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Coordinates: 53°24′45″N 2°50′20″W / 53.4126, -2.8388 Image File history File links Size of this preview: 504 Ã 600 pixelsFull resolution (600 Ã 714 pixel, file size: 407 KB, MIME type: image/png) File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
Image File history File links Red_pog. ...
Merseyside is a metropolitan county in North West England, with a population of 1,365,900. ...
The British national grid reference system is a system of geographic grid references commonly used in Great Britain, different from using latitude or longitude. ...
The districts of England are a level of subnational division of England used for the purposes of local government. ...
Knowsley is a metropolitan borough in the metropolitan county of Merseyside, England. ...
Metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties are one of the four levels of English administrative division used for the purposes of local government. ...
Merseyside is a metropolitan county in North West England, with a population of 1,365,900. ...
The region, also known as Government Office Region, is currently the highest tier of local government subnational entity of England in the United Kingdom. ...
North West England is one of the nine regions of England. ...
Constituent countries is a phrase used, often by official institutions, in contexts in which a number of countries make up a larger entity or grouping; thus the OECD has used the phrase in reference to the former Yugoslavia[1], the Soviet Union and European institutions such as the Council of...
Motto (French) God and my right Anthem No official anthem - the United Kingdom anthem God Save the Queen is commonly used England() â on the European continent() â in the United Kingdom() Capital (and largest city) London (de facto) Official languages English (de facto)1 Government Constitutional monarchy - Monarch Queen Elizabeth II...
This is an alphabetical list of the sovereign states of the world, including both de jure and de facto independent states. ...
A post town is a required part of all UK postal addresses. ...
UK postal codes are known as postcodes. ...
The L postcode area, also known as the Liverpool postcode area[2], is a group of postal districts around Bootle, Liverpool, Ormskirk and Prescot in England. ...
The UK telephone numbering plan, also known as the National Numbering Plan, is regulated by the Office of Communications (Ofcom), which replaced the Office of Telecommunications (Oftel) in 2003. ...
Merseyside Merseyside Police is the police force covering Merseyside in North West England. ...
A Fire Appliance belonging to the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service The fire service in the United Kingdom has undergone dramatic changes since the beginning of the 21st century, a process that has been propelled by a devolution of central government powers, new legislation and a change to operational...
Merseyside Fire and Rescue Service Is the fire service covering the county of Merseyside in north-west England and is the statutory firfighting and rescue service responsible for all 999 fire brigade calls in Sefton, Knowsley, St Helens, Liverpool and Wirral. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
The North West Ambulance Service NHS Trust was formed on 1 July 2006 as part of Health Minister Lord Warners plans to reduce the number of NHS ambulance service trusts operating in the United Kingdom to 12. ...
This is a list of Members of the European Parliament for the United Kingdom in the 2004 to 2009 session, ordered by name. ...
North West England is a constituency of the European Parliament. ...
List of cities in the United Kingdom List of towns in England Lists of places within counties List of places in Bedfordshire List of places in Berkshire List of places in Buckinghamshire List of places in Cambridgeshire List of places in Cheshire List of places in Cleveland List of places...
This is a list of cities, towns and villages in the ceremonial county of Merseyside, England. ...
Map of Earth showing lines of latitude (horizontally) and longitude (vertically), Eckert VI projection; large version (pdf, 1. ...
Huyton is a town within the Metropolitan Borough of Knowsley, in Merseyside, England. It has close associations with its neighbour, Roby, and is to east of the city of Liverpool. Knowsley is a metropolitan borough in the metropolitan county of Merseyside, England. ...
Merseyside is a metropolitan county in North West England, with a population of 1,365,900. ...
Motto (French) God and my right Anthem No official anthem - the United Kingdom anthem God Save the Queen is commonly used England() â on the European continent() â in the United Kingdom() Capital (and largest city) London (de facto) Official languages English (de facto)1 Government Constitutional monarchy - Monarch Queen Elizabeth II...
Roby is a village in Knowsley, Merseyside, England linked with contiguous neighbour Huyton as Huyton-with-Roby. ...
Location within England Coordinates: , Sovereign state United Kingdom Constituent country England Region North West England Ceremonial county Historic county Merseyside Lancashire Admin HQ Liverpool City Centre Founded 1207 City Status 1880 Government - Type Metropolitan borough, City - Governing body Liverpool City Council Area - Borough & City 43. ...
Geography and administration Huyton was an Ancient Parish in the county of Lancashire which, in the mid 19th century, contained Croxteth Park, Knowsley and Tarbock, in addition to the township of Huyton-with-Roby. It was part of West Derby (hundred), an ancient subdivision of Lancashire, covering the south-west of the county. Lancashire is a non-metropolitan county of historic origin in the North West of England, bounded to the west by the Irish Sea. ...
The hundred of West Derby (sometimes known as West Derbyshire, not to be confused with Derbyshire, which has a district formerly called West Derbyshire) is an ancient subdivision of Lancashire, covering the south-west of the county. ...
Huyton-with-Roby Urban District Council crest In 1894 the township was included in the Huyton with Roby Urban District. Throughout the 1930s a number of Liverpool ‘overspill’ housing estates were built around Huyton-with-Roby. By 1950 the population was over 55,000, the vast majority of whom had moved to the area from the city of Liverpool. As a consequence the area was increasingly thought of as a suburb of Liverpool. In 1974 Huyton-with-Roby became part of the new metropolitan borough of Knowsley. Image File history File links Huyton_roby. ...
Image File history File links Huyton_roby. ...
Huyton with Roby Urban District was a local government district in Lancashire, England from 1894 to 1974. ...
A metropolitan borough (or metropolitan district) is a type of local government district in England, covering urban areas within metropolitan counties. ...
Knowsley is a metropolitan borough in the metropolitan county of Merseyside, England. ...
Huyton-with-Roby is traditionally understood to contain Huyton Park, Roby, Longview, Huyton Quarry, Page Moss, Woolfall Heath, Bowring Park, Fincham, and Court Hey. Today this area is divided into seven local government wards: Longview, Page Moss, Roby, St. Bartholomews, St. Gabriel's, St. Michael's, and Swanside.
History Medieval Both Huyton and Roby are mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086, Huyton being spelt Hitune. A line drawing entitled Domesday Book from Andrew Williamss Historic Byways and Highways of Old England. ...
Industrial Development Huyton-with-Roby is situated near to the south western extremity of the former Lancashire coalfield. In the 19th century Welsh immigrants settled in the area to work in nearby colleries. A Welsh-speaking Non-conformist chapel (Calvinistic Methodists) was founded in Wood Lane, Huyton Quarry. Nearby Cronton Colliery finally ceased production in March 1984, shortly before the Great UK miners' strike (1984–1985). Both Huyton and Roby have stations on the famous Liverpool and Manchester Railway. (The station at Huyton Quarry closed in 1958 and today only the main station building remains). The railway’s construction was supervised by George Stephenson and, when it opened in 1830, it became the world’s first regular passenger train service. Calvinistic Methodists are a body of Christians forming the Presbyterian Church of Wales and claiming to be the only denomination of the Presbyterian order in Wales which is of purely Welsh origin. ...
Cronton is a small village on the border of Merseyside and Cheshire in England. ...
The miners strike of 1984â1985 was a major industrial action affecting the British coal industry. ...
Inaugural journey of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway The Liverpool and Manchester Railway (L&MR) was the worlds first intercity passenger railway in which all the trains were timetabled and operated for most of the distance solely by steam locomotives. ...
George Stephenson George Stephenson For the British politician, see George Stevenson. ...
Second World War During the Second World War, Huyton suffered bombing from the Luftwaffe. Some Huytonians were killed or injured but the scale of destruction was nowhere close to that experienced by Liverpool, Bootle and Birkenhead. Unlike Liverpool, school children were not evacuated from Huyton but schools and homes were provided with air-raid shelters. Mushroom cloud from the nuclear explosion over Nagasaki rising 18 km into the air. ...
The Deutsche Luftwaffe or (German: air force, literally Air Weapon, pronounced lufft-va-fa, IPA: ) is the commonly used term for the German air force. ...
Huyton was also host to three wartime camps: an internment camp, a prisoner of war camp and a base for American service men (G.I.s). A concentration camp is a large detention centre created for political opponents, aliens, specific ethnic or religious groups, civilians of a critical war-zone, or other groups of people, often during a war. ...
Prisoner of War camps Contents // Categories: Substubs | Prisons and detention centres ...
The abbreviation G.I. or GI is most commonly used to shorten government issue, and has different meanings depending on the part of speech in which it is used. ...
 The internment camp, one of the biggest in the country, was created to accommodate those 'enemy aliens' deemed a potential threat to national security. Churchill's demand to 'collar the lot' meant that around 27,000 people ended up being interned in the UK. Unfortunately, many internees were refugees from the Nazis, including a large number of artists attacked for their 'degeneracy' in an infamous Nazi art exhibition in 1937 (see Degenerate art). Huyton internees included artists (Martin Bloch, Hugo Dachinger, and Walter Nessler - see external link), dancers Kurt Jooss, musicians, and composers (e.g. Hans Gal - see external link). More than 40 per cent of Huyton's internees were over 50 years old. Image File history File links Huytoninterncamp. ...
Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, KG, OM, CH, TD, FRS, PC (Can) (30 November 1874 â 24 January 1965) was a British politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 and again from 1951 to 1955. ...
National Socialism redirects here. ...
Joseph Goebbels, Adolf Hitler and Adolf Ziegler visit the entartete Kunst exhibition. ...
Kurt Jooss (1901-1979) was a German dancer and choreographer. ...
The camp, first occupied in May 1940, was formed around several streets of new, empty council houses and flats, and then made secure with high barbed wire fencing. Twelve internees were allocated to each house, but overcrowding resulted in many sleeping in tents. Initially the camp was only meant to hold the internees until they could be shipped to the Isle of Man. However, largely in response to the torpedoing of the transport ship 'The Arandora Star', with the loss of nearly 700 people, the deportations ended. Most of the internees were released long before the camp closed in 1942. The camp was sited in and around what became known as the 'Bluebell estate' and many of the streets were given names of the great battles of the 1939 - 45 War. Built by Cammel Laird & Company in 1927, the Arandora was renamed Arandora Star two years later to avoid confusion with ships associated with Royal Mail (Which typically bore names beginning and ending in A). A 15,501T luxury cruise ship operated by Blue Star Line, she was refitted during the...
The Prisoner of War camp only closed in 1948. Many of its inmates 'went native', stayed in Britain and married local women. Among those in the Huyton camp was Bert Trautmann who later went on to be goalkeeper for Manchester City F.C. Bernhard Carl Bert Trautmann OBE (born October 22, 1923 in Bremen, Germany) is a German football goalkeeper who played for Manchester City for many years. ...
Manchester City Football Club is an English football club based in the city of Manchester. ...
From 1944 American servicemen were temporarily stationed in Huyton. Older Huytonians still recall the tensions between black and white G.I.s which resulted in a night known as ‘the shoot out at the Eagle and Child’ (local pub) (source: The BBC).
Beatles Connection Huyton-with-Roby has several Beatles connections. As The Quarrymen, the Fab Four played the MPTE Social Club in Finch Lane.[1] The Beatles also played 15 times in a hall in Page Moss (Hambleton Hall, St David Road - later became a Probation Office) between January 1961 and January 1962.[2] On 21 March 1961, The Swinging Blue Jeans, fronted by Huyton-born Ray Ennis (born Raymond Vincent Ennis, 26 May 1942), introduced the Beatles to their first ever Cavern Club evening slot.[3] Paul McCartney’s auntie Jin lived in Dinas Lane. In 1963, this was the site of Paul’s eventful 21st birthday party, at which John Lennon got drunk and beat up a local DJ for intimating he was a homosexual.[4] Paul’s mother is buried at Yew Street Cemetery in Finch Lane[5] and Huyton Parish Church graveyard is the final resting place of the Beatles’ original bass guitarist, Huytonian Stuart Sutcliffe.[6] In late 1999 George Harrison survived a knife attack by an intruder in his home, which mirrored John Lennon's murder. On the evening of 30 December 1999 Michael Abram, a Huyton resident, broke into the Harrison's Friar Park home in Henley-on-Thames, and stabbed George multiple times, ultimately puncturing his lung. Harrison and his wife, Olivia, fought the intruder and detained him for the police. 35-year-old Abram, who believed he was possessed by Harrison and was on a "mission from God" to kill him, was later acquitted on grounds of insanity. The Beatles appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 as part of their first tour of the United States, promoting their first hit single there, I Want To Hold Your Hand. ...
The Quarry Men (sometimes Quarrymen) were a little-known skiffle group formed around Liverpool, England in March 1957 by John Lennon. ...
The Swinging Blue Jeans are a four piece 1960s British Merseybeat band, best known for their proto rave-up hit single, Hippy Hippy Shake. Intriguingly, while Hippy Hippy Shake sounds rather like a Beatles-clone, in reality The Beatles actually did a cover version of this song. ...
External view of the New Cavern Club, January 2006 The Cavern Club, which was opened on January 16, 1957, is a legendary rock and roll club at 10 Mathew Street, Liverpool, England, where Brian Epstein was introduced to the Beatles on 9 November 1961. ...
Sir James Paul McCartney, MBE (born 18 June 1942) is an Academy Award and Grammy Award winning English singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist who first gained worldwide fame as one of the founding members of The Beatles. ...
John Winston Ono Lennon, MBE (October 9, 1940 â December 8, 1980), (born John Winston Lennon, known as John Ono Lennon) was an iconic English 20th century rock and roll songwriter and singer, best known as the founding member of The Beatles. ...
Stuart Fergusson Victor Sutcliffe (23 June 1940 â 10 April 1962) was a British musician and artist who, until his early death, worked in a style related to Abstract Expressionism. ...
George Harrison, MBE (25 February 1943[1][2] â 29 November 2001[3]) was an Academy Award and Grammy Award-winning English rock guitarist, singer, songwriter, author and sitarist best known as the lead guitarist of The Beatles. ...
is the 364th day of the year (365th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1999 (MCMXCIX) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display full 1999 Gregorian calendar). ...
Henley-on-Thames from by the playground near the Rail Station River Thames, the five arched Henley Bridge and Leander Club (to the far left) Henley-on-Thames is a town on the north side of the River Thames in south Oxfordshire, England, about 10 miles downstream and north-east...
Notable music - Black - 7 UK Top 70 singles between 1986 and 1991 including 'Wonderful Life' (No.8).[7]
- The Crescent - 3 UK Top 70 singles between May 2002 and Sept. 2002 including 'On The Run' (No.49).[8]
- The La's - 4 UK Top 70 singles between 1990 and 1997 including 'There She Goes' (No.13).[9]
- Space - 8 UK Top 30 hit singles between 1996 and 1998 including 'Avenging Angels' (No.6).[10]
Black is the musical vehicle for singer/songwriter Colin Vearncombe (born on 26 May 1962, in Liverpool, England). ...
The Crescent are an indie rock band formed in 1995 by Sean Longsworth (bass) and Joey Harrison (drums) from Huyton in Merseyside, England. ...
The Las were an English rock band of the late 1980s and early 1990s from Liverpool consisting of frontman Lee Mavers (vocals) and John Power (bass, backing vocals), plus a rotating cast of guitarists and drummers. ...
Space were an indie rock band from Liverpool, England, who came to prominence in the mid-1990s with hit singles such as Female of the Species, Neighbourhood and Avenging Angels. The basis of their sound has inspirations from late 1960s-early 1970s rock groups mixed with black humoured lyrics and...
Recent Events Huyton was brought to national attention in 2005 after the racist murder of Anthony Walker in McGoldrick Park. Wikinews has news related to: Anthony Walker murdered in racial attack in Liverpool, England Front page of The Independent newspaper, 2005-08-01 Anthony Walker (21 February 1987 â 30 July 2005) was a black A-level student from Huyton, Merseyside, England. ...
Transport Huyton is just located to the west of the M57 motorway which marks its border. Liverpool city centre is six miles to the west via the M62 motorway). Huyton railway station, formerly called Huyton Gate, is served by regular City Line services to and from Liverpool, St Helens, Wigan and further afield. The M57 motorway, also known as the Liverpool Outer Ring Road, is a motorway in England. ...
Location within England Coordinates: , Sovereign state United Kingdom Constituent country England Region North West England Ceremonial county Historic county Merseyside Lancashire Admin HQ Liverpool City Centre Founded 1207 City Status 1880 Government - Type Metropolitan borough, City - Governing body Liverpool City Council Area - Borough & City 43. ...
The route of the M62, in dark blue. ...
Huyton railway station serves the village of Huyton, Knowsley. ...
Education Huyton has one college, Knowsley Community College, four secondary schools and seventeen primary schools.
Amenities The shopping centre of Huyton is still referred to by its people as 'the village' or 'the villie', which dates back to the days when the centre was a rural village community. The area recently had a new Asda Walmart complex built close to "the village", which is one of the largest in Europe. It also has an Air Training Corps, 1982 (Huyton) Squadron. Huyton has a King George's Field in memorial to King George V. Huyton has one of the biggest dog homes in Merseyside, Dogs Trust, located on Whiston Lane. This article is about the supermarket chain, for other meanings, see ASDA (disambiguation) ASDA is a chain of supermarkets in the United Kingdom offering food, clothing and general merchandise products. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
There are 471 King George V Playing Fields[1] in the United Kingdom, all part of an enormous memorial to George V of the United Kingdom, each of which is an individual registered charity[2]. This is the page for Merseyside Main article: King Georges Fields See also: List...
George V (George Frederick Ernest Albert; 3 June 1865 â 20 January 1936) was the first British monarch belonging to the House of Windsor, which he created from the British branch of the German House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. ...
Sport Huyton contains many football teams both Junior and Senior but only one FA Charter Standard Club, which is Paramount Community Football Club. King George V is the best sports centre in the area. Huyton has a registered cricket club, located off Huyton Lane which was founded in the mis 1860's by the stone family, and the town has produced at least one first class cricketer: Reginald Moss. Reginald Heber Moss (24 February 1868 - 19 March 1956) was an English cricketer: a right-handed batsman and a right-arm bowler of both fast and medium pace. ...
Huyton also had a professional rugby league club from 1968 to 1985. It was formed from Liverpool Stanley (1934-1951) and Liverpool City (rugby league) (1906-1907,1951-1968). Huyton struggled in the second division of the Rugby Football League until 1985, when they were replaced by Runcorn Highfield. This team, later renamed Highfield, struggled on near the bottom of the pro game - in 1995-1996 they gained just 1 point all season and changed their name to Prescot Panthers. Prescot finally disappeared at the end of the 1997 season (see List of defunct rugby league clubs). Liverpool City were a professional rugby league team from the city of Liverpool in England. ...
This is a list of defunct professional rugby league clubs. ...
(Huytonians still interested in supporting pro rugby league have the choice of either St Helens RFC and Widnes Vikings, both of whom are 6 miles away from Huyton). St Helens Rugby League Football Club or simply Saints are a professional rugby league club from St Helens, England. ...
Widnes Vikings are a professional rugby league club based in Widnes, Cheshire. ...
Huyton has been much more successful in producing professional footballers. In recent years the town has produced two outstanding, combative and skilful, midfield England internationals: Peter Reid (Everton FC) and Steven Gerrard (Liverpool FC). Other footballers include: Joey Barton, Craig Hignett, Tony Hibbert, David Nugent, Leon Osman, John Relish, Greg Tansey, and Lee Trundle. Peter Reid (born June 20, 1956 in Whiston, Knowsley, Lancashire (Now Merseyside) is an English former professional football player, manager and pundit. ...
Steven George Gerrard MBE (IPA: []) (born 30 May 1980, Whiston, Merseyside) is an English football player. ...
Joseph Joey Barton (born 2 September 1982 in Liverpool, England) is a controversial English footballer from Huyton who currently plays in midfield for Newcastle United. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Tony Hibbert (born February 20, 1981 in Liverpool, brought up in Huyton, Merseyside ) is an English footballer who currently plays as a defender for Everton. ...
David James Nugent (born 2 May 1985 in Huyton, Knowsley, Merseyside) is an English footballer who currently plays for Premier League club Portsmouth. ...
Leon Osman (born May 17, 1981 in Billinge Higher End, in the Wigan, England) is a professional football player currently playing for Everton. ...
John Relish is Bath City F.C.s Manager. ...
Greg Tansey (born November 21, 1988 in Huyton, Merseyside) is an English football player. ...
Lee Trundle (born 10 October 1976 in Liverpool) is a professional footballer who currently plays for Bristol City in the Championship. ...
Notably on 28th March 2007, two of Huyton's most prominent footballers starred for England in a 3 nil away win in Andorra. Goals came from Steven Gerrard (2) and David Nugent in a proud night for Huyton. Both players were educated at Cardinal Heenan high school who have a track record as one of the country's top schools for sport. Despite producing so many pro footballers, Huyton has never been able to sustain a semi-pro club for long. Nearby Kirkby Town changed their name to Knowsley United F.C. in 1988 and re-located to Alt Park, the former home of Huyton Rugby League Club. In United's first five seasons they were hugely successful. In 1988-89 they finished runners-up in the North West Counties Football League. The following season they were champions and won promotion to the Northern Premier League Division One. They were accordingly promoted to the Premier Division. The following season they fought their way to the first round proper of the F.A. Cup, only to be beaten by Carlisle United at home. Unfortunately the momentum did not last and Knowsley United ended up as a senior semi-pro side in 1998. The North West Counties Football League is a football league in the north west of England. ...
The Northern Premier League logo. ...
(Huytonians wanting to support a local semi-pro outfit have Prescot Cables F.C. located at Valerie Park in the Northern Premier League (Premier Division) less than 2 miles away). Prescot Cables F.C. is a football club based in England. ...
Famous people Because Huyton does not have its own hospital, most of its famous sons and daughters will have been born elsewhere, usually in Liverpool or Whiston. - Although born in St Helens, Thomas Beecham (1879 – 1961), the famous classical music conductor, was brought up in the Blacklow Brow area of Huyton. In 1947 he founded the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
- Alan Bleasdale, playwright famous for 'Boys From The Blackstuff', attended St. Aloysius RC Infant and Junior Schools, Huyton, 1951-57.
- Stan Boardman, comedian.
- Sir Rex Harrison, actor who starred in films such as My Fair Lady and Cleopatra, was born and raised on Tarbock Road in Huyton, and attended St Gabriel's School.
- John McCabe (composer)
- Reginald Moss, first-class cricketer.
- Although originally from Manchester, Peter Noone (1947 - ), of 1960s group Herman’s Hermits, settled in Chestnut Avenue, Huyton, before wealth and fame came knocking.
- Phil Redmond, the creator of Hollyoaks, Grange Hill and Brookside.
- Freddie Starr, comedian.
- Stuart Sutcliffe, the Fifth Beatle.
- Former Prime Minister Harold Wilson was Member of Parliament for the former Huyton constituency. A statue of Wilson was erected in Huyton town centre in 2006.
Famous footballers include: Joey Barton, Steven Gerrard, Craig Hignett, Tony Hibbert, David Nugent, Leon Osman, Peter Reid, John Relish, Greg Tansey, and Lee Trundle. To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
Alan Bleasdale (born March 23, 1946 in Liverpool, England, UK) is a British television dramatist, best known for several powerful social drama serials based around the lives of ordinary people. ...
Stan Boardman is an English comedian, best known for his somewhat controversial racial jokes. ...
Sir Reginald Carey Harrison (March 5, 1908–June 2, 1990) was a British theater and film actor. ...
My Fair Lady is an Academy Award-winning 1964 film adaptation of the stage musical, My Fair Lady, based in turn on the play Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. ...
Cleopatra is a 1963 film directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. ...
John McCabe CBE (born 1939) is a British composer and pianist. ...
Reginald Heber Moss (24 February 1868 - 19 March 1956) was an English cricketer: a right-handed batsman and a right-arm bowler of both fast and medium pace. ...
Peter Noone (born Peter Blair Dennis Bernard Noone, 5 November 1947, in Davyhulme, Manchester) is an English singer, songwriter, Guitarist, Pianist, and actor. ...
Phil Redmond (born 1949 in Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom) is a British television producer and scriptwriter. ...
Freddie Starr as seen on the cover of his 2001 autobiography Unwrapped. ...
Stuart Fergusson Victor Sutcliffe (23 June 1940 â 10 April 1962) was a British musician and artist who, until his early death, worked in a style related to Abstract Expressionism. ...
The Fifth Beatle is an informal title that numerous commentators in the press and entertainment industry have applied to several people who were at one point a member of The Beatles, or who had a strong association with the Fab Four other than John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and...
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is, in practice, the political leader of the United Kingdom. ...
James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, FRS, PC (11 March 1916 â 24 May 1995) was one of the most prominent British politicians of the 20th century. ...
A Member of Parliament, or MP, is a representative elected by the voters to a parliament. ...
Huyton was a parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom. ...
Joseph Joey Barton (born 2 September 1982 in Liverpool, England) is a controversial English footballer from Huyton who currently plays in midfield for Newcastle United. ...
Steven George Gerrard MBE (IPA: []) (born 30 May 1980, Whiston, Merseyside) is an English football player. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Tony Hibbert (born February 20, 1981 in Liverpool, brought up in Huyton, Merseyside ) is an English footballer who currently plays as a defender for Everton. ...
David James Nugent (born 2 May 1985 in Huyton, Knowsley, Merseyside) is an English footballer who currently plays for Premier League club Portsmouth. ...
Leon Osman (born May 17, 1981 in Billinge Higher End, in the Wigan, England) is a professional football player currently playing for Everton. ...
Peter Reid (born June 20, 1956 in Whiston, Knowsley, Lancashire (Now Merseyside) is an English former professional football player, manager and pundit. ...
John Relish is Bath City F.C.s Manager. ...
Greg Tansey (born November 21, 1988 in Huyton, Merseyside) is an English football player. ...
Lee Trundle (born 10 October 1976 in Liverpool) is a professional footballer who currently plays for Bristol City in the Championship. ...
References - ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.782;
- ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.474;
- ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.1055;
- ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.340;
- ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.746;
- ^ Harry, Bill (2000) The Beatles Encyclodedia, Virgin Publishing, London, p.536;
- ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p. 229;
- ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p.692;
- ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p.393;
- ^ Strong, M.C. (2003) The Great Indie Discography, Canongate, Edinburgh, p.989;
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