Belle Vale, Liverpool
Belle Vale | |
Our Lady of the Assumption (Roman Catholic church in Belle Vale) |
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Belle Vale |
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OS grid reference | SJ337927 |
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Metropolitan borough | Liverpool |
Metropolitan county | Merseyside |
Region | North West |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | LIVERPOOL |
Postcode district | L25 |
Dialling code | 0151 |
Police | Merseyside |
Fire | Merseyside |
Ambulance | North West |
EU Parliament | North West England |
UK Parliament | Garston and Halewood |
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Coordinates: 53°23′42″N 2°51′40″W / 53.395°N 2.861°W
Belle Vale is a district of south-east Liverpool, Merseyside, England and a Liverpool City Council Ward that covers both Belle Vale and Netherley.
Description
The Belle Vale area shares borders with Huyton, Netherley, Gateacre and Childwall. The main road in Belle Vale is Childwall Valley Road (B5178) running from Childwall through to Netherley. The old North Liverpool Extension Line (loop line) at the back of Hartsbourne Avenue is often considered to be the border between Belle Vale and the neighbouring districts of Childwall and Gateacre.
Belle Vale District Centre has a number of amenities including a fire station, police station, health centre, large shopping centre,[1][2] and also Belle Vale Park. The Belle Vale Junior football league now plays in nearby Netherley. The district is often linked with Childwall or Gateacre, which are neighbouring districts. The Belle Vale area is also divided with different housing estates having their own local names, such as Hartsbourne, Lee Park and Naylorsfield. You will also find past and modern references to the area being in Gateacre further adding to the confusion.[3]
District signage erected by Liverpool City Council in 2005 did not include Belle Vale as a distinct district leaving the area in somewhat of a quandary. Signs were put up on Childwall Valley Road saying Gateacre (southbound towards the shopping centre and Netherley) and Childwall (northbound towards Childwall). The centre of Belle Vale effectively falls within the area identified as Gateacre by the signs, with Childwall deemed to begin north of a new school and health centre. The area's identity as Belle Vale is recognised by the names of various local amenities including the health centre, shopping centre, police station and fire station.
The postcode for Belle Vale is L25, which is also the postcode for nearby Woolton and Gateacre.
History
Belle Vale was historically part of the parish of Childwall and part of the township of Little Woolton.[4] Little Woolton was absorbed into the City of Liverpool in 1913.[5] At the beginning of the 20th century Belle Vale was a hamlet within the rural district of Little Woolton. It consisted of cottages, farm buildings and Belle Vale Hall, an old twelve acre estate on the corner of Wambo Lane and Belle Vale Road. In 1901 Belle Vale Hall was owned by Thomas Harrison, a merchant and ship owner. Rex Harrison, the actor, who was related to the family, visited the hall when he was a boy. In the 1920s the estate became a fruit farm and traded as Belle Vale Orchards Ltd. The Hall was demolished in 1929. John Irwin Sons & Co. Ltd had a jam factory on the site in the 1930s and 1940s. After 1960 the factory produced spam, initially as Blue Cap Foods and later as Newforge. The site of the factory is now occupied by Morrisons supermarket and petrol station. Part of the estate grounds survived to become Belle Vale Park.[6]
The first church in the district was St Stephen's, Church of England, built between 1872 and 1874 in Belle Vale Road. It was initially used as a chapel of ease to Childwall church until Gateacre was made a parish in its own right in 1893 and St Stephen's became its parish church. It was designed by Liverpool architect Cornelius Sherlock who also designed Church Cottages next to the church. The cottages were built in 1880 by Sir Andrew Barclay Walker for his estate workers. The cottages remained part of the Walker estate until put up for auction in 1917. In the garden in front of the church there is a stone memorial cross inscribed with the names of those local men who died in the First World War and Second World War. The west window in the church was designed by Edward Burne-Jones for William Morris & Co and was a gift from Sir Andrew Barclay Walker in memory of his first wife who died in 1882.[7]
Over one-thousand prefabricated homes were erected on land around the hamlet, named Belle Vale Estate Gateacre on the plans, between 1945-1947, to provide affordable rented accommodation for people whose homes were destroyed in bombing raids on the city during World War II, making it one of the largest Prefab communities in the country.[8] Its most famous former resident is Sir Terry Leahy, previously chief executive of Tesco, the UK's biggest supermarket chain. Leahy is also President of the Belle Vale Prefab Project.[9][10] From the mid-1960s the Prefab estate was cleared. It was replaced by new housing and a shopping centre by the mid-1970s. Our Lady's Roman Catholic church, initially built on the Prefab estate in 1949, relocated from across the road from the current location of Gateacre School playing field to Hedgefield Road in 1965.[3] Hartsbourne, Lee Park and Naylorsfield, beyond the Prefabs, were mostly retained as farm land until the 1960s when the land was acquired for development.
Paul McCartney attended Joseph Williams Primary School, then located in Sunnyfield Road on the Prefab estate, from 1949 to 1953. He travelled by bus to the school because of the shortage of school places in Speke where he lived.[11] The site of the former school, now opposite Viennese Road and Dorchester Road, is part of housing development plans also involving other sites in the area. While an adjacent site was used to build a retirement living development called Joseph Williams Mews in 2015, the actual site of the former school remained vacant.[12] In December 2015 Riverside informed residents that Compendium Living were ready to submit a planning application to build family homes for sale directly on the former Joseph Williams school site.
Education
Schools in Belle Vale include Childwall Valley Primary School, Belle Vale Community Primary School, Our Lady of the Assumption Roman Catholic Primary School and Belle Vale Sure Start.
Gateacre School relocated to land off Hedgefield Road, including part of the former Reggie Smith Playing Fields, in 2011. The move funded by the Building Schools For The Future scheme cost £30 million.[13] The football facilities formerly on the site were relocated to a new centre at nearby Caldway Drive in Netherley.[14]
Places of worship
- St Stephen’s, Church of England, Belle Vale Road, "Gateacre", Liverpool, L25 2PQ[15]
- St Mark’s, Church of England, Cranwell Road, "Childwall Valley", Liverpool, L25 1NZ[16]
- Our Lady of the Assumption, Roman Catholic, Hedgefield Road, "Gateacre", Liverpool, L25 2RW[3]
- Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses, Corner of Cockshead Road and Hartsbourne Avenue, Liverpool, L25 2RA[17]
- Salvation Army, Liverpool Valley Corps, Mildenhall Road, Liverpool, L25 2SN[18]
Football
Gateacre School is the home of West Cheshire League Division Three side Gateacre F.C. who were founded in 2012.
Transport
Belle Vale has its own small bus interchange next to the shopping centre on Hedgefield Road, connecting to, among other areas, Huyton and St Helens eastbound and Woolton, Halewood, Garston and Speke southbound. From May 2012 it briefly gained a service to Liverpool city centre, but lost it from January 2013 when the service was extended to Netherley and reverted to using stops on nearby Childwall Valley Road, along with other services between Liverpool city centre and Halewood or Widnes.
The area has not had a train service since Gateacre railway station closed in 1972; the disused railway trackbed has been converted into a cycle and pedestrian path from Aintree to Halewood, forming part of the Trans Pennine Trail.[19]
References
- ↑ Belle Vale Shopping Centre
- ↑ Photograph of shopping centre
- 1 2 3 Our Lady Gateacre
- ↑ Little Woolton
- ↑ Liverpool
- ↑ Beryl Plent & Mike Chitty. Gateacre & Belle Vale, 2009, pp. 55-56.
- ↑ Beryl Plent & Mike Chitty. Gateacre & Belle Vale, 2009, pp. 62-64.
- ↑ Prefabs
- ↑ BVPP Newsletter
- ↑ Belle Vale Prefab Project. More Prefab Days (Belle Vale Remembers), 2008, pp. 102-103.
- ↑ Paul McCartney
- ↑ Joseph Williams Mews
- ↑ New Gateacre School
- ↑ "South Liverpool Football Club". Clubbz. Retrieved 2012-08-14.
- ↑ St Stephen’s Gateacre
- ↑ St Mark’s Childwall Valley
- ↑ Jehovah’s Witnesses
- ↑ Salvation Army
- ↑ Loop Line
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Belle Vale. |
- Liverpool City Council: Ward Profile
- Lee Valley Library
- Belle Vale Prefabs Project Pictures and Written Memories of post-war prefabs past dwellers