Toxtheth, Liverpool
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- Created by: NehaG2
- Created on: 28-04-18 17:06
Toxteth
Location on map
Part on inner Liverpool (1.5km South of city centre)
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Natural Characteristics and Past
- Occupies undulating land rising up from banks (River Mersey)
- Stream flows Northeast, dividing into two before discharge into river
- The mersey - fast flowing past Toxteth as narrow channels before passing into Liverpool Bay, little foreshore at Toxteth
Past Charcteristics
- Saxons - settlement Domesday times 1086 records, coastal villages along banks of Mersey
- After Norman conquest - given to knight, Roger of Pictou
- Early 13th century - King John took control as large hunting forest, remained fenced off for 300 years
- End of 16th century - Farming
- 17th century - small scale industries, use of water power from dammed stream
- Industrial Revolution - major port for industries
- Urban and industrial nature e.g. copper works 1772 and ceramics factory
- Flour milling and brewing developed for growing population
- River bank lined with docks, ship building yards (specialise handling timber imported from Scandinavia
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Past Characteristics continued
- Toxteth had housing scheme with wide streets and villas
- Attractive greenfield site for property developers who built for middle class ( escape congestion and declined environmental quality index)
- Growing service sector and managerial jobs in manufacturing
- 19th century - demand for housing and space meant area behind large villas use for cheap poorly constructured houses
- Epidemics such as thypoid and cholera erupted in unhygenic conditions
- Terraced houses dominated near docks for industry workers
- Exodus of middle class, disposable income increased and urban transport improved), relocation to greenfiels sites on edge of city
- 150 years change - from small rural community to inner city suburb in large metropolitan area
- Rural fields replaced by built environment
- Increasing connections nationally and internationally
- Goods passing through docks traded over country and UK
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Present: Demographic, Socio-Economic and Cultural
- Toxteth had few elderly residents, majority between 16 and 64 and few children
- Ethnic diversity in Liverpool
- Attracting migrants with large influx of Irish in 19th century
- 2nd World War - employment and housing for migrants increased rapidly
- Port links with many countries e.g. Asia, Hong Kong, West Africa, Caribbean
Socio-economic profile
- Average houshold size 1.9 people, England 2.4 people
- Car avaiablilty 54.4%, England 25.6%
- Bad or very bad health 9.4%, England 5.6%
- Aged 16 or over no formal qualifications 27.2%, England 22.5%
Cultural face
- Marks a lot of festivals - Eid, Ramadan, Friday prayers of Muslim community
- Black African community- distinct foms of Christian worship
- Diversity - 19th century whe Green Orthodox Church was built and synagogue (Jewish)
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Present-day Characteristics
Political Charcteristics
- Toxteth part of Riverside Ward, 1 of 30 wards making up Liverpool City Council
- Each ward returns 3 councillors
- Council has responisiblites of education, children's services, regeneartion, housing and sustainability.
- Part of Liverpool Riverside parlimentary constituency, electorate of 73 000
- Also have local groups influenced on place profile and focusing on place heritage
Built Environment
- Migrant communities influence - mosques, ethnic retailers and new buildings have been constructed changing places
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Shifting flows of resources and ideas changing loc
- Experience of loss of employment in docks and manufacturing jobs
- Much of economy dominated by docks and industries such as processing of goods imported, e.g. sugar refining and glour milling
- Containerisation and migration of docks further North at Seaford led to unemployment
- Susequent poverty was significant to riots 1981 - civil disturbance
- Since early 1980s, initiatives to remake Toxteth
- Meryside Development Cooperation regenrate former dock areas
- 1988 - major art gallery, Tate Liverpool, opened
- 2008 - European Capital of Culture, boost tertiary employment cultural tourism
- Waterfront recognised by UNESCO World Heritage Sites, offering employment
- 2003 - Liverpool science Park, development in knowledge economy
- EU funding - structural and investment funds strategy - regenerate liverpool profile
- City's Low Carbon sector expand offshore wind technology - Europe's largest offshore wind farm
- However, survey oflocal businesses in Liverpool - applicant have lack of skills and technical knowledge - no skills or qualifications
- Multiplier effect - provides inward flow of investement -change socio-economic factors
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