had a rather strange name!
Stan H.
You're aged about 35 aren't you Smurfy. Thought you'd not been online today.
http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/liver...name_page.html
.
Wasn't me Guv. I wuz in bed when it happened
Sorry about the poor quality of this image. It's a screenshot taken from Alan Davies' Teenage Revolution shown on the 23rd September. It's from the early 80s and shows Bootle library, with the Triad and the old Electricity Pylon things over the canal.. The dude in the centre is on his way to the Job Centre
Attachment 17292
Our Boxing day jaunt where we kept the pubs of Bootle in business.
http://img27.imageshack.us/img27/819...wdsnboxing.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
---------- Post added at 01:22 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:17 PM ----------
Some of the motley crew in the Wild Rose Wetherspoons.
Then it was onto Yates next door, the Strand Tavern, Blobber and Stanley where I kicked ass in pool - after 8 extra cold guinness :)
http://img707.imageshack.us/img707/8...10wildrose.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
---------- Post added at 01:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:22 PM ----------
Any of you Bootleites got this book. Very well put together, loads of old street party and family photos. 120 pages - well done Allan Boyle.
http://img141.imageshack.us/img141/7369/bootlebook.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
.
Make the most of them Ged. I reckon a few of them will close down before next xmas
Well you're not helping are yer :(
Ha, only kiddin'.
Very true, Pubs just don't appeal to me. Would rather sit under the bridge with a bottle of white lightning :PDT_Aliboronz_24:
Ah, it was you?
I was visiting a property in Gray Street, Bootle at the weekend. It had a cellar so I weighed up what I'd do with it. A new RSJ, a wall to be demolished, some plasterboard, a pool table, seating, bar and 42 inch flatscreen in the recess later and bob's your Uncle.
http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/763/graystbootle.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Looking up to the original coal grid up in the street, this of course being the underside of it.
http://img402.imageshack.us/img402/4330/cellar1.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Where the coal would accumulate.
http://img715.imageshack.us/img715/6277/cellar4.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
The recess carries on up to the living room to form the bay window. A t.v. could go here or perhap use the space instead for a seat.
http://img861.imageshack.us/img861/2154/cellar3.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Perhaps someone could confirm to me what this was used for. Obviously built into the chimney brest. It has a hole in the top and a little space for possibly lighting a fire in the bottom. Is it an early 1900s manual tumble dryer :) No, something to cook on I suspect?
http://img18.imageshack.us/img18/8593/cellar2.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Surveying the wall. If I had the place, that would go, but then i'm always meddling.
http://img593.imageshack.us/img593/1429/cellar5.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Wouldn't it be an old stove for a kettle or even an iron ?
or a tub for boiling the laundry. They used to have them in the old days - big tubs for heating up water. There was one in our Wolverton st house before we modernised it.
Looking at that picture, the tub would be on the top and the fire lit underneath.
Bootle School Board offices, Balliol Road. It's currently getting new neighbours now the cleared sites are being built on.
Don't forget the scrollbar.
http://img690.imageshack.us/img690/5...ficesballi.jpg
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
Here you go Ged, taken from my story to my grand kids about my time as a kid. Its a discription of our back kitchen, which also was a cellar.
Inside the back kitchen on the back wall of the house was a window that was similar in size to the front cellar window; again the top third of the window was above ground and the other two thirds below ground. In front of this window on the outside a section of the ground was cut away to about two feet wide to allow a little more light into the back kitchen. This section was known as and called the ‘area’; Looking out from the back kitchen window, the back yard was about eye level to a person of average height. In the back kitchen, in the corner to the right of the window was a cold water tap set in the wall and a stone sink below. The sink was made from York stone same as the paving stones! The sink was set into the wall about waist high and was about twenty-eight inches square and about four inches thick. The depth or trough of the sink was only about two inches deep with a small grid about three inches diameter, (no plugs on a chain in those days.) There was always a bowl in the sink for washing the dishes and to catch the splashes from the water tap. The whole family had to have their daily wash at this one cold-water tap. If you wanted hot water it had to be heated with a pan placed on a gas ring of the cooker. Under the window and next to the sink stood a small kitchen table with a plastic tablecloth to cover it. Most of the dishes and crockery for day-to-day use was placed here.
To the left of the window on the opposite corner was a set of shelves for other dishes and crockery; the shelves were recessed into a gap between the back wall and the chimneybreast.
(I remember on the middle shelf was a set of three different sized jugs, angular and oblong in shape with a scene of a coach and horses on each side. Over the years they gradually disappeared through breakage.)
On the other side of the chimneybreast two cupboards were fitted into the recess between the chimneybreast and the wall dividing the front and back kitchens. ** Set into the chimneybreast, instead of a fireplace was a brick built boiler about four foot square and about three foot high, set into the centre of the brickwork was a circular iron bowl or cauldron about eighteen inches deep and about two foot diameter, for washing clothes, underneath this was a small iron fire grate to heat the water in the bowl. I don’t remember the boiler being lit very often, because public washhouses were more practical for washing clothes for the working class families of the time. (The one time I do remember it being used was in the sever winter of 1947 when it was too difficult for mam to take the washing to the washhouse, due to the snow and ice. Then the back kitchen was like ‘Dante’s Inferno’ with the flames from the fire under the boiler, the smoke from the fire not drawing up the chimney due to lack of use, and the steam from the washing in the boiler, steaming up the windows. I don’t know how mam coped with it all.)Opposite the chimneybreast was the gas cooker made of cast iron in the traditional style of the day, it was like a large safe on legs with a door in the front with a fastening like a back door latch. (This style of gas cooker was based on an original design which I believe was first produced in Birkenhead and lasted well into the sixties, until the trendy, pastel coloured enamel cookers became the order of the day.) You still see this design in large kitchens of old hotels.
To the left of the door into the kitchen; against the wall facing the window was a small kitchen table with a drop leaf, on top of the table was a small cupboard with a door on the front, covered with a galvanised mesh screen. This cupboard, which was always known as the ‘safe’ was used for keeping food under cover, (most food for meals was bought fresh and cooked and eaten on the same day, it was not left long enough to go bad or off!) This room also had a gas bracket for lighting but this was fixed to the wall alongside the window and near to the sink. In this small, damp back room, Mam had to cook and wash clothes for five kids, Dad and herself! There were seven in our family, Mam, Dad, my sister who was the eldest, two brothers older than me, and one younger brother.
Cheers Samp. Yes Lindy had it right. My pa-in-law confirmed it when he saw it - you arl gets ;)
Does anyone remember the Welsh Baptist Chapel that was next door to the School Board Offices? That is where I lived as my parents were the caretakers of the chapel,we left there in the 60's to live in Waterloo. I remember the school dentist was also in the school board building,went there once,put me off dentists for life. I heard that the chapel had been pulled down and houses were built on the site,I would'nt know what was there now. The chapel was haunted. :shock:
Hi Maureen, I was down there looking for the chapel for you, not even seen a pic of it but still looking.
Steve. They've built all around the school board building so hopefully it's saved. The buildings opposite are listed as far as I know.
Hi Ged, The chapel was pulled down a few years ago, I thought you might have had a photo in your collection,thank you so much for trying though,I have been looking through the bootle photo's and getting quite nostalgic,lol, it has changed so much since I was there,once again thank's for trying.
According the the council website the old school board building is listed so hopefully that means it's safe. Does Hugh Baird still own it ?
I asked on another forum and one of the members suggested contacting
http://www.archiveswales.org.uk/anw/...d=10150&expand
The only thing is,being listed,isn't always enough to save you! "Ozanam" house,in Tubrook, and "Josephine Butler" house,opposite the Philharmonic, were both listed,and both demolished,the latter site being used as a car park! "Maghull Developments",who own it,are skint at the moment!
Maureen,maybe you could have a look at the " Bootle Times" site?!