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Recommended Reviews - Liverpool Town Hall

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Eleanor Rigby Statue

Eleanor Rigby Statue

3.0(2 reviews)
0.2 mi

A stone's throw from Matthew Street and the legendary Cavern Club there's a bronze statue of…read moreEleanor Rigby. The work of musician and artist Tommy Steele, the statue was inspired by the imaginary character in The Beatles song and given to the city as a gift. The plaque dedicates it to 'All the lonely people...' and there's space on the bench for locals and tourists to sit and contemplate in solitude. Since 'Eleanor Rigby' happens to be one of the few Beatles songs I loathe, I never get the inclination to visit her. Lots of people clearly do however, as there's often flowers laid across her lap and feet. I'm not sure if it's an urban myth but allegedly, Steele placed a pair of football boots, a four leaf clover, a couple of sonnets and a few childrens comics inside the statue for luck!

I always presumed the Eleanor Rigby statue was on Mathew Street somewhere and couldn't fathom how…read moreI'd never seen it. Then just the other day I walked past it, by chance. Turns out it's on Stanley Street. Ah begorrah! This location seems quite fitting because, detached from the swathe of tourists cramming up the area radiating from the Cavern, the statue gives off an even more melancholy air. Poor gal. She doesn't even have a face. She obviously left it in a jar by the door. Also, since Beatles songs feature such memorable characters (Sergeant Pepper, Mean Mister Mustard, the Taxman, a girl with kaleidoscope eyes etc), does anybody else think, statue-wise, we could've done better than this lonely cow?

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Eleanor Rigby Statue

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William McKenzie's Tomb

William McKenzie's Tomb

4.7(3 reviews)
0.8 mi

Strangely, William McKenzies Tomb can represent everything you wish to find about Liverpool. It is…read morean eccentric and flamboyantly designed tomb going against the grain of convention that holds a macabre presence on Rodney Street with many great stories surrounding it. Now surrounded by weeds and construction sights it does not have the dignified surroundings that it deserves but through local interest and the love of a good yarn it has begun to once again attract interest largely due to the larger than life character that inhabits it. Shabby and rough around the edges, you can't help but stop and look when walking past and find yourself being drawn in by its odd charm.

This is a great little spot to visit if you're passing through Liverpool as a tourist or traveller…read more The story behind this pyramid type tomb is that of William McKenzie. Over a hundred years ago, McKenzie was a wealthy business man who resided in Liverpool and was well known for treating his staff terribly and gambling compulsively. Legend has it that McKenzie played poker down to his last penny with a hooded character one night, deciding at that point, to gamble his soul. He then turned cards and had lost his soul to his mysterious opponent. Due to this he requested that upon his death, he be entombed above ground, his corpse sitting at a card table, a winning hand of poker in his hand! He believed that being buried this way would save his soul from being stolen for eternity. That's how he sits within the pyramid tomb on Rodney Street, and his ghost is said to stalk the streets late at night!

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William McKenzie's Tomb

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Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic

Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic

3.5(2 reviews)
0.3 mi

Although the doomed liner never actually came here, Liverpool is connected to the Titanic in more…read moreways than you'd think. The head offices of the company that commissioned it stand just across the road from the Three Graces, twenty-eight Liverpudlians went down with it and the word 'Liverpool' painted on the stern was probably the last piece of the boat that saw air before it slid into the Atlantic. Go us. The Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic was built to commemorate the coal-shovelling workers who kept the electricity going as the disaster unfolded. Since the granite statue was erected in 1916, its purpose was extended to include all engine room fatalities in the First World War, or as it was called then, the Only World War.

Titanic was owned by White Star Line the Oceanic Steam navigation, or more commonly known shipping…read morecompany, which was founded in Liverpool. Thomas Ismay, founder of White Star Line lived on Marine Terrace in Waterloo, Liverpool, it is also rumoured that the captain of the Titanic, Edward Smith, who moved to Liverpool in the 1850s to begin his career, lived for a time on this same road. Smith died onboard the Titanic along with around 1500 people when the "unsinkable ship" sank in 1912.Many of the crew members, including six senior engineers were Liverpool born or had settled in the city. This is a fine memorial marking a poignant loss of life.

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Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic

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Liverpool Town Hall - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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