Jump to content

Croxteth

Coordinates: 53°26′53″N 2°54′27″W / 53.44819°N 2.90757°W / 53.44819; -2.90757
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Croxteth
Church of the Good Shepherd, Croxteth
Croxteth is located in Merseyside
Croxteth
Croxteth
Location within Merseyside
Population16,543 
OS grid referenceSJ405961
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLIVERPOOL
Postcode districtL11
Dialling code0151
PoliceMerseyside
FireMerseyside
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Merseyside
53°26′53″N 2°54′27″W / 53.44819°N 2.90757°W / 53.44819; -2.90757

Croxteth is a suburb of Liverpool, Merseyside, England, and a Liverpool City Council Ward. Although housing in the area is predominantly modern, the suburb has some notable history. At the 2011 census it had a population of 14,561.[1]

Etymology

[edit]

The name Croxteth appears to be of Old Norse origin. The name appears to mean "Croc's landing place" or "river-bend landing place", derived from the elements Croc (personal name) or Old Norse krókr ("river-bend") + Norse stǫð ("landing-place, jetty"). Or else, the second element may be staðr ("place").[2]

History

[edit]

The suburb is in the north of Liverpool and borders Norris Green, Gilmoss, Fazakerley and West Derby. The "Dog and Gun" public house (demolished in 2005) was a historic hostelry, likely associated with the hunt from Croxteth Hall.[citation needed]

The first tranche of housing in Croxteth was built to rehouse families from the Scotland Road area of the city that was subject to mass demolition during the construction of the second Mersey Tunnel. Within the past twenty years very large areas of Croxteth Park and a City Council playing field have been sold for housing development to create a huge housing estate, noted for its lack of local amenities. [citation needed]

From the A580 road (the Liverpool-East Lancashire Road, abbreviated to and known commonly as East Lancs Road) passing Malpas Road to St. Swithens including the much talked about haunting of Gillmoss School. Croxteth was one of the first "suburbs of Liverpool".

Redevelopment in Croxteth in 2007

The first houses in the Croxteth estate were in fact built in the immediate post war period to house skilled workers from Slough and Rugby who had been brought in to the English Electric and Napier factories (on the East Lancs Road), and families from the dockland inner-city areas who had lost their homes through bombing and slum demolition. The second tunnel came much later. The first families arrived in 1951 to live in an estate that was without roads, pavements, shops, pubs or buses. However, in the wake of World War II during the late 1940s and early 1950s, massive residential extensions at Croxteth, alongside similar and indistinguishable development of neighbouring Norris Green, resulted in what together, are now regarded as the largest municipal housing estate in Europe.[citation needed]

Transport

[edit]

Croxteth is close to the A580 East Lancashire Road, to the north, and the M57 motorway.

The area is served by the Merseytravel bus routes to Liverpool City Centre, Page Moss, Broadgreen Hospital, Fazakerley Hospital and Knowsley Industrial Estate.

The nearest station is Fazakerley railway station, approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) away in on the Kirkby branch of Merseyrail's Northern Line.

A proposed light rail system, Merseytram was intended to serve Croxteth. Approved in 2002, it would have linked Kirkby and Croxteth to Liverpool City Centre via West Derby, West Derby Road, the Royal Liverpool University Hospital and a city centre loop. The Merseytram Line 1 Transport and Works Act was approved by the then Secretary of State for Transport Alistair Darling in December 2004 and construction of the route was expected to begin with the M-Pact consortium of GrantRail and Laing O’Rourke selected to do so from 2005. However, due to cost overruns and other associated difficulties, the scheme was cancelled in November 2009.

Education

[edit]

The area is serviced by two secondary schools (11–18); Dixons Croxteth Academy (mixed) and St John Bosco Arts College (Catholic Girls). In 2010, a third school, Croxteth Community Comprehensive (Mixed), closed due to poor academic standards and falling pupils numbers, despite local protests and the school achieving higher academic standards in OFSTED reports and on average higher student grades than De La Salle. In June 2008 it was revealed a new £20m "super-school" would be built on the site of De La Salle.[3] However, this proposal has since been scrapped.

Notable residents

[edit]

Former England footballer Wayne Rooney and his wife Coleen (née McLoughlin) grew up and met in the area. Coleen was a pupil at St John Bosco School[4] and Wayne attended De La Salle School (now Dixons Croxteth Academy).[5]

One-time England footballer Francis Jeffers also attended De La Salle School.[6]

Distance runner Robert Pope, who became the first person to complete the 15,600-mile Forrest Gump run, was born and raised in the area.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2001 Census: Croxteth". Office for National Statistics. 2001. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
  2. ^ "Key to English Place-names - Croxteth, Lancashire". University of Nottingham. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  3. ^ "£20m dream for a school of the future". Liverpool Echo. 10 June 2008. Retrieved 19 June 2008.
  4. ^ Lusher, Adam (26 February 2006). "The new Colleen? Not me, says Andy's girl". The Telegraph. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
  5. ^ "Today is Wayne Rooney's birthday but for Everton it feels like Christmas". 24 October 2002.
  6. ^ Stammers, Steve (21 March 2010). "Jeffers: My mate Wayne Rooney, aged 17 1/2". London Evening Standard. Retrieved 18 October 2010.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Fitzsimmons, Francesca (17 September 2016). "Watch Croxteth vet's story as he starts Forrest Gump run across America". liverpoolecho. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
[edit]