Aigburth
Aigburth ( ) is a suburb of Liverpool, England. Located to the south of the city, it is bordered by Toxteth and Dingle to the north, Mossley Hill to the east, and Garston to the south, with the River Mersey forming its western boundary.
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South Liverpool F.C. (1890s)
South Liverpool F.C. was a football club from Liverpool, England. The club's colours were white shirts, black shorts and red socks. The club relocated and became New Brighton A.F.C. in 1921. In 1935 a phoenix club was established South Liverpool F.C. (1935).
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Liverpool Feds W.F.C.
Liverpool Feds Women's Football Club is an English women's association football club based in Liverpool, Merseyside. The first team currently plays in the FA Women's National League North and during the 2019–20 season the reserve team play in North West Women's Regional Football League Division One South. Beginning with the 2025-26 season, they play their home games at Walton Hall Park (stadium).
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South Liverpool F.C.
South Liverpool Football Club is a football club based in Aigburth, Liverpool, England, founded as a phoenix club of a club of the same name. It is currently a member of the North West Counties League Premier Division; the team plays at Jericho Lane in the Otterspool area of Aigburth. The club's colours are white shirts, black shorts, and red socks.
The First Team play on the Stadium Pitch at the Jericho Lane Sports Hub which is where the First Team are affiliated. The Reserves and Third Teams also play on this pitch intermittently but also use the second pitch or its home of many years, The North Field, on Jericho Lane, which the club still operates.
The club has around 35 teams under its South Liverpool FC Banner, ranging from Open Age through to Vets Teams, Reserves Youth Teams and Juniors. It has close ties with Liverpool Feds FC who they work closely with to develop Women and Girls players.
A large number of the club's Committee have been with the club for many years and the club remains very familiar to those who have played for it. The Clubs Chairman is Gary Langley who is also a Director of the North West Counties League.
The club has an active supporters club which works closely with the football club to generate awareness and funds for club operations. It is considered one of the largest supporters Clubs in the NWCFL.
It’s Fanzine “The Fanzine with no name” is also a candidate for the longest continuously running Fanzine in non-league.
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Otterspool Promenade
Otterspool Promenade is a riverside walk and accompanying area of parkland in the Aigburth and Grassendale districts of Liverpool, England. The promenade runs along the bank of the River Mersey from just north of Garston Docks to Otterspool Park. A narrower footpath and cycling lane continue north along the riverbank to the city centre, ending at the Albert Dock. The promenade adjoins the former private parkland estates of Cressington Park, Fulwood Park and Grassendale Park. It is notable for the excellent views it gives of shipping in the Mersey and over the river to the Wirral.
Opened in 1950, it was built by landscaping a site that had been used for disposal of household waste, and for spoil from excavation of the Queensway tunnel under the Mersey in the 1920s. The stated desire of the local authorities was, "Firstly... provide a place where the citizens of Liverpool can enjoy their leisure in pleasant surroundings on the banks of the Mersey estuary. Secondly... for providing a large area where the essential need to the community for the disposal of its refuse could be met economically and by the use of hygienic and up-to-date methods." Renovations of the promenade were undertaken in 2006 and 2007, including the creation of a children's playground. The renovations were opened in 2007 with a plaque commemorating Liverpool's 800th anniversary.
After several years of campaigning by skateboarders, rollerbladers, and BMXers, the promenade had a concrete skate park installed, which was completed in May 2015. To the north of the promenade on the riverbank was the 1984 International Garden Festival site.
Toward the end of the Otterpool promenade stands the Sitting Bull sculpture by Dhruva Mistry, commissioned for the 1984 International Garden Festival.
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