Liverpool at Work

Liverpool at Work
Author: Ken Pye
Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited
Total Pages: 173
Release: 2017-11-15
Genre: Photography
ISBN: 1445673231

In a fascinating series of contemporary photographs and illustrations, well-known local author Ken Pye explores the life of Liverpool and its people.

Tracing Your Liverpool Ancestors

Tracing Your Liverpool Ancestors
Author: Mike Royden
Publisher: Casemate Publishers
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2010-03-10
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 1844686760

Tracing Your Liverpool Ancestors' gives a fascinating insight into everyday life in the Liverpool area over the past four centuries. Aimed primarily at the family and social historian, Mike Royden's highly readable guide introduces readers to the wealth of material available on the citys history and its people. In a series of short, information-packed chapters he describes, in vivid detail, the rise of Liverpool through shipping, manufacturing and trade from the original fishing village to the cosmopolitan metropolis of the present day. Throughout he concentrates on the lives of the local people on their experience as Liverpool developed around them. He looks at their living conditions, at poverty and the laboring poor, at health and the ravages of disease, at the influence of religion and migration, at education and the traumatic experience of war. He shows how the lives of Liverpudlians changed over the centuries and how this is reflected in the records that have survived. His useful book is a valuable tool for anyone researching the history of the city or the life of an individual ancestor.

Mrs Brown is a Man and a Brother

Mrs Brown is a Man and a Brother
Author: Krista Cowman
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2004-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780853237389

This text draws on a variety of sources including branch records, personal papers and local newspapers to offer a detailed regional study of women's politics in the United Kingdom in the period before the First World War.

Britain's History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery

Britain's History and Memory of Transatlantic Slavery
Author: Katie Donington
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2016
Genre: History
ISBN: 1781382778

Transatlantic slavery, just like the abolition movements, affected every space and community in Britain, from Cornwall to the Clyde, from dockyard alehouses to country estates. Today, its financial, architectural and societal legacies remain, scattered across the country in museums and memorials, philanthropic institutions and civic buildings, empty spaces and unmarked graves. Just as they did in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, British people continue to make sense of this 'national sin' by looking close to home, drawing on local histories and myths to negotiate their relationship to the distant horrors of the 'Middle Passage', and the Caribbean plantation. For the first time, this collection brings together localised case studies of Britain's history and memory of its involvement in the transatlantic slave trade, and slavery. These essays, ranging in focus from eighteenth-century Liverpool to twenty-first-century rural Cambridgeshire, from racist ideologues to Methodist preachers, examine how transatlantic slavery impacted on, and continues to impact, people and places across Britain.

Reclaiming the Streets

Reclaiming the Streets
Author: Roy Coleman
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1134033672

This book makes a key contribution to theoretical debates around social control, providing a study of social control in Liverpool city centre, exploring the development of, and meaning attributed to, social control practices by those at the centre of the implementation and management of these practices.