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    Liverpool Town Hall

    Liverpool Town Hall

    4.8(4 reviews)
    0.5 mi

    Wow. So lovely! We recently has the pleasure of visiting Liverpool Town Hall for a wedding, and…read morewhat a wonderful place to get married! Like many historical buildings in the UK, it features prominent features like the neoclassical façade and big dome. Upon entry, you come straight into a grand staircase draped in a bright red carpet. All of the fixtures, statues, and details throughout the whole building are opulent. Rooms large and grand. There was a reception prior to the wedding ceremony which took place on the second floor, which included access to the main balcony. It was a stunning day (shocking, I know!), making it the perfect opportunity to enjoy gathering outside overlooking bustling castle street. The ceremony was in yet another grand room, with plenty of history. Such is a great place for any kind of larger event! It sounds like you can also come here for guided tours to explore the historical and architectural significance.

    Liverpool Town Hall is not nearly as grand or ostentatious as many other town halls to be found…read moreacross the UK, however it takes perfectly proportioned pride of place along one of my favourite streets in the city centre. The architecture of Cstle Street is brilliant with every building seemingly capturing a different, style, era and atmosphere of the city through its development. At the tope sits the town hall where it has been positioned under various stages of renovation and transformation since 1673. Although the mayor has little power within the city and much of the council power resides in other buildings across the city, the town hall is still an important civic centre within which weddings and prestigious social and charity events can be held.

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    Liverpool Town Hall
    Liverpool Town Hall - View of Liverpool Town Hall

    View of Liverpool Town Hall

    Liverpool Town Hall

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    William McKenzie's Tomb

    William McKenzie's Tomb

    4.7(3 reviews)
    0.5 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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    The Ancient Chapel Of Toxteth

    The Ancient Chapel Of Toxteth

    4.5(2 reviews)
    1.8 mi

    It's frightening how old this place is. It's not 'ancient' in the same way Pythagoras was but it's…read morestill damn old, one of Liverpool's half dozen oldest buildings. Built sometime between 1604 and 1618, the original chapel (now modified) has always been associated with non-conformist religion. Its first master, Richard Mather, was only fifteen when a group of Toxteth Puritans (not a gang name) appointed him. Following a stint at Oxford he returned to the chapel and lasted right through to the early 1630's, when he was suspended for his non-conformist views. He emigrated to America in 1635. 1635! America was just a bunch of tiny villages back then. The country still had a damn century to wait until George Washington was even born. Although constructed in the countryside, the chapel was later swallowed up by the neighbourhoods of Liverpool and now sits at the end of Park Road, next to a cemetery of unquestionably old gravestones. I reckon it'll outlive the Himalayas.

    Hopefully ! - we have a visit planned for a week tomorrow (27 July 2017) with a U.S. visitor, who…read moreis directly descended from the Aspinall family, whose brass plaque is in the chapel. The contact phone number (0151 263 4899) is a dead line, and there is no email address - PLEASE CAN YOU HELP US TO CONTACT THEM TO CONFIRM OUR DATE AND VISIT ? Many thanks in advance for your assistance - I do not do Facebook (I am 70). Martin Walker

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    The Ancient Chapel Of Toxteth
    The Ancient Chapel Of Toxteth
    The Ancient Chapel Of Toxteth

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    Penny Lane

    Penny Lane

    4.2(12 reviews)
    3.0 mi

    In 1966, three years after the release of the legendary "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and two years…read moreafter their sensational US tour that started Beatlemania, the Beatles were World famous. It was also at this time when Paul McCartney started writing about his days that he shared with John Lennon in their hometown, Liverpool. For Paul, it seemed like he was taking a step back from the limelight of the Beatles' phenomenal success and taking the time to reflect upon his childhood memories. Paul said in a documented interview: "I still want to write a song about the places in Liverpool where I was brought up. Places like The Docker's Umbrella ..., and Penny Lane near my old home." There were a lot of fond memories for Paul when he wrote Penny Lane. This was where he had to change buses to get to John Lennon's house. This was also the district where he hanged out with many of his friends. Paul explained that Penny Lane was not only a street, but also a district, and the lyrics of the song were all based on real places - the barber shop, the bank, the fire station. "It's part fact, part nostalgia for a great place..., as we remember it, and it's still there." Paul recalled that as he was writing Penny Lane, John came along to help him: "We were writing childhood memories: recently faded memories from eight or ten years before, so it was a recent nostalgia, pleasant memories for both of us." Penny Lane is one of very few Beatles songs that were written about real places and real lives and is probably the only one that is about the childhood of Paul McCartney and John Lennon. It's been over 50 years since the release of Penny Lane and almost 40 years since the Beatles broke up, but numerous tourists still visit Penny Lane every day. Yours truly included. And its road sign still gets stolen by Beatles fans. The latest version of the road sign when I was there was bolted down into a concrete wall with temper-proof screws, screws that cannot be unfastened with a screwdriver or most tools. Let's see how long this one gets to stay. I am just guessing... but this must be the most often stolen road sign in the World... "In Penny Lane, there is a barber showing photographs Of every head he's had the pleasure to know And all the people that come and go Stop and say, 'Hello'..."

    Another place to visit if you are checking out Beatles landmarks in Liverpool. Penny Lane is a real…read morestreet in the suburbs of Liverpool. The song "Penny Lane" is named after this street of course. You can see the street signs and take a pic. Penny lane is in my ears and in my eyes There beneath the blue suburban skies I sit, and meanwhile back Penny lane is in my ears and in my eyes There beneath the blue suburban skies

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    Penny Lane
    Penny Lane
    Penny Lane

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    Eleanor Rigby Statue

    Eleanor Rigby Statue

    3.0(2 reviews)
    0.4 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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    Wellington's Column - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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