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In 1818 Joseph retired and sold his business, devoting all of his time and effort to the construction of his labyrinth. It was a time of great poverty and mass unemployment, many men having recently returned home from the Napoleonic War to find their old jobs gone. It is estimated that Williamson employed over half the able bodied labouring population of Edge Hill, providing work and training for men who would otherwise have been living in abject poverty. Indeed, it is now generally accepted that philanthropy was the motivation for the construction of the tunnels; old Joseph giving something back to the community and to the working class from which he came. Work on the tunnels did not cease until 1840 when Joseph Williamson died at the age of seventy-one. The maze’s entrances were sealed soon after.
The mythology surrounding Williamson’s abandoned tunnels grew exponentially and in 1906 – a mere sixty six years after Joseph’s death – local newspaper the Liverpool Porcupine reported that “some three hundred years ago a rich nobleman spent a fortune in making the excavations, but with what object in view we are unable to learn!”. Rumour spread that the catacombs were haunted or that huge populations of spiders and rats, made monstrous by their perpetual interbreeding, now resided within them. Hand himself wrote of such superstitions in his paper “It is often said that in these workings are countless accumulations of spider’s hammocks and armies of rats, but I have not seen either the one or the other”.
Williamson’s story could easily have been lost in the mists of antiquity; dismissed as a mere urban legend or simply forgotten had it not been for a small group of dedicated individuals. The Friends of Williamson’s Tunnels organisation was formed in September 1995 with the intention of acting as a pressure group campaigning to prevent any developments that would jeopardise the tunnels. Today the stable yard is owned by the Joseph Williamson Society (a separate organisation to the FOWT) and is the sight of the Heritage Centre: a small area of tunnels now cleared and opened to the public, complete with its own bar situated within one of Williamson’s famed triple tunnels. The FOWT’s own visitor site is located in the heart of the Williamson Student Village in Paddington, just around the corner from Mason Street. Both organisations are campaigning to raise awareness of the works of Joseph Williamson and are working hard on opening up more and more of his tunnels to the public. As Williamson left no map of his structures, each time a new stretch of tunnel is cleared fresh discoveries are made.
Though his tunnels may have more than a whiff of the tomb about them, Williamson was not interred within his life’s work; he was buried in the Tate family vault at Saint Thomas’s Church alongside his wife in 1840. Having fallen into disuse, the church was demolished in 1911. Headstones and monuments were removed and the land was eventually sold off for development. Even so, there were those who dared to dream that the Tate’s crypt had somehow been left undisturbed. On Sunday the 23rd of August 2005 FOWT were excavating a discussed car park near Canning Place, soon to become part of the new Liverpool One Paradise Street Development. Believing that the parking place stood upon the once hallowed ground of Saint Thomas’s, the volunteers had until five o’clock that afternoon to unearth some evidence of Williamson’s final resting place; construction work was scheduled to begin on the site the following morning. It was a little after lunch time when a 7 foot by 3 foot [2.13 metre by 0.91 metre] slab bearing the name of Tate was unearthed by one of the on site archaeologists. The find was greeted with cheers from the assembled volunteers, representing as it did an end to ten year’s worth of searching with barely four hours to spare. Once fully uncovered the grave stone could be clearly read, The Mole’s modest epitaph at its bottom: “Also the remains of Joseph Williamson of Edge Hill who died 1st May 1840 aged 71 years”. With its location properly noted and recorded, the slab was re-buried before the afternoon’s deadline.
REFERENCES
Charles R. Hand: Joseph Williamson – The King of Edge Hill, Transactions of the Historical Society of Lancashire and Cheshire 1927.
The Story (
www.williamsonstunnels.com).
Richard Whittington-Egan: Joseph Williamson Maker Of Catacombs.
James Stonehouse: The Streets Of Liverpool (1869).
The Mole newsletter #19, March 2009.
Homa Khaleeli: Found! Mole’s Resting Place. Daily Post, Monday August 24th, 2005.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to FOWT Chairman Chris Sharples for his assistance with the original article, Johnathon Wild for his help with the 2008 revisions and Keith Hawkins for the additional information for the 2009 version.
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