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Church of St Anne, Aigburth

1854 establishments in England19th-century Church of England church buildingsAnglican Diocese of LiverpoolChurch of England church buildings in MerseysideChurches completed in 1854
Churches in LiverpoolGrade II* listed buildings in LiverpoolGrade II* listed churches in MerseysideRomanesque Revival church buildings in England
Frontage, St Anne's Aigburth 3
Frontage, St Anne's Aigburth 3

The Church of St Anne is in Aigburth Road, Aigburth, Liverpool, Merseyside, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building, and is an active Anglican parish church in the diocese of Liverpool, the archdeaconry of Liverpool and the deanery of Liverpool South Childwall. Its architecture is an early example of the Norman Revival style.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Church of St Anne, Aigburth (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Church of St Anne, Aigburth
Church Lane, Liverpool Aigburth

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Wikipedia: Church of St Anne, AigburthContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.3694 ° E -2.9305 °
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Address

Parish Church of Saint Anne, Aigburth

Church Lane
L17 6BH Liverpool, Aigburth
England, United Kingdom
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Frontage, St Anne's Aigburth 3
Frontage, St Anne's Aigburth 3
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Nearby Places

River Jordan, Liverpool

The River Jordan, Little Jordan or Otterspool Brook is a tributary of the River Mersey. It has now been culverted for most of the lower part of its course, which runs through Otterspool Park in Aigburth, Liverpool. The river had two tributaries, the Upper and Lower Brooks. The Upper Brook rose near the playing fields in Wavertree, flowing past, and inspiring the name of, the Brook House pub. The Lower Brook had a source in Wavertree Botanic Gardens, where it rose in two ponds near Edge Lane; both branches joined in present-day Sefton Park before flowing through a series of natural cascades into the Otterspool, a creek on the Mersey shore. The watercourse was recorded in the 13th century Chartulary of Whalley Abbey as the "Oskelesbrok", when it was described as forming the boundary of Toxteth, and flowing into "Oterpol". The name, also written as "Haskelesbroc" and "Hoskellesbrok" in the period, may contain a reference to the Old Norse personal name Askell. The brook later gained the name of the "River Jordan", probably during the 17th century when Toxteth Park was disparked and let as farmland. The first tenants were Puritan in religion and this has been suggested as the origin of the name "Jordan", as well as that of a nearby farm called "Jericho" and a rock called "David's Throne". Otterspool itself was one of the most important of the Mersey fisheries well into the 18th century, and was reputed to be the finest salmon fishery in the area. The course of the river was changed radically in the 19th century, when housing developments and parks were laid out and much of the watercourse was incorporated into a series of ornamental water features. The Upper Brook was dammed in Greenbank Park to form a lake, and both it and the Lower Brook were channelled into the Boating Lake in Sefton Park. Below this point, the river is currently visible near the gates of Otterspool Park but has been culverted from that point, though many features of its valley are still visible in the park. The area of the river mouth is now part of the Otterspool Promenade, where the river's flow is now piped to the Mersey.