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Bootle Town Hall

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52-570: Bootle Town Hall is a municipal building in Oriel Road in Bootle , Merseyside , England. The building, which is the headquarters of Sefton Council , is a Grade II listed building. After significant population growth in the later half of the 19th century, largely associated with Irish immigration attracted by work at the Liverpool docks , and following the incorporation of Bootle-cum-Linacre as

104-482: A leisure centre , located in the North Park area, which includes a modern gym, swimming pool, and various indoor sports halls. The Bootle New Strand shopping centre contains many of the regular high street stores, combined with a smaller collection of local businesses. For entertainment there is a wide variety of public houses , snooker clubs and late-night bars. There are also a number of restaurants. Originally

156-537: A municipal borough in 1868, civic leaders decided to procure a dedicated town hall: the site they selected was open land north of Baliol Road. The foundation stone for the new building was laid by the mayor, John McArthur, on 8 July 1880. It was designed by John Johnson in the Renaissance style and was officially opened by the mayor, Alderman William Poulson, on 10 April 1882. The design involved an asymmetrical main frontage with eight bays facing onto Oriel Road;

208-424: A Conservative seat, Bootle elected early MPs such as Bonar Law , a future Tory Prime Minister. The seat was briefly Liberal in the early 1920s. Labour first captured the seat in 1929, in the personage of local hairdresser John Kinley , but lost it in 1931. Although Kinley recaptured it in 1945 it did not become safely Labour until the long tenure of Simon Mahon . It is now impregnable, politically, and since 1997

260-555: A multimillion-pound facility called the L20 Building located on Stanley Road was opened. This houses a dedicated University Centre with open-plan study areas for students studying University level courses. There are two railway stations served by frequent electric services from Liverpool to Southport. These are Oriel Road near the Victorian era civic centre, and New Strand , serving the shopping centre. A third railway station

312-553: A population of 51,394 in 2011; the wider Parliamentary constituency had a population of 98,449. It is part of the Liverpool City Region . Historically part of Lancashire , Bootle's proximity to the Irish Sea and the industrial city of Liverpool to the south saw it grow rapidly in the 1800s, first as a dormitory town for wealthy merchants, and then as a centre of commerce and industry in its own right following

364-834: A reputation for his successful anti-submarine warfare exploits in the Battle of the Atlantic during the Second World War , includes two paintings, naval ensigns, the General Chase signal flags and the ships's bell from HMS Starling which was given to Bootle Town Hall in October 1964. The colours of the 7th Battalion the King's Regiment (Liverpool) , which had been based at Park Street in Bootle and which evolved to become

416-467: Is a metropolitan borough of Merseyside , England. It was formed on 1 April 1974 , by the amalgamation of the county boroughs of Bootle and Southport , the municipal borough of Crosby , the urban districts of Formby and Litherland , and part of West Lancashire Rural District . It consists of a coastal strip of land on the Irish Sea which extends from Southport in the north to Bootle in

468-716: Is also home to the Royal Birkdale Golf Club which has played host to the Open Championship , Ryder Cup , Walker Cup and Curtis Cup . This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Sefton at current basic prices published (pp. 240–53) by Office for National Statistics with figures in millions of British Pounds Sterling. ^ Components may not sum to totals due to rounding ^ includes hunting and forestry ^ includes energy and construction ^ includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured At

520-775: Is on Wadham Road. Firwood Bootle CC has a significant success record, with 6 Liverpool and District Cricket Competition championship titles to their name. Bootle field three senior teams that compete in the Liverpool and District Cricket Competition and they have an established junior training section that play competitive cricket in the Liverpool Competition Junior League. The town has one further education college, Hugh Baird College , located on Balliol Road. The college delivers over 300 courses to more than 7,000 students with course levels from Entry Level to Level 3, A Levels, apprenticeships and university level courses and degrees. In January 2014,

572-471: Is ranked as only the tenth worst area for unemployment in Britain, and all other parts of the region have lower unemployment—a stark contrast to the 1970s and 1980s when areas of Merseyside dominated the list of Britain's least economically active areas. As of 2009, in the depth of a recession , unemployment stood at 12%. In 2022, it was reduced to less than 4%, similar to the national average. Bootle Docks

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624-591: Is situated on the boundary of Bootle (Old Roan), and is part of the Liverpool to Ormskirk Line. A goods line, the Bootle Branch , is still in use, but it used to be a passenger line which had a station at Bootle Balliol Road railway station and served the areas of Clubmoor , Tuebrook and Childwall among other places. It closed during the 1960s. Called the Canada Dock Branch , a second route,

676-710: The Bootle constituency has been one of the safest Labour Party seats in the whole of the United Kingdom. The area was represented in parliament by Joe Benton until he stood down in 2015. The current MP is Peter Dowd . For elections to Sefton Council the town of Bootle is split between the electoral wards of Netherton and Orrell , whose three representatives, are all members of the Labour Party, and are Susan Ellen Bradshaw, Ian Ralph Maher and Tom Spring. Derby , whose three representatives are Brenda O'Brien, David Robinson and Anne Thompson and are all members of

728-522: The Earl of Sefton and the Earl of Derby , resident of Knowsley Hall , and the adjacent borough was subsequently named Knowsley. A Sefton Rural District covering some of the villages in the district existed from 1894 to 1932. The Metropolitan Borough of Sefton is one of the six constituent local government districts of the Liverpool City Region . Since 1 April 2014, some of the borough's responsibilities have been pooled with neighbouring authorities within

780-554: The North Mersey Branch could still be opened. The bus station is under the New Strand Shopping Centre and provides services to Liverpool City Centre , Penny Lane , Allerton , Tuebrook and Crosby . Bootle Docks used to host passenger ships to Belfast and Dublin , but now it is used solely for freight services, and it is somewhat less important than the port of Liverpool. The town has

832-456: The temperance movement . Local societies thrived, including sports teams, scouts and musical groups. The Bootle May Day carnival and the crowning of the May Queen were highlights of the social year. The town successfully fought against absorption by neighbouring Liverpool in 1903. It subsequently made good use of its Latin motto Respice, Aspice, Prospice , ("look to the past, the present,

884-555: The 2011 census, there were 265,010 usual residents of Sefton aged 3 or over whose main language was declared. The 10 most common main languages were as follows: 1,794 (0.68%) usual residents over the age of 3 had a different main language to the above languages. Sefton is twinned with: The following people, military units and Organisations and Groups have received the Freedom of the Borough of Sefton. In terms of television,

936-588: The 40th (The King's) Royal Tank Regiment in 1938, were laid up in the town hall in October 1966. The building continued to be the local seat of government when the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton was formed in 1974. The main administrative base for new council was established at Bootle Town Hall although the council continued to maintain a presence in Southport by holding some of the meetings of its full council at Southport Town Hall . In March 2020,

988-413: The Labour Party, and finally Linacre whose three representatives, are all members of the Labour Party, and are John Fairclough, Christine Maher, and Daniel McKee. Overall there are nine councillors representing the Bootle area, all of them are members of the Labour Party. Overall the electoral wards of Sefton Council in and around Bootle and the parliamentary constituency itself are extremely safe seats for

1040-469: The Labour Party, sometimes standing uncontested by the other parties. Many notable footballers were born in Bootle. Jamie Carragher , Steve McManaman and Roy Evans came to prominence playing for Liverpool (with Evans later going on to become the club's manager) whilst Alvin Martin is regarded as one of West Ham United 's greatest-ever players. Former Evertonian Jose Baxter of Sheffield United

1092-488: The Second World War large council housing estates were built inland from the town centre, including the area of Netherton , which was built on new town principles. The Liverpool Overhead Railway and Liverpool Tramways Company closure in the 1950s reduced Bootle's connection to Liverpool. Bootle did share in the postwar boom. The centre of the town was redeveloped and the 'Bootle New Strand' shopping centre

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1144-542: The Spring Budget, a £58 million fund for “Capital Levelling Up”, of which £20 million has been allocated to the first phase of repurposing the Strand shopping centre and wider transformation of Bootle Town Centre. In November 2016, Liverpool2 was opened, expanding Seaforth Docks with river berths that can accommodate large container ships. The economic recovery on Merseyside since the 1980s has meant that Bootle

1196-526: The UK national government and the combined authority over a possible devolution deal to confer greater powers on the region, including whether to introduce an elected 'Metro Mayor' to oversee the entire metropolitan area. The existence of Sefton has been an ongoing local controversy, especially in Southport , where local Members of Parliament (MPs) and councillors have campaigned for separation from Bootle and

1248-630: The Welsh terrace houses get demolished and replaced with 2,3 and 4 bed modern houses. This was after the controversial move by Bellway after residents opposed demolition. Sefton Council submitted a bid to the Government’s Levelling UP Fund in July for £20 million to underpin a regeneration scheme to transform Bootle town centre. The outcome of the fund is expected to be announced in 2023. In March 2023, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt announced, as part of

1300-506: The abduction and murder of two-year-old James Bulger in 1993. Bootle has one association football non-league team known as Bootle F.C. who currently play in the Northern Premier League Division One West. They are a reformed version of the original Bootle F.C. (1879) . Bootle Cricket Club was founded in 1933 and they incorporated Firwood into the club's name in the 1990s. Their main ground

1352-486: The area is served by BBC North West and ITV Granada broadcasting from the Winter Hill transmitter. The borough is served by both BBC Radio Merseyside and BBC Radio Lancashire . Other radio stations including Heart North West , Smooth North West , Dune Radio , Hits Radio Liverpool , Hits Radio Lancashire , Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool & The North West and Greatest Hits Radio Lancashire . The area

1404-400: The area known locally as 'Bootle Village', centred around Marsh Lane . The Liverpool, Crosby and Southport Railway arrived in the 1840s and Bootle experienced rapid growth. By the end of the 19th century the docks had been constructed along the whole of the river front as far as Seaforth Sands to the north. The town became heavily industrialised. Fearful of annexation by Liverpool, Bootle

1456-542: The arrival of the railway and the expansion of the docks and shipping industries. The subsequent population increase was fuelled heavily by Irish migration. The town was heavily damaged in World War II with air raids against the port and other industrial targets. Post-war economic success in the 1950s and 1960s gave way to a downturn, precipitated by a reduction in the significance of Liverpool Docks internationally, and changing levels of industrialisation, coupled with

1508-754: The borough. Bootle played an important role in the Battle of the Atlantic . Royal Navy 's Captain Frederic John Walker , the famous U-boat hunter, would rest in the Mayor's Parlour of Bootle Town Hall and his ships, HMS Stork and HMS Starling , sailed out of Gladstone Dock Bootle. Memorabilia associated with Walker including the ships's bell from HMS Starling which was presented to Bootle County Borough Council on 21 October 1964 by Admiral Sir Nigel Henderson Commander-in-Chief, Plymouth. can be viewed in Bootle Town Hall . After

1560-545: The council is composed of 41 Labour councillors, 12 for The Liberal Democrat and Progressive Alliance Group, six Conservatives , and five for The Independents Group. There are two vacancies. The borough has a strong income from tourism, most of whom visit the Aintree Grand National , the most valuable horse race in Europe, Anthony Gormley 's Another Place at Crosby Beach and Southport . Birkdale

1612-598: The country and had high levels of unemployment. Asda heavily invested in Bootle by building a new eco-friendly superstore on Strand Road in 2008. Among refurbishment and rebuilding projects in the 2010s, the HSE buildings and the new-look Stanley Road have been created, Oriel Road Station has been refurbished, and a new block of flats on the site of the Stella Maris building and a Lidl store on Stanley Road have been built. The Klondyke Estate located off Hawthorne road saw

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1664-614: The development of modern suburbs and the expansion of industries into the Merseyside hinterlands. By the 1980s, there had been a sharp spike in unemployment and population decline. Large-scale renewal projects have begun to help regenerate the local economy. Etymologically , Bootle derives from the Anglo Saxon Bold or Botle meaning a dwelling. It was recorded as Boltelai in the Domesday Book in 1086. By 1212

1716-473: The dockside. Stories about three streets in particular, Raleigh Street, Dundas Street and Lyons Street, caused great alarm. Lyons Street, the scene of the 'Teapot Murder', was renamed Beresford Street shortly before the First World War . Bootle was the first borough to elect its own school board , following the passage of William Forster's Elementary Education Act 1870 . In 1872 Dr R.J. Sprakeling

1768-465: The fabled Angels of Mons which protected the British Army in the First World War and a painting by Edward Halliday depicting the 40th (The King's) Royal Tank Regiment parading before Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace in October 1960. Bootle Bootle (pronounced / ˈ b uː t əl / ) is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton , Merseyside , England, which had

1820-490: The future"). The docks made Bootle a target for Nazi German Luftwaffe bombers during the Liverpool Blitz of the Second World War , with approximately 90% of the houses in the town damaged. Situated immediately adjoining the city of Liverpool, and the site of numerous docks, Bootle had the distinction of being the most heavily bombed borough in the UK, with 458 civilian deaths from enemy action recorded within

1872-446: The last quarter of the 19th century. The population of the town swelled during this period, boosted in large part by Irish immigration and the attraction of plentiful work on the docks. The wealth to pay for the splendour of the town hall and the gentrified 'Bootle Village' area was generated by these docks. The skilled workers lived in terraced houses in the east of the town, while the casual dock labourers lived in cramped, dwellings near

1924-405: The left hand bay featured a large round headed window on the first floor with a pediment above, while the second bay featured a round headed doorway with a tympanum flanked by Corinthian order columns supporting an open pediment with a two-stage clock tower above. The next three bays featured dormer windows at roof level while the last three bays featured mezzanine floor windows. Internally,

1976-617: The metropolitan area and subsumed into the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority . The combined authority has effectively become the top-tier administrative body for the local governance of the city region and the leader of Sefton Council, along with the five other leaders from neighbouring local government districts, take strategic decisions over economic development, transport, employment and skills, tourism, culture, housing and physical infrastructure. In July 2015, negotiations took place between

2028-492: The possible inclusion of the town as a district in the non-metropolitan county of Lancashire . It was highlighted after the 2012 local government election that different regions in Sefton had vastly different socio-economic backgrounds and needs. There are high levels of poverty around the Bootle area and central Southport . The council has 66 councillors, three for each of the borough's 22 wards : As of April 2021 ,

2080-604: The principal room was the assembly hall which featured stained glass windows depicting the coats of arms of Lancashire towns. The building was extended to the south by five bays to include a library and museum in 1887. The town hall became the headquarters of the new county borough of Bootle in 1889. King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited the town hall and met with civic leaders in May 1938. Memorabilia associated with Captain Frederic John Walker , who gained

2132-625: The south, Walton to the east, with Seaforth , Litherland and Netherton to the north. To the west it is bounded by the River Mersey . In the centre is a sizeable area of large office blocks, and the Leeds and Liverpool Canal . The old civic centre of Bootle contains large Victorian buildings such as the town hall and the municipal baths . To the north lies the New Strand Shopping Centre , which gained notoriety after

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2184-476: The south, and an inland part to Maghull in the south-east, bounded by the city of Liverpool to the south, the Metropolitan Borough of Knowsley to the south-east, and West Lancashire to the east. It is named after Sefton , near Maghull. When the borough was created, a name was sought that would not unduly identify the borough with any of its constituent parts, particularly the former county boroughs of Bootle and Southport. The area had strong links with both

2236-491: The spelling had been recorded as Botle . The spellings Botull , Bothull and Bothell are recorded in the 14th century. In the 18th century, it was known as Bootle cum Linacre. Bootle was originally a small hamlet built near the 'sand hills' or dunes of the river estuary . In the early 19th century, it began to develop as a bathing resort , attracting wealthy people from Liverpool. Some remaining large villas which housed well-to-do commuters to Liverpool are located in

2288-479: The town hall, along with the Atkinson Art Gallery and Library and Waterloo Town Hall , was the venue for A Nightingale's Song , a video production produced by Illuminos as part of Sefton's Borough of Culture celebrations, which involved the projection of a story describing local coastal communities onto prominent buildings. Works of art in the town hall include a painting by Marcel Gillis depicting

2340-437: Was also born in Bootle. England Lioness and Manchester City player Alex Greenwood grew up playing on the streets of Bootle. In the arts, Bootle has produced the comedian Tom O'Connor , the television presenter Keith Chegwin , television producer and presenter Will Hanrahan and early rock and roll singer Billy J. Kramer . The fashion retailer George Davies was educated in Bootle. John C. Wells , linguist. He

2392-460: Was appointed the first Medical Officer of Health, and was instrumental in improving sanitary conditions in the town. The Metropole Theatre on Stanley Road played host to stars such as music hall singer Marie Lloyd . Tree lined streets surrounded magnificent open spaces, such as Derby Park, North Park and South Park. Roman Catholic and Anglican churches sprang up all over the town, and Welsh immigration brought with it Nonconformist chapels and

2444-491: Was born in Bootle. Derek Acorah , psychic medium. He was born in Bootle. Paul Nuttall , former Leader of the UK Independence Party . He was born in Bootle. Sergiusz Pinkwart , writer, journalist, traveler, Magellan Award winner. He lives in Bootle. Pat Kelly , New Zealand trade unionist. He was born and raised in Bootle. Metropolitan Borough of Sefton The Metropolitan Borough of Sefton

2496-512: Was created as a part of the Mersey Docks and now promoted as Port of Liverpool , with the Liverpool and Wirral Docks, being located on both bank sides of the River Mersey . Bootle Docks are situated at the northern end, that is closer to the Irish Sea estuary. Bootle, along with Southport , is one of the two main administrative headquarters for the Metropolitan Borough of Sefton . Among Bootle's neighbouring districts are Kirkdale to

2548-466: Was economic change. The very reason for Bootle's existence, the access to the Mersey, became almost irrelevant as the docks closed and the new container port required far fewer workers than the old docks had. This in turn affected practically every other industry in the town. The problems slowly gathered pace until Merseyside hit crisis point in the early 1980s. Even by 2006 the area was one of the poorest in

2600-755: Was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1868 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 , and in 1889 was granted the status of a county borough by the Local Government Act 1888 , becoming independent from the administrative county of Lancashire . During this time period it was sometimes formally known as Bootle-cum-Linacre . Orrell was added to the borough in 1905. There are still large areas of Victorian terraced houses in Bootle, formerly occupied by dock workers. These are built in distinctive pressed red brick. Bootle Town Hall and other municipal buildings were erected in

2652-637: Was much in evidence. The docks declined in importance in the 1960s and 1970s, and Bootle suffered high unemployment and a declining population. The establishment of large office blocks housing government departments and the National Girobank provided employment, filled largely by middle-class people from outside the Bootle/Liverpool area. In the early 1970s Bootle was absorbed into the new local authority of Sefton under local government reorganisation. More fundamental than political change

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2704-613: Was opened in 1968. At the same time, new offices were built in the town centre. The town lost its access to the beach when neighbouring Seaforth Sands was redeveloped in the early 1970s, but the Seaforth Container Port brought new jobs into the area. The local authority, and other 'social' landlords, saw to it that new housing was built and older stock renovated. Bootle did not go down the route of massive housing clearance, and many local communities remained intact. The borough celebrated its centenary in 1968 and civic pride

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