Go Back   Ancestry Aid Genealogy and Family History Forum » Counties & History » History Board
Register Login AA Calendar NEW! Groups Mark Forums Read

Thread: Picton Clock Tower, Liverpool.

The Picton Clock Tower (Wavertree, Liverpool ) The Picton Clock Tower - at the junction of Childwall Road, Church Road North and .......


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 29-01-2006, 11:57 AM   #1 (permalink)
Ancestry Aid Staff
 
nanna's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Liverpool, Merseyside.U.K
Posts: 11,524
AA Donator Member Assistance Level 2 Posting - Level 3 
Total Awards: 3
Default Picton Clock Tower, Liverpool.

The Picton Clock Tower (Wavertree, Liverpool)

The Picton Clock Tower - at the junction of Childwall Road, Church Road North and the High Street - has been a local landmark for over 100 years. It was presented to the people of Wavertree by Sir James Picton in 1884, having been designed by him as a memorial to his wife Sarah, who had died in 1879 after fifty years of happy marriage. Picton was a prominent local resident. Born in Liverpool, the son of a timber merchant, Picton became a well-known architect and surveyor. He moved to Wavertree in 1848, having designed and built himself a house - Sandy Knowe - in Mill Lane.

James Allanson Picton was a prominent member of both the Liverpool Town Council and the Wavertree Local Board of Health. In Liverpool he was Chairman of the Libraries Committee for almost forty years. As a mark of respect, one of the main library buildings was named after him in 1879, and two years later he was knighted by Queen Victoria in recognition of his 'high attainments and public services'. As well as being a linguist and seasoned traveller, Picton was a keen student of local history. His two-volume work entitled 'Memorials of Liverpool' remains one of the leading reference books on the city's buildings and personalities.

An inscription facing Church Road North reads 'Time wasted is existence; used is life'. It is difficult to think of a more fitting epitaph for Sir James Picton himself, who packed so much activity into his 83 years. Facing the High Street is another inscription, recording the dedication of the tower to 'his beloved wife Sarah Pooley'. After fifty years of marriage Sir James still seems to have referred to his wife by her maiden name! Before the days when everyone had watches or radio sets, the villagers of Wavertree would tell their children to 'go and see what the time is by Sarah Pooley'.

Sir James Picton deliberately chose this spot as the site for his gift, so that the clock could be seen by as many people as possible. It was the very centre of the old village. Before the Clock Tower was built it was the site of the 'Big Lamp', marking the parting of the ways for travellers to Old Swan, Childwall and Gateacre.


This clock is at the top of the main High Street in Wavertree, my birthplace and home . It once was a small village which has grown immensely over the years and is now a thriving community. The house that James Picton built for himself is alongside the Church that I used to attend as a child, having been born just two street's away.



Nanna
nanna is offline   Reply With Quote Top
Advertisement
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools


Advertisement

This is a Genealogy site.