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Liverpool Anglican Cathedral
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Hiya Cilla ooeer I mean Mark. Great pic, did you say you have some more. Very impressive isn't it and holds a few records for highest vaults, heaviest peel of bells etc. The red sandstone quarried locally in Woolton.
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Originally Posted by
Ged
Hiya Cilla ooeer I mean Mark. Great pic, did you say you have some more. Very impressive isn't it and holds a few records for highest vaults, heaviest peel of bells etc. The red sandstone quarried locally in Woolton.
Hiya Ged, great to meet you, lol I put Cilla as an avatar for now being a daughter of Liverpool, love her personality, she's one of the lads!
I do have some more pics to come, being inside that bell tower was a bit eerie I can tell you, glad to read the stone was quarried locally, on another subject I was particularly impressed with the heavy-scale quarrying that happened which I noticed whilst on the train to Lime Street past Edge Hill, those navvies sure worked hard back in the day!
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Amazing pics,Mark.Nice one.:)
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Hi Mark and nice to meet you too. Massive isn't the word really is it. Monumental. There are many dedicated stained glass windows to the likes of Agnes Jones and Kitty Wilkinson as you've noticed. The Quarrying at Lime st station cutting is impressive and was done by Stevenson's men (of the Rocket fame) and these were interspersed with other tunnels dug by the men employed by Joseph Williamson aka the mole of Edge Hill. It might be worth you using the search facility on here (top right) as threads already exist for these subjects.
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Originally Posted by
Mark O
The view 25 years ago from here would have been like a mini-Manhattan in the background with dense tower blocks.
Yep the cathedral is big. If in London it would dominate the city and be world renowned.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ged
Hi Mark and nice to meet you too. Massive isn't the word really is it. Monumental. There are many dedicated stained glass windows to the likes of Agnes Jones and Kitty Wilkinson as you've noticed. The Quarrying at Lime st station cutting is impressive and was done by Stevenson's men (of the Rocket fame) and these were interspersed with other tunnels dug by the men employed by Joseph Williamson aka the mole of Edge Hill. It might be worth you using the search facility on here (top right) as threads already exist for these subjects.
Will do Ged, I vaguely recall something about Edge Hill being one of the oldest rail stations in the world, but as you say I'm sure I'll read all about it on existing threads, so many to go through being a newbie!
Back to the subject of the Cathedral, I was intrigued about it taking 74 years to complete, can anyone tell me what the last few things to be completed were in say 1977 and 1978?
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Originally Posted by
gregs dad
Hi gregs dad, nice to meet you and some beautiful pics on your link, I'm sure you would know, but whilst looking north from the Anglican beyond the Metropolitan there's a standard size red brick church on the top of a small sloping hill, in possibly the Everton area?..........I also noticed it on the right whilst on the train to Southport as it leaves the tunnel, it looks worth a visit and would have a fine view of the city, any ideas?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mark O
Hi gregs dad, nice to meet you and some beautiful pics on your link, I'm sure you would know, but whilst looking north from the Anglican beyond the Metropolitan there's a standard size red brick church on the top of a small sloping hill, in possibly the Everton area?..........I also noticed it on the right whilst on the train to Southport as it leaves the tunnel, it looks worth a visit and would have a fine view of the city, any ideas?
this church?
St Georges
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y94...verpool039.jpg
http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y94...n/mixed387.jpg
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mark O
Will do Ged, I vaguely recall something about Edge Hill being one of the oldest rail stations in the world, but as you say I'm sure I'll read all about it on existing threads, so many to go through being a newbie!
No that is Broad Green 1830. Edge Hill is the second station at that point. 1st 1830 , the current is 1836.
- The first underground section of Merseyrail metro with stations originated in 1886 - Mersey Railway, the world's second underground rail network.
- The world's first deep-level underground railway - 1886. The Mersey Railways, which is now a part of the Wirral Line.
- The oldest currently electrified section dates from 1848, from Kirkdale to near the old Exchange Station, now a part of the Northern Line.
- The oldest diesel section dates from 1830, being a part of the original Liverpool-Manchester Passenger railway, now a part of the City Line. The oldest part of any urban railway in the world.
- The world's oldest used railway station, Broad Green, dating from 1830, is on the Merseyrail network.
- Merseyrail runs through the worlds oldest used tunnel at Edge Hill station - 1836.
- Wapping Tunnel (1.26 miles). The first ever bored through a metropolis.
The tunnels:
The Historic Tunnels
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Back to the subject of the Cathedral, I was intrigued about it taking 74 years to complete, can anyone tell me what the last few things to be completed were in say 1977 and 1978?
Just the north section.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mark O
Hi gregs dad, nice to meet you and some beautiful pics on your link, I'm sure you would know, but whilst looking north from the Anglican beyond the Metropolitan there's a standard size red brick church on the top of a small sloping hill, in possibly the Everton area?..........I also noticed it on the right whilst on the train to Southport as it leaves the tunnel, it looks worth a visit and would have a fine view of the city, any ideas?
It is one the world's first iron framed buildings. 25 years ago you would not have seen it for tall towers. Look at:
Liverpool - skyscrapers
The church is also here.
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That looks like ir robbo, cheers, looks a similar stone to that of the Anglican, thanks for the info about the tunnels waterways.:thumbsup: