The Official Seven Hills, from Ken Pye
I think we have now found the answer, or at least as definitive as we are likely to get., i.e. from KEN PYE in what must be the best ever history of Liverpool, his £20 book, "Discover Liverpool" (If you haven't got it yet, GET IT! worth every penny , and more)
on page 124, he says; "Liverpool is built on seven major hills, and these are;
Walton Hill
Everton Ridge
High Park/Toxteth Ridge
Mossley Hill,
Allerton Hill
Olive Mount
Woolton Ridge.
So now you know.
As soon as you start checking these out you start to realise that most of the roads with Hill in the name are just sloping streets, and you have to keep going until you stop going UP.
Try Brownlow Hill and Mount Pleasant, clearly NOT two separate Hills, and even when they have joined by the University Clock Tower, the road towards Edge Lane goes rising past PAddington and Mount Vernon where it meets LOW Hill, and you still have to ask, is that the summit? From Edge Hill CHurch the roads mostly go down, but along Towerlands, etc south, things stay fairly level rather than going down, and do they in fact go down at all, making this area - including the "missing" Edge Hill - part of the rising land that tops out at Olive Mount.
Certainly contour maps are needed for the true answer, but Landranger Sheet 108 has got so much built-up area that there is hardly a contour line to be seen.
Anyway, there you have it; the Seven Hills of Liverpool. Sorted.
2 Attachment(s)
Seven Hills -- summits, not roads.
Thank you so much, Tony S, (and Jim Moore)for that line drawing of the hills. That makes it all so muich clearer and has saved me some hours of work. Just add Walton (on the) Hill at the top and we are just about there.
I am currently scanning OS map 108 to see what I can make out in terms of contour lines, and I'll report back. Here are two which look promising, with a clear complete contour circling a summit. They fit in nicely with High Park on Jim Moore's picture, and the hill he does not name to the west of Woolton Ridge, which Ken Pye names as Allerton Hill, centred as it is on Allerton Golf course.
Jim's picture also gives us a good start to the waterways in the valleys for Shoney. Tue brook , Ditton Brook and of course the river that flowed down what became Church Street Lord Sreet to the Pool. The "River Jordan" as Ken Pye says the watercourse through Sefton Park lake is called , would be one of the streams running into the Mersey.
Sorry , H Asbo, but we ARE talking about actual summits, rather than roads which lead upwards ( or down). You're right that there are a lot more than seven "hill" named streets.
My two map sections should enlarge, and mayeb you could save as or something. I don't know how to put large images in the message.
The rivers and streams of Liverpool
Quote:
Originally Posted by
shoney
usually between hills you get rivers, bar for the mersey and the river alt in huyton, i can't think of any others
Shoney is quite right; there must be rivers, there are only two named Rivers, but there are (or were) quite a few watercourses of one sort or another.
Luckily for Shoney - and the rest of us - there have been quite a few really good books come out recently, one of which is "Underground Liverpool". Drop a birthday hint for this one; it explains all about the tunnels, and the wells, and the sewers and watercourses of Liverpool. What about Sugar Brook, Fluker's Brook, Ditton Brook,... and the River Jordan?
In fact at present you can see the river Jordan; it is the watercourse which links the waters in Sefton Park before going underground to Otterspool. With the lower Lake drained, you can see a narrow meandering shallow stream wandering across the middle of the mud - this has just got to be the Jordan.
For everything else, Buy The Book! ("You deserve it")
Gerry