Showing posts with label Holyoake Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holyoake Hall. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 March 2016

Baby-sitting The Beatles

Holyoake Hall
332-338 Smithdown Road
Liverpool 15





On the corner of Blenheim Road and Smithdown Road opposite the old tramsheds and only 200 yards from Penny Lane where terraced Wavertree meets semi-detached Allerton stands Holyoake Hall, a large and impressive red-brick building built as a Co-operative store in 1913-14 with a ballroom on the first floor.

During the days of the "British dance band era" (1930s) there was a wide range of dancehalls in the Liverpool area. Among the premiere venues were the Rialto and the Grafton with their "Old Tyme" and dinner dances, and at the lower end were the smaller ballrooms like Holyoake Hall and Blair Hall, such venues existing for different, perhaps marginalised clienteles, providing them with somewhere to go dancing and socialise.

I’m not sure when the Holyoake was ‘hot’ probably a long time before 1950′s! My parents only went to these places in the 40′s, dodging the air raids. The Holyoake, the Rialto and Grafton were names that were often remembered as part of their dancing days during WW2. "The girls" (I think there was a gang of them) would also get out to the American Base at Burtonwood or did the GI’s come into Liverpool? Anyway, some serious liaisons were formed! I should add, my father didn’t really dance, it was my mother who usually took to the floor! (Denys Owen, Streets of Liverpool)

By the 1950's, Holyoake Hall was in decline, with poor attendances and often with a dance band consisting of just saxophone, drums and piano. A shame because it was reportedly a lovely ballroom with a beautiful sprung wooden floor and a large stage. Down one side were pillars supporting a balcony and underneath this were the seats. Patrons gained access by climbing a long flight of stone steps from the entrance at the side of the building on Blenheim Road.


Holyoake Hall in 2009 when the ground floor was occupied by the Mustard Bar and Restaurant (I had a fantastic meal there....sorry, I digress).

During the skiffle boom in 1957-58 the hall was used to hold regular Skiffle auditions and Rod Davis, banjo player with the Quarry Men remembers them playing here on several occasions during this period.

The subsequent explosion of rock 'n' roll during the late 1950s would bring a new lease of life to the venue as jiving became popular.

One of the first independent rock and roll promoters in Liverpool, if not the first, was a young man from Wavertree, named Wally Hill.

Hill: I was working at the Rialto Ballroom and jive was not allowed, it was strictly ballroom dancing, and we had to keep breaking them up because they would be doing a bit of jive in the corners. I spoke to the wife and I said "There is a market here" because jive wasn't allowed in any dance halls in Liverpool at that time. The manager of the Rialto thought he would run ballroom dances in Garston and so off we went to Garston. He didn't anticipate the trouble there, he didn't like the bloodshed and so he packed it in, but my wife and I said "We'll have a go at rock 'n' roll. We opened for business and it was great.

The Garstonites didn't like anybody foreign in the dance hall, and by that I mean anyone from the Dingle or anywhere else. Nobody but a Garstonite was allowed in a Garston dance hall. If a stranger wandered in, he was found in the toilets, or what was left of him.  When we had the ballroom dances for the manager of the Rialto, he thought it would be civilised to have commissionaires on and they would last about 15 or 20 minutes and then we would have to escort them to the bus stop, so it was rough.

Hill's enterprise soon attracted at like minded soul, a Garston man named Bob Wooler who offered his services as disc jockey and MC (master of ceremonies), mainly, he said because local bands were having to amble on stage without any proper introduction, which he felt was "terrible".  At the time it was unusual for someone to announce the records and take requests. Bob would play appropriate records while the bands were changing over on stage.

He would soon become known as the "Daddy-O" of Merseyside rock 'n' roll DJs , the soul of Liverpool rock 'n' roll organising all aspects of promotion and doing everything he could to encourage the musicians.

One group benefiting from Bob's support was Rory Storm and the Hurricanes, who'd first met him at the Winter Gardens, Heald Street, in Garston, when they were still Al Caldwell and the Ravin' Texans. Knowing Bob was handling bookings at the time, and wanting to play some dance halls they approached him for help and he sorted out some bookings for them.

The Winter Gardens was opposite the police station but that didnt stop regular bouts of fighting. The police soon tired of it and the venue was closed in December 1958. Despite this setback, Wally Hill saw the potential for dances in the area and for using Bob Wooler.

In February 1959, he started rock 'n' roll evenings at Holyoake Hall with Wooler acting as compere and DJ.

Holyoake gained a reputation for rather heavy-handed doormen, something Hill saw as a necessity after his experiences at the Winter Gardens.

Wally: It was different at Holyoake because we had an army of bouncers. We advertised in the Liverpool Echo and we got replies, loads and loads of them, for baby-sitters. Nobody knew the word "bouncers" then and they thought we wanted "baby-sitters".  The national press wanted to know what a "bouncer" was and did a story about it.



Hill employed between 11 and 16 men a night, paying them £1 each which he later increased to 25 shillings (£1.25) and then 30 (£1.50).

Note: In 1958 £1 was the equivalent of £20.21.

As the hall only held around 400, 16 bouncers seems excessive. Wally Hill explains: When we had a riot and we had a few riots in our time, you needed them, you are protecting yourselves and not just the dance hall. The adrenaline would flow and if we didn't have much trouble, we would think "It's a bit boring tonight". It was quite fun, and, except for a few occasions, we were in the strongest army.

There was a row of terraced houses opposite Holyoake Hall and the neighbours would arrange their chairs in the front windows to watch the goings-on for the evening. I thought at the time they were a bit sad, but (in hindsight) it must have been quite interesting.

Mickey Hill (Wally's wife): I used to take the studded belts off them as they went up the stairs. We weighed one once and it was seven pounds. It was like the western films where you see a row of gun-belts in the saloon. Some of them were very heavy. If they had kept them, they would have been swinging them round their heads to stop anyone getting near them.

Bob Wooler: Once I was at the top of the stairs talking with Wally's wife who was in the box office, and this bouncer hit a lad and sent him flying down the stone steps. It was sickening as the lad must have been badly hurt. Wally employed an oriental doorman who had a black belt in judo but, as I never saw him in action it could have been a con.



Wally Hill and his "baby-sitters". Wally is second from the right on the front row.

Wally Hill: We dealt with the front of house, Bob controlled the stage, and the bouncers the dance floor. The stage was high up at Holyoake and Bob felt safe. He knew how to fade away at the first sign of trouble, but the rest of the time he was dynamite.

Bob's influence on the scene cannot be underestimated:

Freddie Marsden (drummer with Gerry and the Pacemakers): Bob Wooler was the main man and we owe what happened to us to Bob Wooler. In 1959 when we were trying to get going, he got us into Holyoake and then into (Hill's other main venue) Blair Hall. He was always promoting us and we felt really good when he introduced us on stage. We'd think he was talking about another group because he made us sound so good.

Gerry Marsden (Gerry and The Pacemakers) remembers the venues: The Cavern had an atmosphere, right enough, for the fans. It stank of disinfectant and stale onions. It was hot, sweaty and oppressive. Blair Hall was ten times better, Holyoake Hall in Penny Lane was brilliant with a big beautiful big stage and a dance floor the kids could enjoy. All the bands preferred it to the Cavern. If Brian Epstein had gone to any of these places to discover us and the Beatles, these venues would have been famous. But the Cavern went down in history.


A dynamic young black singer from the Dingle, Derry Wilkie was born in Liverpool on 10 January 1941.

His big break came in late 1959 when a group from Huyton called the Hy-tones, featuring Howie Casey on tenor sax was appearing at the Hall.  Bob Wooler asked them if Wilkie could join them on stage for a couple of songs. They were impressed and despite having two singers already he soon became their lead vocalist.

Howie Casey: Derry came up and he was doing Little Richard, which was right up my street because prior to that we didn't have a singer who could get down to that sort of stuff. That was great, so we asked Derry to join the band.

Inspired by Danny and the Juniors, they changed their name to Derry Wilkie and the Seniors in early 1960, and they appeared regularly at all the major Liverpool venues including the Jacaranda, whose owner Allan Williams, booked them for the Liverpool Stadium Show with American rock 'n' roller Gene Vincent on Tuesday May 3 1960.

As Derry and the Seniors they began to play at most of the local venues for promoters such as Charlie McBain, Wally Hill and Brian Kelly. Casey remembers both of Wally Hill's venues (Holyoake and Blair Hall) as being 'quite violent': I vaguely remember the bouncers who wore black leather sort of gloves and white shirts, black trousers, black leather - and they had truncheons, or whatever. They used to circle the hall while the people danced and there was always a fight and they'd jump in and people would get kicked downstairs and there was blood and stuff everywhere. A few things like that went on.

I remember Wally Hill with favourable memories. He was okay to us. We didn't get paid a lot of money as you can imagine, but we used to get the money up in the end from Wally. He used to secrete a lot of money. He used to give me bags of silver because his wife kept a firm grip on the finances and he used to sneak off a bit of extra money because I'd asked for rises over a period of time. Big deal, you know. I think we were getting about two quid each.

In fact the violence doesn't appear to have put Casey off too much, Wally Hill remembering the well built sax player asking "When you book us here, do you want me to be a bouncer as well so I can get a bit extra?"

Derry Wilkie and the Seniors
(December 1959 - January 1961):
Derry Wilkie (Lead Vocals)
Howie Casey (Tenor Sax)
Brian Griffiths (Lead Guitar)
Billy Hughes (Rhythm Guitar)
Paul Whitehead (Bass)
Stan Foster (Piano)
Jeff Wallington (Drums)



1961 L-R: Derry, Howie, Frank Wibberly, Brian Griffiths (later in the Big Three), Freddie Starr (to play the Star-Club with the Midnighters), and Phil “Spread” Whitehead.

Howie Casey: This was a Liverpool publicity photo for Derry and the Seniors taken at Holyoake Hall in Liverpool in 1961, but who would have booked us on that picture?





Rory Storm and the Hurricanes:
(line up from December 2, 1959 - December 29, 1961):

Al Caldwell (aka Al Storm, Rory Storm)()vocals)
Johnny Byrne (aka Johnny Guitar) (guirar)
Charlie O'Brien (ake Ty Brien) (guitar)
Richy Starkey (aka Ringo Starr) (drums)
Walter "Wally" Eymond (aka Lou Walters)(vocals, bass)

With Bob Wooler's help Rory Storm and the Hurricanes began appearing at Holyoake Hall in 1960 and drew quite a crowd.  Johnny Guitar's diary lists four such engagements:

January 3rd and 30th, 1960

February 27th, 1960 - the diary notes that the band had a row with the club manager so they only played half a set for half the fee. The Holyoake manager, John Guise, would play hell about the rock'n'roll dances, He would say over the mike "Do you know how long it took to get all the chewing gum off this floor last time?", This place is used for proper ballroom, it is not just for rock 'n' roll.  He might as well have been talking to the wall. He turned puce when Rory Storm jumped on his piano and he told him to get off. I thought of Irving Berlin "That's a fine way to treat a Steinway" (Bob Wooler)

March 12th, 1960
Bob Wooler: (Rory) was far more show than substance. He learnt his tricks from watching Elvis Presley and Gene Vincent. He had little originality but was a very good copycat. He would cock his leg over the mike like Gene Vincent and cover his songs like "Rocky Road Blues". I will never forget him kicking the Reslo mike over at Holyoake: his foot hit the mike, which was the only one we had. I thought "Oh god, I hope he hasn't ruined it" and, fortunately he hadn't. I told him he must never do that when we are down to one mike.

The first time we went there was to see Rory Storm and the Hurricanes. I also remember seeing Freddie and the Dreamers perform there. I recall this particular occasion because Freddie looked just like my dad! Holyoake Hall became one of our most frequented out-of-city-centre venues, although it took me three buses to get there.
(Pam Beesley, Merseybeat)

Wally Hill: Rory Storm would come with about 45 followers, all expecting to come in for nothing. We had to sort him out and say he had to curb this. Rory would fill the dance hall anyway. What an entertainer! You would speak to him on the phone and it would take half an hour because he stuttered but on a microphone not one word would be stutter; he could go straight through. The kids would be ten deep at Holyoake watching him

It appears that Bob Wooler had accidently bumped into George Harrison and Paul McCartney at a bus stop opposite the Holyoake in 1959, and offered them a date at the club. They declined the invitation because they had no drummer (this may have been during their Japage 3 period - late 1959- early 1960). It would be another couple of years before The Beatles would appear here.


The Beatles, July 1961. Just back from Hamburg and in need of a haircut.

The Beatles eventually performed twice at Holyoake Hall, on 15th and 22nd July 1961.

Bob Evans and the Five Shillings were a popular group and they asked us if we had used The Beatles yet. We said 'no' and we asked what they were like. Bob Evans said "Don't touch them, they don't wash their hair and there's a fight every night". There was a fight every night anyway, so that didn't mean anything. We wrote to them in Hamburg and they signed an agreement that they would play for us every Saturday and Sunday at a tenner a night, which was big money then (Wally Hill)

When the Beatles first went to Hamburg in 1960 they were a "bum group" to use Allan Williams' phrase, and nobody would touch them.  By the time they returned from their second trip to Hamburg at the start of July 1961 they were head and shoulders above any other group in Liverpool, and they knew it.

Here's how their schedule looked in July 1961. They played for Wally Hill at both Blair Hall and Holyoake Hall.

Mon 3           Arrival in Liverpool (returning from Hamburg)

Thu 13          St. John's Hall in Tuebrook, Liverpool.

Fri 14            Cavern Club. The Beatles do lunchtime and evening performances, the latter bill shared with Johnny Sandon and the Searchers.

Sat 15           Holyoake Hall, Wavertree, Liverpool  

Sun 16          Blair Hall, Walton, Liverpool.

Mon 17         Cavern Club (lunchtime), Litherland Town Hall, Liverpool (evening) with Gerry and the Pacemakers.

Wed 19         Cavern Club (lunch and evening)

Thur 20         St. John's Hall in Tuebrook, Liverpool.

Fri 21            Cavern Club (lunchtime), Aintree Institute, Aintree, Liverpool (evening)with Cy and the Cimarrons.

Sat 22           Holyoake Hall, Wavertree, Liverpool.

Sun 23          Blair Hall,Walton, Liverpool.

Mon 24         Litherland Town Hall.

Tue 25          Cavern Club, with Gerry and the Pacemakers, the Bluegenes, the Remo Four and the Four Jays.

Wed 26         Cavern Club, with the Four Jays and the Remo Four.

Thur 27         Cavern Club (lunchtime), St. John's Hall, Tuebrook, Liverpool (evening) where they also provide backup for Priscilla White who later changes her name to Cilla Black.

Fri 28            Aintree Institute with the Strangers.

Sat 29           Blair Hall,Walton.

Sun 30          Blair Hall, Walton.

At some point during the month, after comparing the fees they were receiving at other venues with what Wally Hill was paying them at Blair and Holyoake Halls the Beatles decided they were being short changed.

They played a few times and we increased it to £12 and then one night they came along to Blair Hall, Walton, and Paul said "We are not going on unless we get £15". There was a bit of haggling and in the end we decided they weren't worth it! We parted company. They didn't play that night and the kids were disappointed and we never had them again. I think I made a mistake there (Wally Hill)

Despite the guarantee of work every weekend, in the case of Holyoake Hall, at the only venue in south Liverpool close enough to the homes of two of the Beatles* that they could walk there, the group decided they would rather not work at all than do so for someone they considered was taking advantage of them.

Following his dismissal in August 1962 drummer Pete Best joined Lee Curtis and the All Stars and found himself back on the jive circuit at venues such as Blair Hall and Holyoake Hall, the very places The Beatles had left behind.


Liverpool in the early 1960s. The Beatles' influence on the lad facing the camera is quite apparent. Holyoake Hall stands in the background with the original shops to the left. The photo below shows a view of the hall taken from the tower of St. Barnabas church on Smithdown place. The area where the shops stood was a wasteground in 2013. 


Holyoake Hall stood facing the Smithdown / Penny Lane/ Prince Alfred Road tram sheds - see the photo below. Anyone who visits Liverpool and takes the Magical Mystery Tour coach trip or a Fab Four Taxi tour will drive past the hall, probably in both directions, but I wonder how many are made aware of it?


The former "tram sheds with no trams", facing Holyoake Hall, Smithdown Road


Three years on a new build occupies the wasteground and partly obscures the hall.

Whenever I drive past now I will think of the dance hall days with all those ballgowns struggling to get down that long flight of stone steps and out into Blenheim Road... of gangs of Teddy Boys armed to the teeth with home made weapons to be confiscated at the door by Mrs Hill and her husband's army of bouncers, one of them ready to send any troublemaker back down the stairs with a well timed judo kick....Rory Storm arriving with his entourage having promised them they will get in for free if they say they are with him.... all this observed by the neighbours from the comfort of their own living rooms... 

Note:

* John (1.9 miles) and Paul (1.8 miles). George lived 5.2 miles away in Speke and Pete about 3.5 in West Derby.

Source:

Web:  http://streetsofliverpool.co.uk/the-grafton-1956/

Bill Harry's Merseybeat site is a treasure trove of information about this period
  
Books:

The Best of Fellas - The Story of Bob Wooler by Spencer Leigh was invaluable.

Other Voices: Hidden Histories of Liverpool's Popular Music Scenes, 1930s-1970s by Dr Michael Brocken

Sunday, 14 December 2014

Blue Suburban Skies - Penny Lane from Above


“Penny Lane is not only a street but it's a district... a suburban district where, until age four, I lived with my mother and father. So I was the only Beatle that lived in Penny Lane." (John Lennon, 1980)


September is a month of Heritage Open Days across the UK providing the opportunity to explore some of the cultural and architectural treasures that this country has to offer.

There are over a hundred sites to explore across Merseyside and each year I try and visit as many as I can, especially those to which the public do not normally have access. One of the highlights for me during the 2013 heritage month was a trip to up to the top of the St Barnabas Church tower.  St Barnabas was built between 1900 and 1914, and designed by the Liverpool architect James Francis Doyle. The church is designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building and photographs of the interior can be found here.

Situated in Smithdown Place, Liverpool, the church stands at the junction of Allerton Road, Smithdown Road, and Penny Lane and therefore gave me a superb vantage point over a number of Beatles related sites in the Penny Lane district  and the city as a whole.


Looking South, on the horizon the chimneys and pipes of the refineries and production plants in Ellesmere Port can be viewed on the far bank of the River Mersey. Closer to home, the coliseum- like structure of Garston Gas works on Banks Road is clearly visible in the centre of the photo. At the time the works opened in 1892 it was unique for producing only carburetted water gas, though coal gas was produced from 1921. The works later had an oil pipeline to the nearby docks.


The larger gas holder (above right) is one of the largest in the country with a capacity of four million cubic feet. Although no longer producing gas the plant is now the major distributor of North Sea gas for South Liverpool.


Elm Hall Drive runs south-east from St. Barnabas towards Mather Avenue and Allerton.  On the horizon you can just make out the tower of All Hallows Anglican Church on Allerton Road.  It is designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building. The church was built at the expense of John Bibby of the Bibby Line (a shipping line founded in 1807) in memory of his first wife at a cost of £20,000 (as this is the equivalent of £1,640,000 in 2014 we can assume he had a few bob).

It was designed by G. E. Grayson. The foundation stone was laid on 31 October 1872, and the church was consecrated on 10 August 1876 by the Bishop of Chester.


To my shame I have yet to visit the church despite it being a regular attraction on Heritage Weekends and me living only ten minutes away. The finest feature of the church is said to be its Victorian stained glass windows. Of the 15 windows, 14 were designed by Edward Burne-Jones, with some input from William Morris, and were made by Morris and Co. They were considered to be such marvellous and valuable examples that during the Second World War the stained glass was removed to the isolated Lancashire village of Slaidburn for safety and replaced by plain glass. Whoever made this decision had great foresight as the replacement windows were destroyed during an air raid.  The stained glass was returned in 1946 and will no doubt continue to be admired by generations to come.


Looking East down Allerton Road in the direction of Childwall and Calderstones Park. Barnados (bottom left) was formerly the studio/shop of photographer Albert Marrion who photographed the early Beatles. Next door is the TSB bank, potentially the bank referred to in the song "Penny Lane".  The Tesco metro store on the corner of Plattsville Road between the two turretted buildings was formerly a branch of Woolworths where John's wife Cynthia worked.

Three photos showing the same stretch of Allerton Road. The black and white photo from 1964 shows Cynthia's Woolworths and a lot less traffic than we have to cope with today.




In addition, here are two close ups of the sadly missed 'Woolies' before and after the administrators closed all 807 stores between 27 December 2008 and 6 January 2009. The store is now a Tesco Express and Costa coffee.


My vantage point casts a shadow over the shelter in the middle of the roundabout. What are they building on its roof? Church Road runs towards the top left of the photograph. One of the two banks facing the shelter inspired the song "Penny Lane" - but which one?  Newcastle Road, where John Lennon lived until the age of 5 runs left to right behind the trees and the white building, top centre. The landscaped area to the right of the shelter was the former site of the Welsh Church on the corner of Heathfield Road (see below).


Heritage weekends are not only about historic buildings. In 2012 a number of vintage buses were on hand to transport visitors around, with Merseyside Transport Trust buses from the 1950s to the 1980s running from Liverpool South Parkway Station to Mann Island in the city centre. These two examples are pictured picking up transport enthusiasts behind the former bus shelter. John Lennon would have caught that no. 4 Bus from here back to his home in Woolton.




Not much has changed in the 55 years since this photograph was taken in 1957!


Perhaps the most surprising view from the top of St. Barnabas is this one. On the horizon to the right of the photograph is Winter Hill which is on Rivington Moor in Chorley, some 40 odd miles away from Smithdown Place!  Its prominent position made it the ideal site for the Winter Hill TV mast, which transmitted to a large part of North West England. Trace your finger upwards from the letter "B" on Barnabas and you'll find the mast on top of the hill.


Looking north towards Wavertree from Smithdown Place we can see the tower of the Blue Coat School in Church Road on the horizon. The building with the white frontage to the right of the Footlights dancing shop has recently opened as the Beatles themed (what else?) Penny Lane hotel. The car park behind this serves a small retail park built on the site of the former tram sheds on Prince Alfred Road.


This is a similar view to the one above but the start of Smithdown Road can be seen running northwest towards the city centre which can be seen top left on the horizon. Just above the shops on the extreme left you can see the side of the last remaining tram shed on Smithdown Road which is now a shop selling antiques and fireplaces. The end of Penny Lane can just be seen in the bottom left hand corner of the photo. The policeman mounted upon his white horse rides of here and turns right towards Smithdown Place in the Beatles' video for 'Penny Lane'.  


Above the roof of the retail park is the wide open green space of Wavertree Playground, known locally as "The Mystery" because the land was gifted to the City Council by an anonymous donor who suggested that it was to be used as a venue for organised sports, and a place for children from the city's public schools to run about in, not a park for 'promenading' in the Victorian tradition.



Adjoining the Mystery today is Wavertree Sports Park, a large sporting, exercise and leisure complex which is home to the Liverpool Aquatics Centre, Liverpool Tennis Centre and Wavertree Athletics Centre alongside numerous other health and fitness related facilities.


The large white art-deco building in the distance is the former Littlewoods building on Edge Lane. The roof of Liverpool Football Club's Stadium in Anfield is visible top right.


Looking along Smithdown Road towards the city centre. Both cathedrals, the Royal Liver Building and St. John's Beacon are visible on the skyline. The impressive building on the left just past the wasteground is Holyoake Hall, a former Co-operative Building where the The Quarry Men performed at several unadvertised skiffle evenings during 1958. As The Beatles, the group performed here twice in July 1961. The hall was built on the site of the first St. Barnabas Church, opposite the Smithdown Road tram sheds, only one of which remains.



Smithdown Road heading towards the city centre. Holyoake Hall (left) and the tram shed hidden behind bill boards (extreme right).


The tram sheds on Smithdown Road looking towards Smithdown Place


The Church in the left foreground is Saint Bridget's in Bagot Street, Wavertree. It is designated by English Heritage as a Grade II* listed building. The foundation stone was laid on 21 September 1868 and the church was consecrated in 1872. It was originally a chapel of ease to Holy Trinity on Church Road, Wavertree and became a parish in its own right in 1901. My maternal grandparents were married there on 30 November 1940, two days after a heavy German bombing run on the city hit an air-raid shelter in nearby Durning Road and caused 166 fatalities. It was described by WInston Churchill as the "single worst incident of the war".  One of the single worst cases of ill-conceived 1960s architecture in Liverpool, the Royal Hospital, ruins the skyline behind Saint Bridget's. Thankfully this tired eyesore is due for redevelopment.


Saint Bridget's in Bagot Street, Wavertree


Turning further west in the direction of the city centre and waterfront the Metropolitan Cathedral of Christ the King (usually known as Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral) is the seat of the Archbishop of Liverpool and the mother church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Liverpool. The cathedral's architect, Frederick Gibberd, was the winner of a worldwide design competition.


Built quickly and economically, construction began in October 1962 and less than five years later, on 14 May 1967, the completed cathedral was consecrated. Due to the unusual design it is sometimes known locally as "Paddy's Wigwam"(mainly by the Protestant half of the city) or the "Mersey Funnel".


A shot of the interior showing centrally placed altar so designed to be easily visible to a congregation of 2000 allowing them to become more involved in the mass.

St. John's Beacon, known today as the Radio City Tower was built in 1969 as a ventilation shaft for St John's Market but was never used as such. Near the top of the tower was a revolving restaurant, the facade and floor of the restaurant revolving as one unit, while the roof of the restaurant was used as an observation platform for visitors. 

Closed in 1977 due to safety concerns it reopened as Radio City 96.7 in August 2000.
The outdoor observation deck which had been located on the roof of the restaurant was transformed into a second floor; the studios are on the lower floor that used to be the restaurant. The original revolving structure and machinery were left intact during the refurbishment but no longer revolve due to the installation of brackets locking the moving structure in place. At 457 ft tall it is the second tallest free-standing building in Liverpool after the Beetham West Tower (459 feet) which is visible directly behind the beacon on the skyline in my previous aerial photograph.


One of, if not the most recognisable landmark in the city of Liverpool is the Royal Liver Building (opened 1911). It is sited at the Pier Head and along with the neighbouring Cunard and Port of Liverpool Buildings, is one of Liverpool's Three Graces, which line the waterfront.


"If you want a Cathedral we've got one to spare".

Liverpool Cathedral is the Church of England Cathedral of the Diocese of Liverpool and the seat of the Bishop of Liverpool. Based on a design by Giles Gilbert Scott the Cathedral was built on St. James' Mount, approximately half a mile from the Metropolitan Cathedral at the other end of Hope Street.  Construction began in 1904, was disrupted by two world wars and finally finished in October 1978. That month the completion of the building was marked by a service of thanksgiving and dedication attended by Queen Elizabeth II, the fourth monarch to take the throne since building began.

The cathedral was built mainly of local sandstone from Woolton quarry. The last sections completed in the 1960s and 1970s used the closest matching sandstone that could be found from other quarries once the supply from Woolton had been exhausted.


The row of shops at the end of Penny Lane featured in the "Free As A Bird" music video in 1995. The large white building in the photograph was originally Grove House and used by trustees as the "Home for Incurable Children". When the present St. Barnabas was built, Grove House was purchased for use as a new Parochial Hall and Sunday School. In the late 1950s the hall held regular Saturday night skiffle sessions and the Quarrymen are known to have performed on several occasions.  The hall was sold in 1965 and is now called Dovedale Towers (see below).




Dovedale Road showing Dovedale Primary School (left) and Dovedale Baptist Church  (right) which is seen in more detail below.  Opened in 1906 the church is faced with flint, an unusual building material in Liverpool, with dressings in red brick and terracotta.  Still active, the church is designated by English Heritage as a Grade II listed building.



The tower on the skyline is the Church of St Matthew and St James, Mossley Hill, which stands on the top of a hill in Rose Lane.  The church was built between 1870 and 1875 and has the dubious honour of being the first church in England to be damaged by enemy bombing, which took place on the night of 28–29 August 1940. All the stained glass windows were destroyed. The church was restored in 1950–52 by Alfred Shennan. Turning south east (to the left of this photo) brings you back to the view over Garston at the top of this post.


Finally, just as I was about to descend the tower look what arrived!



 
The map above gives a good view of the Penny Lane area around St. Barnabas (click to enlarge)

Source:


Google Maps:

https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@53.3891476,-2.9149638,152m/data=!3m1!1e3

The architect James Francis Doyle.

All Hallows Church - the stained glass windows can be viewed here:  http://www.allertonoak.com/AMH/11Ecclesiastical.html


Winter Hill: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_Hill_%28North_West_England%29