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Chapel Street, Liverpool

Coordinates: 53°24′27″N 2°59′46″W / 53.4076°N 2.9961°W / 53.4076; -2.9961
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Chapel Street, Liverpool
Chapel Street, Liverpool
Chapel Street, Liverpool is located in Liverpool
Chapel Street, Liverpool
LocationLiverpool city centre
Postal codeL2
Coordinates53°24′27″N 2°59′46″W / 53.4076°N 2.9961°W / 53.4076; -2.9961
Other
Known for
  • Offices, hotels, bars

Chapel Street is a road in Liverpool, England. Situated in the city centre, it runs between Tithebarn Street and the Dock Road.

History

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The street was one of the original seven streets that made up the medieval borough founded by King John in 1207, together with Water Street, Old Hall Street, Castle Street, High Street, Tithebarn Street and Dale Street.[1] The street originally contained a chapel by the quayside, known as St. Mary atte Key.[2] The first recorded reference to Chapel Street dates from 1368 on a deed for a burgage plot.

By 1355, the church was deemed too small for Liverpool's growing population and a new church was to be built on land given by the Duke of Lancaster to the burgesses. Known as Church of Our Lady and Saint Nicholas, it took over a century to build.

Over the course of time, parts of the church were demolished and rebuilt.[2] In February 1810, part of the spire collapsed into the knave below, killing 25 people.[3] The church was damaged during World War 2, and rebuilding of the church began 1949, with the new building being consecrated in October 1952.

Chapel Street was home to a boarding house and brothel in the 18th century.[4] The building was shut and converted into the Pig and Whistle pub in 1875. The pub takes its name from the crew bars on ships.

Listed buildings

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Chapel Street contains several Grade II listed and buildings, these include:

References

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  1. ^ Bona, Emilia (3 November 2019). "How Liverpool went from seven streets to global superpower". Liverpool Echo. Archived from the original on 28 December 2023. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b "BBC - Liverpool Local History -". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 17 May 2024.
  3. ^ Stonehouse, James (aka "A Nonagenarian") (1863). Recollections of Old Liverpool. J. F. Hughes.
  4. ^ Hadfield, Charlotte (6 November 2021). "Liverpool's quirkiest pub that's 'nicer inside' than you think". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 17 May 2024.