In transcribing the following passage from the Internet Archive online version I have expanded abbreviations and added paragraphing, links, and illustrations. — George P. Landow
Places of Worship. — The places of worship within the parish, in 1851, were 36 of the Church of England, with 36,890 sittings; 2 of the Church of Scotland, with 2,650 sittings; 4 of English Presbyterians, with 3,900 sittings; 1 of United Presbyterians, with 1,160 s.; 1 of Reformed Irish Presbyterians, with 120 sittings; 5 of Independents, with 4,276 sittings; 7 of Baptists, with 3,970 sittings; 1 of Quakers, with 940 sittings; 2 of Unitarians, with 1,531 sittings; 6 of Wesleyans, with 3,762 sittings; 2 of New Connexion Methodists, with 1,370 sittings; 2 of Primitive Methodists, with 1,300 sittings; 3 of the Wesleyan Association, with 2,220 sittings; 4 of Welsh Calvinistic Methodists, with 2,S07 sittings; 1 of Independent Methodists, with 30 attendants; 1 of Sandemanians, with 39 attending; 2 of the New Church, with 600 sittings; 5 undefined, with 1,517 sittings; 1 of the Catholic and Apostolic Church, with 100 sittings; 9 of Roman Catholics, with 8,S0tJ sittings; and 3 of Jews, with 710 sittings.The places of worship within the borough, in 1851, were 59 of the Church of England, with 60,545 sittings; 10 of Independents, with 7,942 sittings; 11 of Baptists, with 6,520 sittings; 4 of Unitarians, with 1,791 sittings; 17 of Wesleyans, with 8,944 sittings; 3 of New Connexion Methodists, with 2,020 sittings; 4 of the VVesleyan Association, with 2,431 sittings; 5 of Welsh Calvinistic Methodists, with 4,241 sittings; 1 of Lady Huntingdon's Connexion, with 150 sittings; 14 of isolated congregations, with 2,095 s.; 1 of Latter Day Saints, with 9 sittings; 16 of Roman Catholics, with 14,213 sittings; and the same of other denominations as in the parish. The places of worship in 1866, taken as including some in the course of erection, some close on the borough boundaries, some in suburbs lying compact with the borough, and some obscure or ephemeral ones, cannot be very correctly enumerated; but, even exclusive of the doubtful or the obscure ones, they may be stated at upwards of 200, with an increase of sittings fully proportionate to the increase of churches. The new ones, too, have been erected somewhat equally by the Church of England and by other denominations; and very many of these, as well as very many of the less recent, are large and elegant.
St. Nicholas's Church and Tower Buildings, Liverpool>. “From a drawing by W. G. Herdman.” Source: Muir's Bygone Liverpool, Plate 21. The Tower Buildings (1846) were designed by Sir James Picton (1805-89).
St. Nicholas' church stands at the foot of Chapel-street, on the site of the ancient chapel, long the only place of worship in the town; was built in 1776; is in a mixed style of architecture; comprises nave, aisles, and chancel, with tower and spire; and contains a memorial window to W. P. Campbell, Esq., who died of injuries sustained in the Crimean war, and interesting monuments to W. Clanon, Esq., H. Bluudell, Esq., Bryan Blundell, Esq., Capt. W. N. Wright, and Mrs. Earle.
The tower is 120 feet high, of three stages, and elegant; the spire is a lantern one, 60 feet high, and richly decorated; and they were rebuilt in 1S15, in room of a previous steeple which fell in 1810. and buried twenty-two persons in its ruins. The church-yard had formerly a statue of St. Nicholas; and, so late as less than a century ago, was was by the waters of the Mersey; the space now intervening between it and the river having been all gained foot by foot in the course of the construction of the docks.
The Dispensary and St. Peter’s Church Source: Ramsay Muir, Bygone Liverpool.
St. Peter's church stands in Church-street; was built in 1704; is in a tasteless variety of the Italian style; has a tower upwardly of octagonal fonu: and contains some good oak carving, and two rich monuments to W. Lawler, Esq., and W. Cuulltte, Esq.
St. Peter’s Church and Church Street Source: Ramsay Muir, Bygone Liverpool.
St. George's church stands in Derby-square, on the site of the ancient castle; was built in 1734, and rebuilt in 1825; and has an elegant octagonal steeple, with Ionic columns below and Corinthian columns above, surmounted by a lofty spire.
St. George’s Church and Castle Street Source: Ramsay Muir, Bygone Liverpool.
There is also a St. George's church in Everton ton.
St. Thomas’s church stands in Park-lane: was built in 1750; shows a rustic basement, and two rows of windows, with alternations of two Ionic piilasters, and has a steeple of 1S45. The origmal steeple was 240 feet high; suffered much damage from a storm in 1757: was denuded of its spire in 1822; acquired then a cupola-capped hexagonal turret, in lieu of the spire; and was razed to the ground in 1944. —
St. Paul's church stands in St. Paul's-square; was built in 1709, in miniature imitation of St. Paul's, London; has a boldly projecting tetrastyle Ionic portico on the Wfnnit; has also attached totrastyle Ionic porticoes on the north and the south fronts; and is surmounted by a dome, rising from an octagonal base, supported by eight large Ionic pillars, and crowned with a lantern.
St. Anne's chnrch faces the north end of St. Anne's-street; extends from north to south, instead of from east to west; is in a variety of the pointed style, of stuccoed brick and stone; and has, at the north end, a pinnacled brick tower.
St. John's church stands in St. John's lane, beside St. George's Hall; was built in 1734; is a rectangular structure, in poor pointed style, with tvo rows of five windows on each of the longer sides; and has a square tower 123 feet high, surmounted by a number of small pinnacles. Its church-yard was formerly much crowded; and there were so many as 27,080 interments in it during the twenty years ending in 1820.
St. Stephen's church stands near the end of Byrom-street; was erected as a Baptist chapel in 1722; was long the only Baptist chapel in Liverpool; went, by sale, to the Church of England in 1702; assumed then the name of St. Stephen's church; and is a quaint and plain yet neat-looking structure, with a belfry. St Matthew's church stands in Scotland-road; was originally St. Peter's Scotch Kirk; went, by sale, to the Church of England in 1849; is a handsome edifice in the Saxon style; and has a fine turreted tower, surmounted by a spire. St. Mark's church stands in Upper Duke-street; was built by subscription, at a cost of £18,000, in 1803,— and consecrated in 1815; is a plain but very large edifice; and has a rich painted east window.
St. Michael's church stands in Upper Pitt-street; was founded in 1816, and completed in 1826, at a cost of £45,267; is a beautiful and imposing edifice; has, at the west end, a Corinthian portico of ten columns and two half columns, surmounted by tower and spire, — and at the east end, four Corinthian columns; and contains monumental tablets to the Rev. T. Johnson and the Rev. H. Bury. The tower is of two stages, respectively Ionic and Corinthian; and the spire, in consequence of having been injured by a thunder-storm, was rebuilt in 1841.
St. David's church stands in Brownlow-hill; was erected in 1827; and is appropriated to the use of the Welsh inhabitants of the town. The church of St. Martin-in-the-Fields stands between Blenheim-street and Great Oxford-street; was built by government, at a cost of £20,000, on a site given by E. Houghton, Esq.; is in the early decorated English style; and has a pinnacled tower and spire, much blackened by smoke from chimneys in the vicinity.
St. Bride's church stands between Percy-street and Catherine-street; has, in front, a bold hexastyle Ionic portico, — and on each side six windows of Greco-Egyptian form; projects the chancel from the main body and is well fitted in the interior, with gal- leries resting on slender cast-iron pillars, and with a panelled ceiling.
St. Catherine's church stands on the east side of Abercromby-Square: was built by subscription, after designs by Fester; is a very handsome edifice, in pure Grecian style; has a hexastlie Ionic portico, and south cupola; is fitted, in the interior, with galleries resting on square pillars, and with a richly panelled ceiling; and is lighted only from the altar-window and from the cupola. Another church of the same name is at Edgehill; was built in 1863, at a cost of £3,000; and is in the early English style, of red brick with Stourton stone facings.
St. Barnabas' church stands in Parliament-street; was built in 1841; is a handsome red-stone edifice, in the early English style; and has a beautiful tower and spire, 135 feet high. St. Silas' church stands in Pembroke-place; is a fine structure, of brick with stone facings; and has a red-stone tower and spire, and a very elegant interior.
St. Bartholomew's church stands in Naylor-street, and is a handsome stone building. St. Saviour's church stands in Bloom-street, near the S boundary of the borough; is a plain stuccoed edifice, in the Roman style; and has an octagonal tower, terminating in pediments, and surmounted by a vase.
St. Matthias’ stands in Great Howard-street, amid a street-locality which has been almost totally changed in the course of the modern improvements of the town; succeeded a previous church which was built in 1834, and which required to be taken down in connexion with operations for the formation of a railway terminus; dates itself from 1849; and is an edifice in the pointed style, altogether different in appearance from its predecessor.
St. Simon's church stands in Gloucester-street, near the terminus of the Northwestern railway; was built in 184S; is a haudsome edifice, in the pointed style, with lofty tower and spire; and succeeded a previous church which was built about 1808 by the Associate or Burgher Scottish Presbyterians, bore for a time the name of Silver Hill chapel, was relinquished by its congregation in 1827 for their new place of worship at Mount Pleasant, and passed afterwards into possession of the Church of England.
All Saints’ church stands in Great Nebon-street, and is in the early English style. The church of St Mary Magdalene stands in Finch-street; and there are churches of St. Mary in Edge-hill, Kirkdale, Bootle, Wavertree, and Walton. There wad also a church of St. Mary in Harrington-street, erected in 1776; but it was taken down in 1809, and not rebuilt.
There is likewise a church of St. Mary, often called the church for the Blind, at the comer of Hardman-street and Hope-street; and this succeeded a previous church on a neighbouring site, and forms one of a cluster of grand and beautiful public buildings. The previous church was built in 1819; and was taken down in 1850, to give place to an enlargement of the Northwestern railway terminus. The present church is in purs Grecian style, after designs by Foster; has an elegant portico, copied from that of the temple of Jupiter Panhellenius, in the island of Egina; is neatly fitted in the interior; contains two fine paintings by Hilton and Haydon; and communicates, by a subterraneous passage, with the school for the blind.
Holy Trinity church stands in St. Anne-street; was built by private proprietors, in 1792; is a large stone structure, with a west tower surmounted by vases; and recently underwent a thorough repair. There are also three churches of the same name in Parliament-street, in Anfield-Walton-Breck, and in Wavertree.
Christ church stands in Hunter-street; was built in 1794, at a cost of £15,000, all defrayed by John Houghton, Esq., who also endowed it; is crowned by a large dome, surmounted by a lantern, with exterior circular gallery, commanding a fine view of the town; and is fitted interiorly with two rows of galleries, lower and upper. There is also a church of the same name in Everton. St. Philip's church stands in Hardman-street; was built at a cost of about £12,000; and is in the pointed style, of painted brick and ornamental cast-iron.
St. Luke’s Church Source: Ramsay Muir, Bygone Liverpool.
St. Luke's church stands at the north end of Berry-street, fronting the end of Bold-street; was founded in 1811, and completed in 1831, after designs by Foster, at a cost of £44,110; is in the decorated English style, of superior stone and excellent workmanship; consists of nave, aisles, and chancel, with a tower, all elegantly decorated; has a brilliant interior, with stained glass windows of various designs, and with armorial devices; and was regarded, by a writer in Blackwood's Magazine, as resembling a cathedral, and as worthy of being made the seat of a new bishopric should one be formed out of that of Chester.
Mariners' church is a floating fabric, moored at the south end of George's dock; was formerly a sloop of IS guns; and was presented by government, to be formed into a church.
Holy Innocents' church stands in [?]-street; and was budt in 1854, at costs defrayed by H. Banner, Esq. St. Jude's church stands in Hardwick-street, on ground given by the Marquis of Salisbury; was built by subscriptions and donations; is in the style of the 13th century, of brick and stone, without a tower; and has a handsome and commodious interior. St. James' church stands in Chesterfield-street, Toxtoth Park; and is a plain brick building, with round-headed windows, and with a square tower.
St Augustine's church stands in Shaw-street, adjoining the Collegiate institution; was built in 1830; is in the Greco-Egyplian style, with stucco imitation of stone; and has a tower, copied partly from the Choragic monument of Thrasyllus at Athens, and partly from the Ionic temple of Ilisius.
St Clement's church stanils in Stanhope-street, in the part of the town called Windsor; and is a small but elegant red-stone edifice, in the pointed style.
St. John-the-Baptist's church stands in Park-road; and is a very neat edifice of red stone, in the pointed style. St. Paul's church, Belvidere-road, Prince's Park, was built in 1848; is in the later English style, with tower and spire 150 feet high; has a floor of encaustic tiles, tiistefully arranged; and contains about 2,000 sittings. St. Aidin's church, in Victoria-road, was built in 1860, at a cost of £3,500; and is in the early English style, of red sandstone.
St. Thomas' church, in Warwick-street, was built and endowed in 1841, by John Gladstone, Esq.; and contains about 1.000 sittings.
Everton Source: Ramsay Muir, Bygone Liverpool.
St. Timothy's church, in Pokeby-street, EVERTON nearly a hundred years ago, and even somewhat later, was a fashionable suburb, and its history has been written with great minuteness by Robert Syers, and published in 1830. Here dwelt the prosperous Liverpool merchants, who erected handsome mansions in commanding situations, and who were facetiously designated by the town residents “Everton nobles.” That old family, the Seacomes, possessed large properties in Everton; and here, too, lived “Squire Shaw,” who, through a fortunate marriage, became possessed of a good estate; whilst Mr. Sparling dwelt on his St. Domingo property, of which he was inordinately proud. It is said that he proposed to build the Queen’s Dock at his own expense; but instead of that he sold the site to the Liverpool Corporation for a large sum. He was most anxious that his family should always identify his name with the estate in Everton; but in this he was disappointed, for his son never resided there after his duel with poor Mr. Grayson, the shipbuilder, whom the wretched fellow challenged to a duel, and had out on a fair green field in Toxteth Park, where he shot him dead on Sunday morning, February 26, 1804, The next year there was another fatal duel fought in a field close to London Road, between Colonel Bolton, of the first regiment of Liverpool Volunteers, and Major Edward Brooks, of the second regiment. Major Brooks was killed, but his opponent docs not seem ever to have been brought to trial, stands in a poor neighbourhood; was buUt in 1302, at a cost of £2,300; and is in a plain variety of the decorated English style. Other churches in the parts of the borough beyond Liverpool parish, and in the suburbs, are noticed in the articles on their respective localities.
Oldham-street Scotch kirk was built in 1793; and is a large, plain, brick edifice. St. Andrew's Scotch kirk, in Rodney-street, is an elemmt structure, with handsome stone front; and has an Ionic portico, sunnounted by two square turrets, each of which is ornamented with eight Corinthian columns, and crowned with a cupola.
St. George's Presbyterian church, in Myrtle-street, was built in 1845; and is an elegant stone edifice, in the Norman style. The Free Presbyterian church, in Canning-street, is a recent erection, at a cost of about £4.500; is in the early English style, all faced with white stone; and has a bold tower and spire, 114 feet high.
The United Presbyterian church at Slount Pleasant, was built in 1827; and has a handsome stone front, with four Doric pillars, and an upper range of five round-headed windows.
The United Presbyterian church at the junction of Breck-road and Queen's-road, Everton, was built in 1865; is in the Later English style, with a nave about 74 feet by 66, and a transept of 15 feet by 19; and has a tower and spire 133 feet high.
The United Presbyterian church, in Prince's-road, was built in 1866, chiefly of brick; consists of nave and transepts, with a tower 135 feet high; and has, behind it, a large lecture-hall.
The Irish Presbyterian church, in Islington, is a stuccoed brick builtllng, and has four Doric pillars in its front.
Great George-street Independent chapel was built in 1841; succeeded a previous chapel on the same site, erected in 1812, and burnt in 1840; is an elegant edifice in the Grecian style, 127 feet long and 63 feet wide; h;is, on the principal front, a serai-circular portico of ten fluted monolithic columns, after the model of the temple of Jupiter Stator, sunnounted by a richly ornamented dome on a circular stylobate; is adorned, along thw flanks, by Corinthian pilasters, alternating with serai-circular-headed windows; and has a chaste and beautiful interior, with panelled ceiling.
Renshaw-street Independent chapel was baUt in 1777, by a body of English Presbyterians; passed, by their union with another congregation, into possession of Independents; and was new-fronted with a neat Gothic facade in 1820.
Norwood Independent chapel was built in 1862, at a cost of nearly £5,000; is in the decorated English style, of red sandstone with Stourton-stone dressings; and has a lofty turret on each side of the principal entrance.
Everton-crescent Independent chapel was buUt in 1833, in lieu of a previous chapel in Hotham-street, erected in 1802, and eventually sold to the New Connexion Methodists; and is a neat stone edifice, with a tetrastyle Ionic portico. Stanley Independent chapel was built in 1365, at a cost of £3,800; and is in the decorated English style. Chadwick-Mount Independent chapel, in Everton, was built in 1866, at a cost of £1,500; is in the Roman Ionic stye; and was constructed on a plan to admit of much enlargement.
The Welsh Calvinistic chapel in Princes-road, in lieu of a previous one in Bedford-street, was founded in the summer of 1865; and was designed on a plan to cost about £15,000. Mvrtle-street Baptist chapel, opposite the Philharmonic Hall, was built in 1844; was subsequently so enlarged as to contain about 2,000 sittings; and is in a variety of the pointed style, with a number of ornate pinnacled turrets at both ends. B[]on-street Baptist chapel was buiit in 1789; is a large, plain and substantial edifice; was so much menaced by the formation of a contiguous tunnel of the Northeastern railway as to be abandoned and sold by its congregation; and passed afterwards into possession of another Baptist body. Crowm-stre«t Baptist cnapel is a recent erection, of very handsome appearance; and has a missive tetrastyle Ionic portico. The Quakers" raeeting-hon.se, in Hunter-Street, is a large and plain building. Bnmswick chapel, in Goss-street, the principal Wesleyan chapel in Liverpool, a handsome edifice, with stone front nnd Ionic portico; and is interiorly formed in the manner of an amphitheatre, with about 1,500 sittings. Great Homer-street Wesleyan chapel has a handsome Greciain front. Pitt-street Wesleyan chapel w;is built about 18IO, on the site of a previous chapel, which was the earliest Methodist one in Liverpool, and in which John Wesley preached.
Upper Stanhope-street Wesleyan chapel is a large and fine edifice, with stone front and neat portico; and has, attached to it, a cemetery enclosed by a stong wall and palisades. Princes-park Wesleyan chapel was built in 1833, at a cost of £7,000; is in the decorated English style, all of stone; and has a high-pitched gable front, with richly carved doorway and four-light traceried windows, flanked with square towers and tall spires. H[]-srreet Unitarian chapel was built about 1850; forms one of a group of fine public buildings; and is an elegant [ ], in the jointed style.
Park-road Unitarian chapel was built in 1662; and is a picturesquely ivy-clad edifice, surrounded by a burying-ground. The Catholic Apostolic church, in Canning-street, is a splendid cruciform edifice, in the late decorated English style; is surmounted, near the centre, by a handsome spire 200 feet high; and has a richly-ornate interior, with cathedral arrangements.
The Greek church, at the corner of Princes-Park-road and Berkeley -street, was built in 1866-7; is in the Byzantine style, of brick, stone, and marble; comprises uartaex, nave, aisles, transepts, and apsidal chancel; is surnountcd by small, lead-covered, brick domes, and by a grand central dome, nearly 50 feet high, crowned with a Greek cross; and has a rich interior. St. Mary's Ilornin Catholic church, between Edmund-street and Omioni-street, otf Oldhall-street, was built in 1845, at a cost cf about £14,000; is in the style of the early part of the 14th century; consists of nave, aisles, chancel, and Lady chapel, with a southwest tower; contains a very beautiful pulpit of Caen stone, and three rich canopied sedilia; has a chancel-fioor of enamelled encaustic tiles; and succeeded a plain brick church on the same site, which again succeede a comparatively ancient one, destroyed by fire in 1745. St. Peter's Roman Catholic chapel, in Seel- street, is a plain but commodious edifice.
St. Joseph's Roman Catholic chapel, in Grosvenor-street, on the site of a once famous tennis court, was built in 179S, as a church of the Establishment; bore, while belonging to the Establishment, the name of All Saints; was sold to The Roman Catholics in 1344; and has accommodation for about 2,010 persons. St. Francis Xavier's Roman Catholic church, in Salisbury-street, was built in 1849; is in the pointed style, 150 feet long, and 60 feet wide; and is a very hamdsome or even splendid edifice.
St. Anthony's Roman Catholic chapel, in Scotland-road, was erected in 1832; is an elegant edifice, in the pointed style, with accommodation for about 1,700 persons; stands over a deep crypt, containing 654 single burial vaults, — and also over some other burial vaults; and succeeded a previous chapel of the same name, which was sold and converted into dwelling-houses, at St. Anthony's -place, Mile-East.St. Patrick's Roman Catholic chapel, in Mark-place, Park-road, is an elegant and spacious edifice, with a buryingj-ground attached; and has, in front, a large and well-formed statue of St. Patrick.
St. Nicholas' Roman Catholic chapel, in Hawke-street, ranks as a cathedral; is in a richly executed variety of the pointed style: and ranks a plentiful display of pinnacles. St. Anne's Roman Catholic chapel, in Duke-street, Edgehill, is a neat structure in the pointed style; and has, connected with it, a school and an asylum. Holy Cross Roman Catholic church, in Standish-strcct, was built in 1S61; measures 102 feet in length, 30 in width, and 70 in height; is very rich in constructive decoration; and has attached to it a presbytery and other buildings.
St. Michael's Roman Catholic chapel, in West Derby-street, Was built in 1865, at a cost of about £5,000; measures 100 feet by 50; is in a Continental variety of the pointed style; and has some good carving, both without and within.
St. Oswald's Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852) 1839-42.
St Oswald's's Roman Catholic chapel, at the Old [...], is a splendid edifice in the early English style; and contains armorial bearings of all the canonized kings of England.
The Roman Catholic convent of the Sisters of Mercy, in Mount Vemon-street, is a neat structure in the pointed style; and has a small chapel, and a private cemetery. Another convent of the Sisters of Mercy is in Marlborough-lane; and two other convents are at Mount Pleasant and Great George-square.
The Jews' synagogue, in Seel-street, succeeded a previous one on another site; was built, according to a lettering upon it, in A. M. 1868; shows a neat stone front, with tetrastyle Ionic portico; and has, over the door, a Hebrew inscription. The Jews' synagogue, in Hope-place, Hope-street, is a small brick edifice, with a handsome interior.
The Convent of Our Lady of Mercy, Liverpool by Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812-1852). Source: Present State of Ecclesiastical Architectur
Cemeteries
Cemeteries are attached to very few of the churches; and most of those which are so have already been noticed. The Necropolis, or Low Hill cemetery, in West Derby road, was formed in 1825, at a cost of about £S,000; occupies an oblong area of about five acres; is separated from the road by a lofty stonewall; has a stone-front entrance, in the Grecian style, with oratory on the one side, and minister's house on the other; includes a belt of colonnaded catacombs, 10 feet wide; and is elsewhere ornamented with shrubbery. The Toxteth Park cemetery, in Smithdown-lane, was formed about 1856; occupies 464 acres; and contains three chapels for respectively Episcopalians, Dissenters, and Roman Catholics, all in the pointed style, the first and the second each at a cost of £700, the third erected in 1864.
St James' cemetery, in Upper Duke-street, was originally excavated as a stone quarry; was converted to its present use, in 1829, at a cost of £21,000; comprises an area of 44,000 square yards, enclosed by a stone wall and palisades, with four spacious entrances; contains three successive galleries of catacombs, an oratory, a minister's house, and many interesting monuments; and is beautifully adorned with walks, flower-beds, and shrubberies. The oratory is in pure Doric style, after the model of a Greek hyprethral temple, surrounded by a small flight of steps; and contains several well-executed monmnents. The minister's house is a handsome stone edifice. A circular mausoleum, inclosing a marble statue of the Hon. William Huskisson, is near the centre of the ground; was erected in 1834; and consists chiefly of three-quarter fluted Corinthian columns, the surrounding dome, and a crowning cross.
St. Mary's cemetery, in Walton-road, Kirkdale, occupies nearly three acres; has a very beautiful stone front, ornamented with annorial bearings, turrets, pinnacles, and various devices; and has, on the north side, a chaoel with carved oak fittings and oak-ribbed ceiling, — and on the south side, a minister's house.
Anfield-Park cemetery, in the northeast outskirts, beyond Everton, occupies much ground; is tastefully laid out with shrubs and trees; and contains mortuary chapels. The Jews' cemetery, in Deane-street, Fairfield, was opened in 1837; and has a gateway in the form of an arch, surmounted by a small distyle Doric portico.
Links to Related Material
- Liverpool’s Cultural Institutions (1870)
- Liverpool’s Schools and Educational Institutions
- Religion in Victorian England (homepage)
Bibliography
Wilson, John M. (John Marius). The imperial gazetteer of England and Wales: embracing recent changes in counties, dioceses, parishes, and boroughs: general statistics: postal arrangements: railway systems, &c.; and forming a complete description of the country. 8 vols. Edinburgh: A. Fullarton, 1870.Internet Archive online version of a copy in the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Web. 17 September 2022.
Last modified 19 September 2022