The Mersey Steel and Iron Company was founded in 1810 by Ralph Clay.
It later moved inland and eventually occupied a vast site.
The main reason it closed was that residents in the Wirral complained of the noise coming from the hammer.
Off hand, I'm not sure when it closed, but 1890s sounds about right.
In 1908 Griffiths mentions the "deserted and ruined remains".
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Corn Street and Yates Street were built there simply because the mill owned the land.
The map shows that fact.
They would have to have been built high because of "rights to light".
Bran and Grain Streets were also built for the Mill workers.
Yates Sreet was named after the famous family who lived at the Dingle.
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