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Monday 25 July 2011

Merseyrail's Wirral Line railway





Merseyrail's Wirral line is a commuter railway line that serves the Wirral Peninsula, which is owned by Network Rail and operated by Merseyrail.
One hundred thousand passengers a day use Liverpool's Merseyrail trains by way of 800 daily departures. The Merseyrail system is 75 miles long - 6.5 miles of which is underground and via the Mersey Tunnel - and has 66 stations, four of which are located in and around Liverpool City centre, they are -  

Liverpool Lime Street - For national rail services.
Liverpool Central - For main shopping areas.
Moorfields - For central business district. This station is the deepest of the Merseyrail stations as it is located below the Queensway Tunnel.
James Street - For Liverpool One, Liverpool Waterfront and tourist attractions.


The Wirral Line was developed by way of the amalgamation of three former historic, national railways - the Mersey Rail - Britain's second underground rail system built in 1886 and the first line in the world to be wholly electrified - the Wirral Railway built in 1863 and the Chester + Birkenhead Railway built in 1838.
Today, the Wirral Line is 33 miles long ( 54km) and has four routes - Liverpool to West Kirby, Liverpool to Chester, Liverpool to New Brighton and Liverpool to Ellesmere Port - which are served by 34 stations between them.
The Wirral Line has been known by this name since it was officially opened by H.M Queen Elisabeth II on the 25th of October 1978.
The line's 1,435mm standard gauge track is electrified by way of a 750 v DC third line which became a fully electrified system in May 1994.
The Wirral Line links the Wirral Peninsula with Liverpool City centre by way of the Liverpool Loop, a clockwise circular rail route built in the early 1970's.
The Wirral Line is connected to the country's mainline National Rail system by way of connections at Liverpool Lime Street and Chester.
The system uses Class 507 and Class 508 rolling stock which can attain speeds of up to sixty miles an hour.

The Wirral Line system is operational seven days a week from approximately 06.00 - 24.000 hrs. The line runs trains every 15 minutes during daytime, every five minutes during rush hour and every half an hour in the evenings and on Sundays.
For timetables, rail information and various ticket types please refer to Merseyrail's informative website - www.merseyrail.org. 

The Wirral Line is highlighted in green. 


Tuesday 12 July 2011

Origins of Wirral placenames.

The Harvest Mouse, Heswall.


Bebbington. 
Bebbington was named after an Anglo Saxon tribal chief called Bebba and the name means Bebba's town. 

Birkenhead.
There are two given forms as to where the name Birkenhead comes from. 
One is that it comes from the name of Wirral's longest river, the River Birket, on which the town was built. 
It  could also come from the Saxon word birchen, which meant birch forest, of which the area was completely surrounded during medieval times.


Bromborough
Comes from the word Brunanburh.  Brunnr was the Viking word for spring or well and burh was the Saxon word for settlement or town.

By.
Several place names on the Wirral end in the suffix by, which is Norse or Viking for settlement or town. 
The Vikings called each of their settlements -
Frankby - French town.
Greasby - From the Old English Gravesberie, meaning settlement near a wooded area. 
Irby - Irish town.
Pensby - Town on a hill.
Raby - Town on a boundary.
West Kirby - Town with a church situated to the west.
Whitby - White town. 

Caldy.
Caldy comes from the Anglo Saxon word calders, which was the name given to a nearby hill which meant  cold arse.


Clatterbridge.
This unusual placename comes from an area which was once the home of a bridge that spanned the Clatter Brooke.


Eastham.
East Ham means home in the east in Anglo Saxon. The village of Eastham is situated at the southern most tip of the Wirral Peninsula and local historians believe that it is the oldest, permanently inhabited settlement on the peninsula.


Egremont.
In 1835 a large house was built in what is now Egremont by the harbour master of Liverpool Docks, Captain Askew, who named his house and then the village that grew up around it, Egremont, after his birthplace of Egremont in Cumberland.


Ellesmere Port.
This River Mersey, port town, originally known as Netherpool, was built at the end of the Ellesmere Canal, an arm of the Manchester Ship Canal, and was built as the canal's main port and docklands area. 
The word Ellesmere comes from the British peerage title Earl of Ellesmere,of which there were five men who held the title between 1800 - 1963. The title was superceded by that of the Duke of Sutherland.
The instigation of the building of the canal was an industrious project originally planned to link the Rivers Dee, Mersey and Severn by way of the Shropshire Union, Manchester Ship, Llangollen and Chester canals by industrialist Francis Egerton, first Duke of Bridgewater, known in engineering circles as the father of inland navigation. 
Francis Egerton was unmarried and died in 1803 without issue, thereby entrusting the canal to his second cousin, another Francis Egerton, first Earl of Ellesmere. 
The name Egerton is synonomous with canal building and the family name is remembered by way of Egerton Wharf, Egerton Bridge and Egerton Dock in Birkenhead and ten street / road names found in various parts of the peninsula.

Ferry.
There was once eleven ferry crossing sites along the Wirral side of the River Mersey and some of their names still live on in the placenames of Monks Ferry - the very first Mersey Ferry crossing - New Ferry and Rock Ferry.

Heswall.
The estuary town of Heswall received it's name from one Patrick de Haselwall former Sheriff of Cheshire, who bought the land the town now stands on in 1277. 

Hilbre.
Several places on the peninsula have been named after the tiny island of Hilbre, situated off the peninsula's coast between Hoylake and West Kirby.
Hilbre is a corruption of the name Hildeberg, a 17th century Anglo Saxon holy woman.


Hoylake.
Situated about a mile out to sea off the seaside town of Hoylake, was once a large sand bank known as Hoyle Bank that protected a pool of sea water known as Hoyle Lake.This lake was used by the Port of Liverpool as a holding bay for waiting ships coming into port and as an anchorage for larger ships to be loaded and unloaded, which were too large to sail into Chester along the River Dee. The town was subsequently named after this lake.


Landican.
Landican comes from the Celtic word Landechene.  



Leasowe.
Leasowe is an Anglo Saxon word which means meadow pastures.


Liscard.
The word Liscard comes from the Old Irish - lios na carraige - which meant hall on the rock.


Meols.
Meols - pronounced mells -  is of Viking origin and means sand dunes.


Mockbeggar.
There are several references to the name mockbeggar between the coastal towns of Moreton through to New Brighton.
The word mockbeggar is an Old English word for derelict building, and the derelict building in this case pertained to Leasowe Castle. 

Moreton. 
Moreton is an Anglo Saxon name that meant town by the lake.


Ness / Neston.
Ness is a Viking word for promontory and neston is Old English for town on the promontory.


New Brighton.
This once thriving, Regency holiday resort was named after the other thriving, Regency holiday resort on the south coast of England, Brighton.


Noctorum.
This most unusual name comes from the Old Irish - Cnocc Tirim - which meant dry hill. 

Prenton. 
Prenton is an Old English name which meant town in the woods.


Saughall Massie.
Sau Hall is Old English for hall built near willow trees. The suffix Massie probably pertains to Hamon de Mascey, a rich, medieval, land owner whose family originated from Auranches in Normany, and whose name is synonomous with the medieval history of the peninsula.


Spital.
The word spital is the end of the word hospital, suggesting that there was once a hospital or leper colony in the area.


Storeton.
Storeton comes from the Viking word for large farm.


Thingwall.
This unusual name has Viking roots and comes from the term bing volir, which meant meeting place, suggesting this area was once a very important administration area.


Thornton Hough.
The land that now contains the village of Thornton Hough was given to the daughter of Rojer de Thornton upon her marriage to the son of Richard de Hoghe.The couple named their new settlement by combining each of their family names.


Tranmere.
Comes from the Viking words trani meir, which meant sandbank of the cranes.


Thurstaston.
Upon the Vikings expulsion from Ireland in 902, the Norsemen first made their way to the Isle of Anglesey, but were driven out by the King of Gwynedd, Anarwd ap Rhodri.
The Norwegian refugees pleaded with the Anglo Saxon Queen, Aethelflead, daughter of Alfred the Great and widow of King Aethelred, for permission to come to England.
The queen duly granted them the right to stay on the Wirral Peninsula under the proviso that they did not venture into the City of Chester.
 The Vikings  landed on the Wirral peninsula sometime between 912 - 913 under the leadership of one Ingimund Thorsteinsson, where they made their very first Wirral settlement at present day Thurstaston, then called Turstanetone, Thorstein's settlement. 

Within months the Norseman had made the Wirral Peninsula a self governing Viking state, which saw hundreds of former Viking refugees from Ireland, who had previously fled to the Isle of Man and the Scottish Western Isles, come and make their permanent home on the Wirral Peninsula.  

Wallasey.
Walha meant stranger or foreigner in the ancient Saxon language and ey meant island. The land that is now the town of Wallasey was once seperated from the rest of the peninsula by the Wallasey Pool, which was made into the Birkenhead Docks in 1820. Today there are four bridges that link the island with the rest of the peninsula across this vast pool.

Willaston.
Comes from the Old English word Wilavaston, which suggests the town - ton - is named after someone called Wilav. Local historians believe that Willaston was once the largest Anglo Saxon settlement in the ancient area known as the Wirral Hundred and was an important, administration area.

Sunday 10 July 2011

Famous people born on the Wirral Peninsula

Wirral's most famous daughter, actress Glenda Jackson.

                                                              
ARTS. 

Shirley Ballas - ballroom dancer and Strictly Come Dancing adjudicator, was born in Wallasey in 1960. 
Shirley Hughes OBE - children's author and illustrator, was born in West Kirby in 1927.
Mark Lechey -  Turner Prize winner in 2008, was born in Birkenhead in 1964.
Ralph Steadman -  cartoonist and caricturist, was born in Wallasey in 1936.
Philip Wilson Steer OM -  impressionist and landscape artist, was born in Birkenhead in 1860. 

William Bill Tidy MBE - cartoonist, was born in Tranmere in 1933.  


BANDS FORMED ON THE WIRRAL.
The Boo Radleys, a 1990's alternative rock band was formed in Wallasey.
Engine, a 1970's boogie rock band was formed in Birkenhead.
Half Man, Half Biscuit, was a 1980's rock band formed in Birkenhead.
Orchestral Manouvers in the Dark was a famous synthpop band of the 1970's and 80's and was formed in Heswall.
The Coral, was a 1990's folk rock band formed in Hoylake.
The Rascals, is an Indie rock band formed in Hoylake in 2008.


FILM, T.V. & RADIO.
Mathew Ashton - BAFTA award winning movie designer, (Lego movie), was born in Upton. 

Alan Clarke -  T.V and film director, was born in Wallasey in 1935.
Lewis Collins -  T.V actor, was born in Bidston in 1946.  

Taron Egerton - actor, born in Birkenhead in 1989.
Richard Dickie Davis - T.V and sports presenter, was born in Wallesey in 1933. 
Anthony Tony Hall (Baron of Birkenhead) - present director general of the BBC, was born in Birkenhead in 1951.
Paul Hollywood - celebrity chef, was born in Wallesey in 1966.
Geoffrey Hughes -  actor, was born in Wallasey in 1944.
Glenda Jackson - , academy award winning actress, CBE and MP was born in Birkenhead in 1936.
Megs Jenkins -  actress, was born in Birkenhead in 1917.
Phil Liggit -  T.V sports commentator, was born in Bebington in 1943.
Nigel Lythgoe -  choreographer, T.V & film director, was born in Birkenhead in 1949.
Paul O'Grady -  comedian, was born in Birkenhead in 1955.
John Peel OBE - radio presenter, was born in Heswall in 1939. 

Jan Ravens - actress and impressionist, was born in Bebington in 1958. 
Simon Rimmer - celebrity chef & restauranteur, was born in Wallasey in 1963.
Patricia Routeledge -  comedy actress, was born in Tranmere in 1929.


MILITARY.
Emma Hamilton -  mistress of Admiral Horatio Nelson, was born in Ness in 1765.
Brigadier Sir Philip Toosey CBE, DSO, TD, JP, LLD -  senior allied officer in the Thai P.O.W camp Tha Maa Kham. Toosey was portrayed by actor Alec Guiness in the film Bridge over the River Kwai.
Toosey was born in Oxton in 1904.


MUSIC.
Pete Burns -  singer / songwriter, was born in Port Sunlight in 1959.
Paul Heaton -  singer / songwriter and former member of the Housemartins and Beautiful South, was born in Bromborough in 1962.
Malcolm Holmes -  drummer in pop group Orchestral Manouvers in the Dark (OMD) was born in Birkenhead in 1960.
Stephen Hough -  concert pianist, was born in Heswall in 1961.
Miles Kane -  singer and former member of pop groups The Rascals and Last Shadow Puppet, was born in Hoylake in 1986.
George McCluskey -  songwriter and member of OMD, was born in Heswall in 1959.
Cyril Meir Scott -  classical composer, was born in Oxton in 1879.


POLITICS. 

Selwyn Lloyd - Conservative politician, Foreign Secretary 1955 - 1960, Chancellor of the Exchequer 1960 - 1962, Speaker of the House 1971 - 1976, was born in West Kirby in 1904. 
Fredrick Edwin Smith GCSI, PC, KC (First Earl & Baron of Birkenhead) - Lord Chancellor 1919 - 1922 and personal, best friend of war time prime minister Winston Churchill, was born in Birkenhead in 1872.
Edith Smith - First female police officer given full power of arrest, was born in Oxton in 1880.


SPORT.
Nigel Adkins - football player and present manager of Reading Football Club, was born in Birkenhead in 1965. 

Chris Boardman -  1992 Olympic gold medal winning cyclist, was born in Hoylake in 1968.
Ian Botham OBE -  England test cricketer, was born in Heswall in 1955. 

Paul Bracewell - football player and football manager, was born in Heswall in 1962. 
Steve Cummings - acclaimed road racing cyclist was born in Clatterbridge in 1981.
Matt Dawson -  Rugby Union scrum half and most capped English scrum half to date, was born in Birkenhead in 1972.  

Peter Davenport -  footballer and football manager, was born in Birkenhead in 1961.
William Dixie Dean -  the most prolific goal scorer in English footballing history, first man to ever wear the number 9 shirt in league football and holder of the record for most goals scored (60) in one season, was born in Birkenhead in 1907.
Charlotte Dod -  five times winner of the Wimbledon ladies singles, holder of the record for youngest (15) female ever to win Wimbledon, Olympic silver medalist for archery in 1908, twice capped for the England ladies hockey team and voted most versatile female athlete of all time by the Guiness Book of Records, was born in Bebington in 1871.
Austin Healey -   rugby player, capped 51 times for England, was born in Wallasey in 1973.
Andrew Irvine -  mountaineer, was born in Birkenhead in 1902.
Neil McKechnie -  swimmer, Olympic finalist at the Melbourne Olympic Games of 1956 and holder of every British swimming record from 100 metres to one mile (30) in 1958, was born in Wallasey in 1939.
Alan Rouse -  mountaineer and first Briton to conquer K9, was born in Wallasey in 1951.
 

Wirral's most eminent sporting hero, footballer William Dixie Dean.

Sunday 3 July 2011

Swimming on the Wirral Peninsula.

Beach and lighthouse at New Brighton.



Below are the addresses of public swimming pools, the locations of the area's finest beaches and a list of Wirral hotels with swimming pools.   


PUBLIC SWIMMING BATHS.


Europa Pools.
Conway Street, Birkenhead. CH41 6RN. Tel - 0151 666 5555.

Caldy Grange.
Gourleys Lane, Caldy. CH48 8AS. Tel - 0151 625 7170. 

The Oval.
Old Chester Road, New Ferry. CH63 7LF. Tel - 0151 645 0596. 

Concourse Leisure Centre.
Grange Road, West Kirby. CH48 4HX. Tel - 0151 929 7801. 

Guinea Gap Leisure Centre. 
Riverview Road, Seacombe. CH44 6PX. Tel - 0151 606 2010. 

Leasowe Recreation Centre. 
Twickenham Road, Leasowe. CH46 1PF. Tel - 0151 677 0916.  
 
BEACHES.


The area's finest beaches are situated at -

Caldy - A sand beach with brackish water situated on the River Dee Estuary.
Hoylake - A sand beach situated on the Irish Sea coast.
Meols - A sand beach situated on the Irish Sea coast.
New Brighton -A vast stretch of sand beach situated on Liverpool Bay in the Irish Sea.
West Kirby - Sand beaches situated on both the River Dee estuary and the Irish Sea Coast. 

For Hilbre Island (West Kirby) tide times and heights please refer to this website  pol.ac.uk/ntslf/tides

HOTELS WITH SWIMMING POOLS.


Mercure Chester North Hotel.
Berwick Road, Little Sutton. CH66 4PS Tel - 0151 339 5121.


Rockland Guest House.
70 Birkenhead Road, Meols. CH47 0LA. Tel - 0151 632 4249.


Thornton Hall Hotel and Spa.
Neston Road, Thornton Hough. CH63 1JF. Tel - 0151 336 3938.


Village Leisure Hotel.
Pool Lane, Bromborough. CH62 4UE. Tel - 0151

Tuesday 28 June 2011

Interesting facts about the Wirral Peninsula.


Coat of Arms of the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral


Below is a myriad of  facts and figures, amazing feats, British and world firsts, did you knows? and sporting achievements all pertaining to the Wirral Peninsula. 

                                                           THE  WIRRAL PENINSULA.

1) The Wirral Peninsular covers an area of 60.35 square miles and is joined to mainland England at the north western tip of the county of Cheshire.The peninsula is actually completely surrounded by water officially making it an island, although it's southern border at Ellesmere Port is actually at the site of the man made Shropshire Union Canal.

2) Despite it's small size the peninsula boasts no less than 1,900 listed buildings, 215 churches, 50 towns and villages, 25 conservation areas, 9 scheduled ancient monument sites, 8 sites of special scientific interest, 10 lighthouses, 5 nature reserves, 4 windmills, 4 historic parks, 2 watermills, one castle and one fort.


3) The indiginous people of the Wirral Peninsula were the Celtic, Cornovii Tribe who lived in the modern day counties of Cheshire, Staffordshire, Shropshire and Clywd.
The oldest known reference to the tribe was mentioned in an historical record written by Roman philosopher Ptolomy in the 2nd century A.D.
The name Cornovii means people of the horn. The word horn pertains to a horned, religious idol that the tribe worshipped.
The Cornovii made their living from salt and copper mining and from the building and running of hill forts, the most famous of which is the Wrekin in Shropshire.
Their tribal capital city was Wroxeter in the county of Shropshire, at one time the fourth largest Roman town in Britain.
The Roman built City of Chester, which is now the county town of Cheshire, was once part of the Cornovii tribal lands.

4) Historians have classified the Wirral Peninsula as the birthplace of England, after the Battle of Brunanburh - present day Bromborough -  in 937 brought together the might of England's combined armed forces for the very first time in order to fight the armies of both Norway and Scotland.

5) In 1376 King Richard II designated the entire peninsula with Royal Park status.

6) The peninsula's Leasowe Lighthouse, built in 1763, is the oldest brick built lighthouse in the U.K. The lighhouse was also the first in the country to have a female lighhouse keeper, when Mrs Mary Elisabeth Williams began her service as keeper in 1908.


7) The Wirral's only recognised holiday resort, New Brighton, is home to the United Kingdom's longest promenade at 3.5 kilometres. 
As well as having the country's longest promenade the Wirral seaside resort was also the site of other record breakers during it's heyday of the 19th century.
Classified as one of the most elegant seaside resort of the Regency period the town could boast the highest tower in Britain, the largest theatre stage in the world, the largest open air swimming pool in Europe, Britain's first amusements arcade and was the smallest town in the country to have a league football club.


8) Hilbre Island situated one mile off the Wirral coast at West Kirby covers an area of just 11.6 acres and is the United Kingdom's smallest, inhabited island. 

9) The Wirral Country Park was Britain's first ever designated country park when it was opened in 1973.

10) The world's first, commercial hovercraft service began on the Wirral Peninsula during the Summer of 1962, when passengers were ferried from the Wirral seaside town of Moreton to Rhyl in North Wales on a Vickers VA - 3 hovercraft.

11) The Ministry of Defence's tidal activity research for the infamous D - Day landings of June 1944 were all taken at Bidston Observatory. 

12) In 1947 the Mersey Ferries were the first boats in the world to be installed with fog radar navigation systems.

13) The charitable organisation, The Guide Dogs For The Blind Association, was formed 1934, three years after Britain's first four guide dogs completed their training by German Shepherd breeders Muriel Crooke and Rosamund Bond, whose business was based in Wallesey.



                                                                 BIRKENHEAD. 

1) The largest town on the Wirral peninsular is Birkenhead, a town which grew up around the Benedictine, Birkenhead Priory built in 1150.
The town's industries first centred around the priory and the River Mersey and since then has been home to an established pottery industry - the Della Robbia pottery - and large areas of docklands and shipbuilding industries. 

2) It is unclear as to where the  town get's its name from, one theory is that it comes from the peninsula's longest river, the River Birket, which flows from the town of West Kirby and makes it's way eastwards towards the town of Birkenhead, where it drains into the river Mersey at the site of the West Float  Docks. 
Another theory is that the name comes from the town's Benedictine Priory which was known as Birchen Priory.Birchen means birch forest, which that area of the peninsula was covered by during those days.

3) The town we know today is in part the brainchild of Scots shipbuilder and local entrepreneur John Laird who became both Birkenhead's first mayor and the town's first member of parliament.
Laird was elemental in the building of dockside cottages, the town's St James' church, the Borough Hospital and the Laird School of Art.
As the first mayor of the town Laird was instrumental in improving policing in the town and for implementing the town's market place - originally held in Market Street near Hamilton Square - street cleaning and street lighting. He was also instrumental in creating several public areas for recreation and the arts.
Laird was owner of the largest ship yard in the area and contributed to the income, welfare and health of 80% of the town's inhabitants.
Laird became Birkenhead's first member of parliament in 1861 and remained the local Conservative member until his death in 1874.
Laird,his wife Elisabeth and their three sons William, John and Henry all lived at 63 Hamilton Square.
Laird died after a riding accident on October 29th 1874 and is buried in the grounds of Birkenhead Priory.
A statue erected in Laird's honour was unveiled in the town on the 30th of October 1877 with the unveiling ceremony witnessed by over two thousand of the town's inhabitants.
John Laird is remembered today by way of Birkenhead's Laird Street, Laird Close, Lairdside Technical Park,the Laird Memorial Statue that now stands on Hamilton Square and Liverpool's Laird Place.
       

4) Birkenhead's Hamilton Square contains the second largest number of listed buildings in the country after Trafalgar Square in London.

5) The town's Birkenhead Park was designed by Joseph Paxton and was the world's first publicly funded municipal park when it was opened on the 5th of April 1847. The idea of publicly donating money for the creation of parks and gardens became the forerunner of the National Parks Movement of Britain.
Today the park is a grade I listed landscape which houses many attractions including the country's only covered, wooden bridge, the 23 foot long Swiss Bridge built in 1847.
The park is also the home of the Wirral Academy of Art.
Paxton's park went on to be the inspiration for the creation of neighbouring Sefton Park in the city of Liverpool and Central Park in New York City, U.S.A.

6) Birkenhead was the site of the country's first ever cross river ferry service, after monks at  Birkenhead Priory were granted ferry rights by King Edward III in 1318. This charter made the route taken by the Mersey Ferry classified as a Royal Highway. 

7) Birkenhead became the first town in Europe to run a public tram service when the town's public tramway system opened on  the 29th of August 1860. 

8) Birkenhead was the home of the first two Boy Scout Groups in the world after Lord Baden - Powell held the inaugural meeting of the Boy Scout Movement at the Grange Road YMCA in Birkenhead on the 24th of January 1908.



                                             WIRRAL SPORTING ACHIEVEMENTS.


1 ) The Wirral's league football team is Tranmere Rovers who play their home matches at Prenton Park, Tranmere.
The team was formed in 1884 and have used the Prenton Park ground since 1912.
The team hold an all time football league record for the most goals scored in one match, after a game played on the 26th of December 1935 when Tranmere Rovers beat Oldham Athletic 13 goals to 4 -  nine of which were scored by centre forward Robert 'Bunny' Ball -  giving the aggregate score of 17 goals the most goals scored in any football match, a record that still stands to this day. The football ground's address is -
Tranmere Rovers Football Club.
Prenton Park, Tranmere. CH42 9PY. Tel - 0151 221 2001.


2) The World Windsurfing speed record was set on the Wirral Peninsula, when windsurfer Dave White attained a speed of 42.16 knots at West Kirby Marine Lake in October 1991.


3) Guinea Gap swimming baths situated in Wallasey has been the site of more swimming records than any other swimming pool in the world.
This amazing feat is due to one man, local born, Olympic bronze medalist, Neil McKechnie who attained no less than thirty English and British swimming records at this Wirral swimming pool during the 1950's and who, by 1958, held every English freestyle swimming record from one hundred metres to one mile during his time as a member of the Wallasey Swimming Club. 
His prowess in the water has been attributed to the baths being filled with water from the River Mersey.

4) West Kirby situated on the Wirral's Irish Sea coast is home to the prestigious Wilson Cup, the world's biggest team yacht racing event.


                                               WIRRAL'S OLDEST BUILDINGS.


1) The majority of the Wirral Peninsula's oldest buildings are made from the area's local, red, sandstone and are most prominent in the area's smaller villages such as Caldy, Saughall Massey, Brimstage and Raby.

2) Several of the area's 215 churches have their roots in medieval times with St Hilary's Church in Wallasey and St Bridget's Church in West Kirby both vying for oldest church in the area, both of which have their origins in the 11th century.

3) The peninsula's oldest pub is reputedly that of the Wheatsheaf Pub in Raby, which dates back to 1611.

4) The peninsula's oldest house is a large, two storey, stone built house situated on Limekiln Road, Wallasey which dates back to around 1627.

5) Although the oldest building on the peninsula is Birkenhead Priory, built in 1150, Birkenhead is not the oldest town, that honour goes to Wallasey which was already an established settlement when mentioned in the Doomsday Book of 1086.
However, some have suggested that the village of Eastham is the oldest permanently inhabited area of the peninsula owing to the site of an aged yew tree that stands in the grounds of the village's St Mary's church, which is reported to be around 1,500 years old.
But the peninsula's record breaker has to be Greasby,where archaeologists have been able to define evidence of human habitation dating back to 7000 BC, when the peninsula was inhabited by it's native people the Cornovii Tribe.  

6) The United Kingdom's oldest brick built lighthouse is situated on the Wirral Peninsula, at Leasowe shore. It was built in 1763 by the Liverpool Corporation Docks.

7) The area's oldest railway line was a branch line of the Birkenhead to Chester line, from West Kirby to Hooton, opened in September 1838. Although the line is now defunct, the line lives on in the form of the twelve mile long Wirral Way nature trail.

8) The area's oldest farmhouse is Old Hall Farm situated in Chapel Lane, Moreton believed to have been built in 1719 for a Daniel and Mary Wilson.

9) Brimstage Hall situated in the picturesque village of the same name was apparantly built between the 12th and 14 th century, making it one of the peninsula's oldest buildings and certainly the oldest manorial residence in the area.


Angling on the Wirral Peninsula.


The River Birket at West Kirby.
 As it's name suggests The Wirral Peninsular is surrounded by water, both freshwater and sea water. 
To the west of the peninsular flows the River Dee and to the east of the peninsular flows the River Mersey. To the south of the peninsular is an arm of the Shrewsbury Union Canal system and the peninsula's west coast is bordered by the Irish Sea.
 

The Wirral interior is served by one main river, the River Birket. The river flows from West Kirby and travels the full length of the peninsula in an easterly direction all the way to West Float Docks at Birkenhead, where it drains into the River Mersey.
There are a myriad of smaller rivers and streams criss crossing the peninsula most of which flow into the larger River Birket, these other bodies of water are the Dibbin, Clatter Brooke, Fender, Arrowe Brooke, Newton Brooke and Greasby Brooke.
 

There are several local angling clubs situated on the Wirral which specialise in both course and sea fishing and owing to the local porous, sandstone leaving little in the way of standing water in the area, some clubs have also created their own private, man made lakes. 
For Wirral angling information please refer to the   
 
Association of Wirral Angling Clubs.
49 Seymour Street, Tranmere. CH42 4LJ. Tel - 0151 650 0561.


Or access these informative websites -  
wirral-fisheries.com/angling-clubs
wirralseafishing.co.uk/index.  
   

TIDE TIMES. 

For Hilbre Island ( West Kirby) tide times and heights please refer to this website  .pol.ac.uk/ntslf/tides                                                          

Sunday 26 June 2011

Cricket, Rugby, Snooker and Tennis clubs on the Wirral Peninsula.

Birkenhead Park Cricket Ground.
Below are the addresses of some of the peninsula's local cricket, rugby,snooker and tennis clubs.

CRICKET. 

There are several small, local cricket clubs situated on the Wirral, but the peninsula's largest cricket ground is situated at -
Birkenhead Park Cricket Club.
Park Road South, Birkenhead. CH43 4UY. Tel - 0151 652 2147.
 
 

RUGBY. 

Anselmians Rugby Club.
Malone Field, Eastham Village Road, Eastham. CH62 0BL. Tel - 0151 327 1613.


Caldy Rugby Football Club.
Paton Field, Telegraph Road, Thurstaston. CH48 1NX. Tel - 0151 625 8043.


Hoylake Rugby Club.
Melrose Avenue, Hoylake, CH47 3BU. Tel - 0151 632 2538.


New Brighton Rugby Club.
Hartsfield, Reeds Lane, Moreton. CH46 3RS. Tel - 0151 677 1873.


Port Sunlight Rugby Club.
Green Lane, Bromborough. CH62 3PT. Tel - 0151 334 3677.


Wirral Rugby Union Football Club.
Memorial Ground, Thornton Common Road, Clatterbridge. CH63 0LT. Tel - 0151 334 1309. 



POOL, SNOOKER and BILLIARDS. 


Mersey Snooker.
14 - 16 Argyll Street South, Birkenhead.CH41 9BX. Tel - 0151 647 0327.

On Cue.
53a Whitby Road, Ellesmere Road. CH65 8AB. Tel - 0151 355 8383.

Phoenix Club.
22a Rake Lane, Wallasey. CH45 5DJ. Tel - 0151 639 2366.

Riley's Pool, Snooker and Poker club.
Argyll Street, Birkenhead. CH41 6AB. Tel - 0151 647 8726.

Rocket Ronnies.
96,King Street, Wallasey. CH44 8AN. Tel - 0151 638 1570.

Sharks Pool Lounge.
Unit 21, Prince Street Business Park, Birkenhead. CH41 4JQ. Tel - 0151 653 0464.



TENNIS.

Heswall Lawn Tennis Club.
Quarry Road East, Heswall, CH60 6RB. Tel - 0151 342 1775.


Hoylake Lawn Tennis Club.
Eddisburry Road, Hoylake. CH48 5DR.


Port Sunlight Lawn Tennis Club.
Warren Lane, Bromborough. CH62 3QQ. Tel - 0151 343 1615.


Thorndale Lawn Tennis Club.
Thorndale Lane, Wallasey. CH44 2AG. Tel - 0151 638 1231.


Wirral Tennis Centre. ( Indoor and outdoor courts)
Valley Road, Birkenhead. CH41 7EJ. Tel - 0151 606 2010.

Sailing on the Wirral Peninsula.

Yachts on West Kirby Marine Lake.

The Wirral seaside town of West Kirby is famous for it's Marine Lake, which hosts many yachting and wind surfing events throughout the year, including the prestigious Wilson Cup Team Yachting event. 
There are three sailing clubs situated on the Wirral Peninsular along with a sailing centre, a sailing school, a sand yachting club, two chandlers and three RNLI lifeboat stations. 
Below is a list of all their addresses, post codes and telephone numbers. 


Dee Sailing Club.
Station Road, Thurstaston. CH61 0HN. Tel - 0151 648 2300.


Hoylake Sailing School.
86A Market Street, Hoylake. CH47 3BD. Tel - 0151 632 4664.


Hoylake Sand Yachting Club.
Hoylake Promenade, Hoylake. Tel - 0151 632 2742.


Tranmere Sailing Club.
4 Bedford Road East, Tranmere. CH42 1LS. Tel - 0151 707 6777.


West Kirby Sailing Club.
Sandy Lane, West Kirby. CH48 3HZ. Tel - 0151 625 5579. 



Wirral Sailing Centre.
South Road, West Kirby. CH48 0QG. Tel - 0151 625 3292.


CHANDLERS  
There are two Chandlers situated on the Wirral Peninsula -


Reliance Marine.
Marine House, 2 - 8 South Parade, West Kirby. CH48 0QG. Tel - 0151 632 5735.


Taylor Marine Supplies.
54 Brimstage Road, Bebington. CH63 3EW. Tel - 0151 334 7811.


R.N.L.I LIFEBOAT STATIONS 
The area's three RNLI lifeboat stations are -


Hoylake.
North Parade, Hoylake. CH47 2AL. Tel - 0151 632 2103.


New Brighton.
King's Parade, New Brighton. CH45 2ND.Tel - 0151 639 8000.


West Kirby.
Coronation Gardens, South Parade,West Kirby. CH48 3JU. Tel - 0151 625 1800.

TIDE TIMES.
For Hilbre Island (West Kirby) tide times and heights please refer to this website - pol.ac.uk/ntslf/tides

COASTAL RANGERS
For more information about the area's watersports or sand yachting, land boarding, kite surfing and kite buggying, contact the Wirral Council Coastal Rangers on 0151 648 4311.

Bowling on the Wirral Peninsula

Aston Park, West Kirby, home of the Victoria Bowls Club.

 The Wirral Peninsula offers the visitor both lawn and crown green bowls, indoor (carpet) bowls and ten pin bowling centres. Below is a list of the addresses and post codes of most of them.

Crown Green and Lawn Bowls. 

Birkenhead Bowling Club.
Park Road North, Birkenhead. CH41 8AA. Tel - 0151 652 1471.


Heswall Royal British Legion Club.
78, Pensby Road, Heswall. CH60 7RF. Tel - 0151 342 1297.


Hoylake Central.
The Green, Proctor Road, Hoylake. CH47 4BB.


Hoylake and Marine Gardens.
The Green, Sandhey Road, Hoylake. CH47 5AU.
 
Tixall Bowling Club.
11,Heathfield Road, Prenton. CH43 5RT. Tel - 0151 652 5794.
 
The Grove.
Chester Road, Ellesmere Port. CH66 2NZ. Tel - 0151 355 2680.
 
Thingwall Recreation Club.
Sparks Lane, Thingwall. CH61 7XE. Tel - 0151 228 7436.
 
Upton Victory Hall.
Salacre Lane, Upton. CH49 0TN. Tel - 0151 677 4715.
 
Victoria Park.
The Green, Higher Tranmere, Bebington. CH42 6PU.
 
Victoria Bowls Club.
Lower Green, Ashton Park, West Kirby. CH48 0RP.

Carpet Bowls 

Scottish Carpet Bowling Society.
Christchurch Church Hall, Oxton. CH Tel - 0151 643 1507.

The Coliseum.
Cheshire Oaks, Ellesmere Port. CH45 9HD. Tel - 0151 356 5065.

Ten Pin Bowling. 

Riverside Bowl.
Marine Promenade, Wallasey. CH45 2JS. Tel - 0151 639 1238.

The Bowl.
Welton Road, Bromborough. CH62 3PN. Tel - 0151 343 1809.

The Coliseum.
Cheshire Oaks, Ellesmere Port. CH45 9HD. Tel - 0151 356 5065.

Golf Courses on the Wirral Peninsula.

The Royal Liverpool Links Golf Course.


 
The Wirral Peninsula is home to eleven golf courses and three links courses, including the prestigious Royal Liverpool Links Golf Course. Below is a list of all courses with their address, post code and telephone numbers.

Arrowe Park Golf Club.
Arrowe Park, Woodchurch, CH49 5LW. Tel - 0151 677 1527.


Bidston Golf Course.
Bidston Link Road, Wallasey. Ch44 2HR. Tel - 0151 638 3412.


Brackenwood Golf Course.
Bracken Lane, Bebington, CH63 2LY. Tel - 0151 608 5394.


Bromborough Golf Course.
Raby Hall Road, Bromborough. CH63 0NW. Tel - 0151 334 2155.


Caldy Links Golf Course.
Links Hey Road, Caldy. CH48 1NB. Tel - 0151 625 5660.


Eastham Lodge Golf Course.
117 Ferry Road, Eastham. CH62 0AP.Tel - 0151 327 1483.


Heswall Golf Course.
Cottage Lane, Gayton. CH60 8PB.Tel - 0151 342 1237.


Hoylake Municipal Golf Course.
Carr Lane, Hoylake. CH47 4BQ. Tel - 0151 632 2956.


Leasowe Golf Course.
Leasowe Road, Moreton. CH46 3RD. Tel- 0151 677 5852.


Prenton Golf Course.
Links Road, Prenton. CH42 8LW. Tel - 0151 608 1461.


Royal Liverpool Links Golf Course.
Meols Road, Hoylake. CH47 4AL. Tel - 0151 632 3101. 

Read my article about this famous golf course the-royal-liverpool-golf-club


Wallasey Golf Club.
Bayswater Road, Wallasey. CH45 8LA. Tel - 0151 639 3630.


Warren Golf Club.
Grove Road, Wallasey. CH45 0JA. Tel - 0151 639 8323.


Wirral Ladies Golf Club - open to both men and women.
93 Bidston Road, Prenton. CH43 6TS. Tel - 0151 652 1255.

Friday 17 June 2011

Cultural venues on the Wirral Peninsula.


 
Hamilton Square, Birkenhead.

Considering it's size the Wirral Peninsular has a wealth of cultural venues which include several protected areas, ancient monument sites, art galleries, museums and heritage centres


PORT SUNLIGHT VILLAGE
The area's largest cultural venue by far has to be Port Sunlight Village, a village built for the workers of the Sunlight Soap factory by entrepreneur and philanthropist William Hesketh Lever between 1885 and 1914.
The entire village of Port Sunlight is grade II listed and offers the visitor a myriad of different types of houses, a museum, a heritage centre, the Gladstone Theatre,the prestigious Lady Lever Art Gallery, a 19th century church, a school house and a once famous local arts centre, Hulme Hall, now a conference centre and wedding venue.
Port Sunlight village is located at CH46 4XB.

                                    
                             

WIRRAL MARITIME HERITAGE TRAIL.
The Wirral Peninsular is steeped in maritime history.The area along the River Mersey waterfront is dotted with historic ferry crossings and former ship building and dockland buildings.
These once vital ferry crossings - there were once eleven in all -  are evident in the names of some of the local areas such as Eastham Ferry, Seacombe Ferry, Egremont Ferry and Monk's Ferry the site of the very first river crossing service back in 1150. All these areas are now accessible by way of the area's  Wirral Maritime Heritage Trail, a River Mersey waterfront walkway between the former Eastham Docks and Eastham Lock - which heralds the start of the Manchester Ship Canal -  and the former, popular Victorian holiday resort of New Brighton, which take in all the aforementioned ferry crossings and the once important dockland and shipbuilding areas on the Wirral side of the River Mersey.
For a list of famous ships built at Birkenhead please read my article on this page - 
          
                         


HAMILTON SQUARE.
Situated in Wirral's county town of Birkenhead is an area second only to Trafalgar Square in London for having the most listed buildings in one place.
Hamilton Square was the brainchild of shipping magnate William Laird who commissioned Scots architect Gillespie Graham in 1826 to design this picturesque square of Georgian town houses built around a central park. 
The name Hamilton was Laird's wife's maiden name.
The area consists of four rows of town houses which encompass a park containing a cenotaph,a monument and statue of William Laird's son, John Laird - Birkenhead's first member of parliament and founder of the Cammell Laird shipping empire. 
At the head of the park entrance stands the former town hall and Wirral Museum which was built much later in the century in 1887.
Also in the square is William Laird's former house situated at number 63 Hamilton Square and a few metres up the road stands the Hamilton Square Railway Station built in 1886.
Hamilton Square is located at CH41 5FR.


FERRY 'CROSS THE MERSEY.
Known the world over and synonomous with the history of the City of Liverpool, this famous ferry service was actually started by Benedictine Monks who lived at Birkenhead Priory during the twelth century.
The ferry operates between Seacombe Ferry Terminal 2 and Woodside Ferry Terminal 3 on the Wirral side of the River Mersey and travels to Liverpool Pier Head on the Liverpool side of the River Mersey. For centuries this vital ferry service was the only way to cross the two mile wide river, but since the opening of the Mersey Tunnels, the ferry has been largely used as a tourist attraction. The guided ferry trip takes around fifty minutes and includes a trip around the former docklands of the area and takes in the World Heritage Site of the Liverpool skyline.
Both Ferry Terminals also house a shop and cafe.
Woodside Ferry Terminal 3 - CH41 6DU. Tel - 0151 639 0609. The site is served by way of a pay and display car park. Also situated here is the U - Boat Story exhibition.
Seacombe Ferry Terminal 2 - CH44 6QY. - Tel - 0151 639 0609.The site is served by way of a free car park. Also situated here is the Spaceport Exhibition Centre. 



SPACEPORT.
Is a venue of several, interactive, space themed exhibits situated at the Seacombe Ferry Terminal. A must see fantasy venue for children and adults alike.
Victoria Place,
Seacombe.
CH44 6QY.
Tel - 0151 330 1333.


PARK GATE.
Park Gate is a village situated on the peninsula's border with the county of Cheshire. The village has, since Roman times, been an important port and ferry service to the City of Chester and an important embarcation point for Wales and Ireland by way of the River Dee.
Today the sea rarely comes up to the seafront other than on the highest of tides, which is a local tourist attraction in it's own right, and the area is now part of the River Dee Estuary Nature Reserve which contains 100 kilometres of salt marshes which have become a local haven for bird watchers.
The area is also reknowned for it's home made ice cream and the village's main street has an array of interesting historical buildings.
The village can also boast a famous, historical, regular visitor in Lady Emma Hamilton, infamous mistress of Lord Horation Nelson. Lady Hamilton was born in nearby Ness in 1765 and it is known that she regularly visited Park Gate in order to bathe in the sea water and to use the local ferry service.




ART GALLERIES.


Lady Lever Art Gallery.
A lifetime collection of fine art, objet d'art and furniture of the wife of William Hesketh Lever, Elisabeth Hulme, can be found in this grade II listed building which was built after her death by her husband in 1922, situated at Port Sunlight.
The collection includes furniture from the couple's former residence in Bolton, objet d'art found on their extensive European and Asian tours and several oil and watercolour paintings by both famous and local artists.
Port Sunlight.
CH62 5EQ.


Williamson Art Gallery.
This purpose built venue which opened it's doors to the public in 1928 houses a vast collection of watercolours and oil paintings both by local and other British artists. The venue also houses a fine collection of locally made pottery - Della Robbia -  and hosts several visiting exhibitions, lectures and concerts.
Slatey Road,
Birkenhead.
CH43 4UE.
Tel - 0151 652 4177.


MUSEUMS


Fort Perch Rock.
Built between 1825 and 1829 at the head of the River Mersey on Liverpool Bay to defend the Port of Liverpool during the Napoleonic wars, this grade II listed former defence battery is now a military artefacts museum and local attraction.
Wallasey Marine Promenade,
New Brighton.
CH45 2JS.



Chapter House Chapel Museum.
This grade II listed Anglican chapel was once the Chapter House of Birkenhead Priory, the oldest building on the Wirral Peninsula. Today the chapel is home to a museum dedicated to the history of the priory and it's subsequent settlement of which the town of Birkenhead evolved. The museum is open to the public on Saturdays and Sundays between 10.00 and 16.00hrs and from Monday to Friday by appointment only by contacting the Williamson Art Gallery on 0151 652 4177.
Admission is free.
Priory Street, 
Birkenhead
CH41 5JH.

Charles Dawson Brown museum.
This small museum is annexed to St Bridget's Church in the seaside town of West Kirby and houses a collection of ancient, stone carvings and artefacts found in and around the Wirral Peninsula. The museum was founded in 1892 by local benefactor and cotton merchant Charles Dawson Brown who once lived in the town.
Visiting is by appointment only by ringing the museum curator on 0151 625 1234. 
St Bridget's Road,
West Kirby.
CH48 7HL.


National Waterways Museum.
A heritage centre dedicated to a bygone age whih boasts a unique collection of historic narrow boats used on the canals and industrial waterways of Britain.The museum is situated on an arm of the Shropshire Union Canal at Telford Quay and is situated opposite the vast Stanlow Oil Dock.
Also available at the museum are local canal boat trips and Manchester Ship Canal cruises.
Pier Road,
Telford Quay,
Ellesmere Port.
CH65 4FW.
Tel - 0151 355 5017.


The U - Boat Story.
View the workings of and witness how life was, onboard a W.W.II, German, U.Boat submarine.
Woodside Ferry Terminal.
Woodside.
CH41 6DU.
Tel - 0151 330 1000.


The Wilfred Owen Story.
Follows the life and works of one of Wirral's most famous resident's WWI poet, Wilfred Owen.
34, Argyll Street,
Birkenhead.
CH41 6AE.
Tel - 0753 937 1925.

Wirral Transport Museum and Tramway.
During Birkenhead's industrial heyday, the town became the first in Europe to adopt a public tramway service.
Birkenhead's prominent place in the history of public transport is celebrated by way of the Wirral Transport Museum which as well as housing a fine array of trams also exhibits buses, cars and motorbikes and has a fully working model railway.
Although the museum is situated on Taylor Street, access to the museum is actually located outside Woodside Ferry Terminal, where visitors are picked up by a 1901 tram and transported to the museum building situated a mile away.
1 Taylor Street,
Birkenhead.
CH41 1BG.


THEATRES. 
The Wirral Peninsula is served by way of several theatres, below is a list of their locations.


Floral Pavillion. 
An 800 seat theatre and conference centre situated in the former seaside resort of New Brighton, this newly opened theatre hosts a large programme of events throughout the year.
The venue is served by an impressive coffee shop and a panoramic lounge which sports stunning views out across the River Mersey, the Irish Sea and the Liverpool skyline.
Marine Promenade,
New Brighton.
CH45 2JS.
Box Office Tel - 0151 666 0000.


Gladstone Theatre.
Situated in the Grade II listed village of Port Sunlight and run by the amateur dramatic company The Port Sunlight Players since 1921, this venue puts on four shows a year.
Greendale Road,
Port Sunlight.
CH62 4XB.
Box Office Tel - 0151 643 8757.



Little Theatre.
This old and established theatre situated in Birkenhead celebrates it's 80th year of productions in 2011.
Grange Road West,
Birkenhead.
CH41 4BY.
Box Office Tel - 0151 647 6593.


Pacific Road Arts Centre.
Home of the Wirral Youth Theatre, this popular venue presents plays and musical performances throughout the year for all ages.
1 Pacific Road,
Birkenhead.
CH41 1LJ.
Info Line - 0151 647 0752.
Box Office tel - 0151 666 0000.

Thursday 16 June 2011

Parks, gardens, pretty villages and nature trails on the Wirral Peninsula.


The Wirral Peninsular is a haven for hikers, cyclists and nature lovers with its many open green spaces, parkland, beaches, nature reserves and nature trails. In all the peninsula is home to twelve green flag parks, eight Special Sites of Scientific Interest ( SSSI ) three country parks, five nature reserves and hosts three nature trails.
Below is a list of Wirral's main parks, and special sites of scientific interest, followed by a list of other important conservation sites, complete with post code reference or addresses. 

PARKS.
Ashton Park, West Kirby - CH48 4DH.
Birkenhead Park, Birkenhead - CH41 4HY.
Brotherton Park, Bromborough - CH62 2BJ.
Coronation Gardens, West Kirby - CH48 0QG. 

Dibbinsdale Nature Reserve, Eastham - CH62 2BJ.
Eastham Country Park, Eastham - CH62 0BH.
North Wirral Coastal Park, Moreton - CH46 4TA.
Royden Park, Frankby - CH48 1NP.
Vale Park, Wallasey - CH45 1LZ.
Wirral Country Park, Thurstaston - CH61 0HN. 


S.S.S.I  AREAS.
The area consists of eight Special Sites of Scientific Interest, they are - 
Bromborough. 
Dibbinsdale Nature Reserve.
Heswall. 
North Wirral Foreshore.
Red Rocks, Hoylake.
The Dee Estuary.
Thurstaston Common.
West Kirby Beach.


Other interesting nature locations include Bidston Hill, a 100 acre site of woodland and heathland which hosts some rare mummer carvings, part of a Roman road, WWII air raid tunnels, ancient Norse carvings and the former Bidston Observatory and Bidston lighthouse, both built in the 1800's. 

Bidston Moss is an eight hectare former salt marsh which is now an important wild life sanctuary of reed beds, ponds, grassland and scrub. 
For information the area's ranger number is 0151 653 9332.


Hilbre Island, a small offshore island situated off the promenade at West Kirby which is accessed by foot at low tide, is a nature reserve and favourite haunt for sea birds and a local Atlantic Grey Seal colony.The island also boasts it's own indiginous vole, a tiny mouse like creature which has evolved entirely on the island and is seen no where else in the world.


Thornton Hough, Brimstage and Raby are three villages that have been designated  Areas of Special Landscape Value.These three villages all boast a fine array of historic buildings, churches and houses most of which are built in the area's local red sandstone.
Thornton Hough also sports a typical Victorian Village Green. 
The local porous sandstone of the Wirral allows little in the way of standing water to flourish, but the village of Raby is unique as it sports a natural, village pond known as Raby Mere, which has become a local beauty spot and favourite haunt for fishermen.  
Raby is also the home of Wirral's oldest pub, the Wheatsheaf, built in 1611.
 


Ness Botanical Gardens is a grade II listed historic park and garden originally built by local entrepreneur Arthur Kilpin Bulley in 1898.The gardens today boast a wealth of botanical plants and water features all set in a large area of parkland.
Ness Botanical Gardens.
Ness.
Neston.
CH64 4AY.
Tel - 0151 353 0123. 

New Ferry Butterfly Park is a five acre urban nature reserve built on former industrial land which harbours a wealth of plant and animal life which has learnt to come to terms with the industrial landscape around them and now live and thrive amongst the acidic grass lands left by the area's former coal yards and busy dock lands.
The park is situated in New Ferry at post code location CH62 5BG. 


Tam O'Shanter Farm is a four acre, green flag community awarded, urban farm whose aim is to make farm animals accessible to all children. The farm relies solely on fundraising, grants and donations in order to be able to offer free admission  to all on a daily basis.
Bidston Hill,
CH43 7PD.
Tel - 0151 652 9197. 

 
Thurstaston Common is a 250 acre area of woods and heathland situated on  periglacial weathered sandstone which is a local nature reserve and Special Site of Scientific Interest.
The common is also home to Thor's Stone, a giant sandstone outcrop which legend says was once a ceremonial Viking religious site. 


NATURE TRAILS.
There are three walking trails situated along the Wirral Peninsular, all are interlinking and can be found on O.S Explorer Maps 265 and 266.


The Wirral Coastal Walk is a 15 mile path from Seacombe Ferry near Birkenhead to Thurstaston Visitor Centre at Wirral Country Park.The route takes in stunning vistas of the Liverpool skyline, the promenades at New Brighton and Egremont and follows the Irish sea coast to West Kirby taking in the reed beds, sand dunes and marsh land of the  River Dee estuary with it's low tide mudflats which harbour a wealth of wading and sea birds.


The Wirral Shoreway is a 22 mile walk fron the centre of the ancient, walled city of Chester along the route of the River Dee all the way to West Kirby taking in a host of sea side villages along the way as well as stunning views out across to the North Wales coastline.


The Wirral Way is a 12 mile railway walk from the railway station at West Kirby along the now defunct
Wirral Circuit Railway, all the way to Hooton station. The walk takes in the area's fine boulder cliffs and the 31,500 acre River Dee Estuary, with stunning views out across to North Wales, the Clwydian Hills beyond and finally the Irish Sea.
The Wirral Way is also part of Route 56 of the National Cycle Network.  

GREEN FLAG PARKS. 
In 2011 twelve of the Wirral's parks were awarded green flag sites, they are - 
Aston Park,West Kirby. 
Bidston Hill.
Birkenhead Park. 
Coronation Gardens, West Kirby.
Dibbinsdale Nature Reserve. 
Eastham Country Park. 
Hilbre Island. 
Royden Park, Frankby. 
The Arno Gardens, Oxton. 
Thornton Hough Village Green. 
Vale Park, New Brighton. 
Wirral Country Park.

 
PROTECTED AREAS. 
The Wirral Peninsula has nine scheduled monument sites, they are -

Birkenhead Priory, Birkenhead.
Bromborough Hall moated site.
Grange Beacon, West Kirby.
Irby Hall moated site.
New Hall moated site, near Gayton CH64 3TE
Overchurch, Upton.
St Barnabas' Cross, Bromborough.
Standing Cross, Woodchurch.
Storeton Hall, Storeton.


The Wirral Peninsular has twenty five Conservation Areas, they are -

Barnston Village.
Bidston Village.
Birkenhead Park.
Bromborough Pool.
Bromborough Village.
Caldy Village.
Clifton Park, Prenton.
Eastham Village.
Flaybrick Cemetary, Bidston.
Frankby Village.
Gayton Village.
Hamilton Square, Birkenhead.
Lower Heswall.
Meols Drive, West Kirby.
Mountwood, Prenton.
Oxton Village.
Port Sunlight Village.
Saughall Massey Village.
The King's Gap, Hoylake.
The Magazines, New Brighton.
Thornton Hough Village.
Thurstaston Common.
Wellington Road, Bebington.
West Kirby Beach.


The Wirral Peninsular has four historic parks and two wooded conservation areas, they are -

Birkenhead Park, Birkenhead.
Flaybrick Gardens, Bidston.
Port Sunlight, Bromborough.
Storeton Woods, Storeton.
Thornton Manor, Thrornton Hough.
Upton Meadow, Upton.
 

Tuesday 14 June 2011

An Introduction to the Wirral Peninsula

                      
The Wirral Peninsular is in north west England and is an 11 mile long by 8 mile wide peninsular that covers an area of 60.35 square miles. The peninsula is bordered by the River Mersey to the east, the River Dee and the Irish Sea to the west and the the Shropshire Union Canal to the south. 
                 

The peninsula's interior is predominantly flat with it's river estuary coastlines surrounded by two parallel Triassic, sand stone ridges which consist of many small to medium sized peaks or tors, the highest of which is Poll Hill at Heswall which reaches 350 feet high.

The peninsula's history goes back to Mesolithic times with historians believing that there has been human habitation on the peninsula since 7000 BC.

The peninsula's endemic people were the Celtic,Cornovii Tribe.
There is also evidence that the peninsula has seen Roman, Saxon and Viking occupations, the latter of which left it's mark by way of the many Norse names given to the local towns and villages.
The name Wirral is an old English name which means Myrtle Corner, as the peninsular was once covered with Bog Myrtle, a marsh loving plant no longer in evidence in the area. 


In the year 937 the Peninsula was the site of a bloodthristy battle between the brothers Athelstan of England and Edmund I of England against the might of the armies of the Norse King Olaf III of Guthfrithson, King Constantine II of Scotland and King Owen I of Strathclyde.
The conflict, known as the Battle of Brunanburh - modern day Bromborough - was fought in and around the area of present day Brackenwood Golf Course. The battle was the first conflict in history which brought together the combined fighting forces of England to fight as one army, leading historians to name the Wirral Peninsula the Birthplace of England.


The peninsula is known politically as the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral and has been known as such since April 1974, although the borough is historically part of the county of Cheshire, a fact that is still in evidence by the area's local post codes which all start with CH.
The peninsula is located in the ceremonial region of Merseyside, a fact which is made evident by way of the area's local telephone numbers which all begin with the City of Liverpool area code of 0151. 


The peninsula's main town is Birkenhead. It is unknown as to how the town got its name, one reason is that the town was called after the peninsula's longest river the River Birket which flows from West Kirby to West Float Docks in Birkenhead before draining into the River Mersey. 

Another possibility is that the town's name came from the Benedictine, Birchen Priory built in 1150. The word birchen meant birch forest, which in those days covered that part of the peninsula. 
The town's settlement originally grew up around it's priory which was built by Hamon di Masci and for four hundred years until the Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII in 1536 was a pilgrims rest. 

Today, Birkenhead Priory has the distinction of being the oldest building on the Wirral Peninsula.


The monks at Birkenhead Priory were the first people to begin the world famous Ferry 'Cross the Mersey river crossing.The monks used the ferry in order to fetch grain from the market at Liverpool in order to feed their many charges and visitors. This then led to the monks being given a Royal Charter to use their ferry service as a means of public transport.  

The town became an important sea port with a large shipbuilding industry during the 1800's and it is this industry which has gone on to shape the town into what we see today, with it's wide, tree lined boulevards and large Georgian and Victorian houses, which were originally built for the families of rich merchants whose businesses were flourishing on both sides of the River Mersey. 
It was also during this time that the peninsula's town of New Brighton became a popular holiday resort, with the town seeing upwards of two million visitors a year during it's heyday, all of which were transported to the resort by way of the River Mersey ferry.
 

                             
Today the peninsular is served by a good transport network of roads, the M53 Motorway, the Merseyrail metro rail system and a reliable bus service.  The Liverpool John Lennon Airport is the peninsula's local airport, and the area is also served by Manchester Airport which is only one hour to the east.
The peninsula is situated just 20 minutes by road from the city of Liverpool, 30 minutes by road from the city of Chester, one hour by road from the city of Manchester and thirty minutes by road from the North Wales coast. 
 

The Peninsula consists of nine Scheduled Ancient Monuments, one thousand nine hundred listed buildings, twenty five Conservation Areas, eight Special Sites of Scientific Interest and four Historic Parks, giving the area many sites of interest for locals and visitors alike. The area also includes miles of sandy beaches, miles of natural walking trails, an extensive sports industry and several pretty villages and small coastal towns which are served by fine dining restaurants, wine bars, traditional pubs and a rarity these days, independent retailers. 

The peninsula is home to four market towns, Birkenhead, Ellesmere Port, Neston and New Ferry. Birkenhead and Ellesmere Port both have large,daily, indoor markets, whilst Neston holds a weekly market every Friday and a farmer's market every third Saturday of the month. New Ferry holds a fortnightly farmer's market every other Saturday.