Posted in Trips, War Memorials at 20:00 on 25 November 2018
There is a cluster of memorials on the riverfront of the Mersey in Liverpool – all relating to World War 2.
The SS Arandora Star was torpedoed west of Donegal on 2/7/1940. Over 800 drowned:-

HMT Lancastria was sunk off St Nazaire 17/6/1940 while evacuating British servicemen and civilans. Up to 6,000 people lost their lives:-

Memorial to ranks and ratings who died on shore with no known grave:-

Repatriation Memorial, commemorating the return of Far East prisoners of war and detainees:-

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Posted in War Memorials at 12:00 on 22 November 2018
By the River Mersey, Liverpool, lies this memorial to Merchant Navy personnel who died serving in the Royal Navy and have no known grave. The names are engraved on the brass panels:-

Central pedestal:-

Inscription. “These officers and men of the merchant navy died while serving with the Royal Navy and have no grave but the sea. 1939-1945”:-

Reverse view:-

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Posted in Architecture, Trips at 12:00 on 13 October 2018
I thought I’d take a respite from Norway for a while so here are some pictures of Liverpool where our friends from Rochdale took us on one of our days with them.
Liverpool is a bustling city with a lot of fine architecture.
Liverpool Anglican Cathedral from the side of the River Mersey:-

It’s a traditional kind of building, quite chunky and solid.
View from the road:-

Liverpool Catholic Cathedral is by contrast in a much more modern style, a bit like a tepee in appearance:-

Keeping up the ecclesiastical theme, the bus tour we were taken on stopped at traffic lights by St Luke’s, a bombed out church which wasn’t restored after World War 2 as reminder and memorial:-
St Luke’s bombed out church:-

St Luke’s Church spire:-

*As the line from the song In my Liverpool Home has it,
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