Tings are getting scarce online now...but I will percy vere. :)
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Tings are getting scarce online now...but I will percy vere. :)
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Might be getting scarce but two good pics.
Cheers George,
Chas
:)
Vipond st was Everton area but is no longer on the map?
Me past is disappearing completely with no documentation to show where I wus born. :( I must do summat about it before I dissapear. :)
:034:
I am,gonna dig a hole where I wus born and drop a tin in the hole with a note sayin I grew up here. :)Quote:
:034:
:noid:
Good stuff.
Excellent pictures Georgie, many thanks. Vipond Street ran between Kilshaw Street and Boundary Lane.
Thanks George,
Chas
:handclap:
Found your street listed on A Guide to Liverpool 1928, I've highlighted the area in purple around your street. I hadn't heard of Vipond Street before now and Kellys 1963 edition doesn't list it. When did you live there, George?
Best wishes,
Chas
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The guy who gave the Boundary Lane lead was spot on too.:handclap:
I didn't,just wanted to see where about in Everton it was based....I lived Albion Street,in between St Domingo Road and Northumberland Terrace....we were a bit posh yer know...little narrow gardens outside. :)Quote:
When did you live there, George?
I know what you mean. It's always seemed a waste to pull down houses when a lot of them could have been modernized / renovated. I know there were some dwellings that were decrepit and deserved to be pulled down, but the CPO demolitions were outrageous. I speak from the point of view of a person who was born in the tenements of Kempston Street:neutral:,
family moved to Gillmoss for a time :cry:,
by chance happened to make it back to Roscommon Street:handclap:,
then moved out to Heyworth Street:handclap:, and all by the time I was 11.
Lasted in Heyworth Street till 1967- 68
before once again the council planning drove us out:(. :034::002:
'tis a tale of woe and anger, but we all have different opinions on the great council land grab.
That's all for now,
Regards,
Chas:PDT11
Oh I don't have any gripes of them pulling the houses down in the Everton/Kirkdale area,as they were in bad shape and outlived their usage.
What does annoy me is the poor ****e way they have remodelled the area ie a waste of land that could have housed new houses,instead they threw up tenaments and maisonettes that are an eyesore now and nobody is interested in living in em.the slopes could have been turned into ski practice slopes and would have been more fun than walking around a stupid so called park.
I disagree on your 1st point. The standards of a lot of housing were superior in both build and design. Much better craftsmanship overall. Survived the blitz, felled by council s***s.:disgust:
I agree, how long did the high rises last?( sorry Ged). Someone made a lot of money. Hush now, I think they still have future long term plans for redevelopment around Everton Park. The creation of Stanley Park was to provide a peaceful haven in the city for it's citizens. When the smell of money is wafted before the city fathers anything goes. Everton Park was always going to be a problem as it is too big, probably not a lot of crime there because it's too remote. Ski slopes? Didn't they open ski slopes in Kirby Sports centre and after a short time they closed down.
George, are you going to the Everton Lost Tribe meet tomorrow? I intend to go, all depends on the weather as usual.
Might see you on the piste,
Yodel ay ay, yodel ee ee,
Chas:D
They didn't survive the blitz,Chas.....they were actually weakened a bit more than they were,the bombing sent shock waves through the ground and add the minor earth tremors we have had over the years brought these victorian working mens houses to dangerous conditions to live in.Quote:
I disagree on your 1st point. The standards of a lot of housing were superior in both build and design. Much better craftsmanship overall. Survived the blitz, felled by council s***s.
You have only got to look at the many pics from the LRO that show collapse of gable walls,bulging backwalls and actual collapse of various internal walls.
Our house in Albion St,the backitchen wall fell down making it dangerous for the bedroom above to be slept in.
The house I have just moved from,the kitchen wall was on the verge of collapse due to it bellying out.
We must remember that the mortar that ws used on these house was poor and over 100 years old in most working mans dwellings and became a substance that crumbled in your hand and you could even scrape it away with the finger.
I admit I don't have any knowledge of Victorian building practice apart from reading "the Ragged Trousered Philanthropists" but where we lived in Roscommon Street some houses were MAGNIFICANT. I recall my dad saying the back yard wall will need pointing in the summer, but that's about it. Our house had belonged to a Liverpool merchant in the past, it had a strange circular looking staircase on the ground floor and a circular skylight in the roof. it had an inside lav and bathroom, a kitchen and pantry, two living rooms and four bedrooms. Attached to it was a large stables, a small washhouse, and a front yard with a loose box building. We only managed to pay the rent by subletting parts of the stable to potato firms for storage etc. When the circus came to town we lodged many animals and pantomimes at the Empire had Shetland ponies and a Jack donkey which Buttons ( Ken Dodd) would ride! We also provided food and lodging to the animal's keepers. At this time my mam worked as a night nurse in Maghull homes, my dad looked after the premises and was involved in various enterprises, mainly to pay the rent. When we left under the CPO the stable wall adjoining Roscommon St school was still standing in the 1990's when the school was torched by vandals. Wish I'd have gotten a pic, you could still see where the impressions of the iron stalls in the wall.
Dad and mam managed to scrape together enough to buy a shop on Heyworth Street, next to the school again. This story could go on for a long time,so....
Getting back to your well argued points, George, the shop structure was sound. General maintenance jobs like pointing (again), no bathroom ( the wash house bathe were a short walk away) ,maybe could've had an bathroom extension in the back yard. Under the CPO we were awarded £300.00 for the property ( no good will as the council had cleared the area of customers by then), family was rehoused to a rented council house in Norris Green.
I keep saying that some properties had no obvious future, but total demolition of an area and it's communities was not the answer. High rise living was a catastrophe (apologies to Ged). I've never lived in the high rises but I visited friends many times. Netherfield Heights, the Bradocks, Garibaldi, Meazzi, St Georges,the Piggeries, Sheil Road...... all constructed in my lifetime and demolished. Good riddance.
It's too late to do anything about the past, let's not repeat the mistakes in the future (Edge Lane area etc). I think within 100 years Everton Park will be developed as a high class suburbia for the
elite. Vauxhall community stood firm and got it right.:handclap:
:002:The open view over Merseyside from St Georges church must have the developer's drooling.:drool:
"Have mercy said the blacksmith,
How are you gonna replace human hands,
Found guilty said the judge,
Of not being in demand." ~ The Band, can't recall the title, just came to mind.
Apologies for rambling, George, just getting things off my chest.
Keep smilin',
Chas:PDT11
Interesting post Chas.
Just reminiscing, in 2003 I had a stroke, memories from my younger days are still crystal clear. Glad you found it interesting, Lindylou.
Chas:)
What is LRO please?
This is a great thread, thanks for all the work thats gone into it
Im interested to know where I can find old Liverpool maps online as it seems there were two roads behind my house at one time which now no longer exist. I have always wondered why that happened.
Liverpool Records Office. :)
Somebody will drop by and give you the contacts etc.
You've apologised to me twice Chas regarding high rise living. I've never said anywhere that it was any good. My books are about the Tenements which were. :PDT11
---------- Post added at 09:15 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:11 AM ----------
I would have liked to have seen a pic of the inside and outside of that house Chas.
:PDT11
I'm confident you'll find them in my previous posts. I've put everything I could find from LRO and my own family collection. Wish I could find more.
I can't remember any inside photographs being taken, but this was pre 60's and flashes for cameras were expensive. I think you'll find that's why a lot of old family photos were taken outside in the sun. Our house had a front room kept spotless for visitors, the other rooms were lived in but tidy. If you really need to know more PM me.
Chas:neutral:
It's perhaps not so much that I lied, but more certain of the others who are in the know are too busy bickering. Tut-tut. ;)
Feast your eyes upon this Lyn...
http://www.liverpool.gov.uk/librarie...amily-history/
Old maps of liverpool can be got from the LRO and are Ordenance street map at 10p per each sheet of the map.Quote:
Im interested to know where I can find old Liverpool maps online as it seems there were two roads behind my house at one time which now no longer exist. I have always wondered why that happened.
What roads are we talking about that you want to know about?
Old roads are often swept away and forgotten about and new estates built with new realigned roads, some carrying the same name as the old ones but not exactly on the same site or new names from scratch.
You posted those in post #147,Joseph....your worse than me for double posting the same pics.