Originally Posted by
Waterways
"Toxteth clearly was outside of Liverpool at
one time"
True.
"and a town in its own right."
Not true.
"It was called Harrington at one stage."
Only a small
part.
All the following is familar, but I don't remember where it's from.
"1774 Parliament granted building leases to the 1st Earl of
Sefton. The intention was to develop a rectangle of land bounded by Mill Street to the West, Parliament Street to the north, Northumberland Street to the
south and the river on the fourth side.
The new town was to be called Harrington in honour Countess of Sefton (daughter of the 2nd Earl of
Harrington). But the name Harrington did not come into general use. The new town was laid out by a local builder, Cuthbert Brisbrown on a grid system, with
intersecting, wide, straight streets. The basic grid plan and many of the streets, though not the properties, survive to this day. One of Brisbrown’s
earliest buildings was St James' Church (at the junction of Mill Street, Stanhope Street and St. James' Place). Work started on this brick-built church in
1774 and it opened for worship in 1775. Although dilapidated, this still stands in 2005."
"1835 Toxteth Park was now bounded by Liverpool and the
townships of West Derby, Wavertree and Garston. Its western side was the River Mersey. It was an extra parochial township and in 1835
under the terms of the Municipal Corporation Act ('An Act to provide for the Regulation of Municipal Corporations in England and Wales'), 9th September
1835, the nearest section of Toxteth Park (from Parliament Street to the Dingle), closest to the city centre, was incorporated into Liverpool. It is perhaps
important to understand that prior to this date what we now think of as a district, Toxteth, was in fact Toxteth Park, self-contained and distinct, it was in
no way a part of Liverpool."
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