Port Sunlight, Christ Church c.1960
Photo ref: P188053
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Photo ref: P188053
Photo of Port Sunlight, Christ Church c.1960

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William Lever, later Lord Leverhulme, added every amenity he could think of to the village. A club-house, library, hospital, youth club, gymnasium and swimming baths, all were included. The building Lord Leverhulme was said to be proudest of was Christ Church, the place of worship that he built for Port Sunlight. It looks much older than the century it was built in, and has a very solid yet charming feel to it. When Lady Lever died, William turned all his art treasures that he had collected over the years to the people and opened the Lady Lever Art Gallery. When he died in 1925, the porch that you can see to the left of the church became his resting place.

An extract from Liverpool and Merseyside Photographic Memories.

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Liverpool and Merseyside Photographic Memories

Liverpool and Merseyside Photographic Memories

The photo 'Port Sunlight, Christ Church c1960' appears in this book.

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A Selection of Memories from Port Sunlight

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Port Sunlight

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

I was born in 1958. My father was in the RAF. His mother, my grandmother lived at 6 Jubilee Crescent Port Sunlight. Whenever we moved from one RAF camp to another we would stay at my Nanas for a couple of weeks, while the house we were moving to was vacant. How I loved it there. Always so much to do. Well it seemed as if there was. My sister and I would play around the memorial, the lovely gardens. I ...see more
This photo of the art gallery reminds me of how we used to go rolling down the banks. Lots of children did this regularly and as you went towards the back of the gallery, the banks got steeper! It could be quite alarming, yet exhilarating at the same time! There was a statue outside the back of the art gallery which is now unseen. The other game was to walk around the ledges and then jump off. You could break ...see more
have just spent a wonderful hour looking through the photographs of Port Sunlight, they have brought back so many memories that are as clear as day still to me. I first came to live in the village with an aunt and uncle in1939 ,so of course the war years were quite prevellent in my experience. I lived in Greendale Road, near the junction with Bolton Road (number 72). It was opposite the tie bridge ...see more