Ye Cracke
Ye Cracke is a 19th-century public house in Liverpool, England. It stands on Rice Street, a narrow offshoot of Hope Street, and takes its name from a Liverpudlian word for an alleyway. John Lennon and Stuart Sutcliffe were regulars here when they studied at the nearby art college, and it was here that Lennon courted his first wife, Cynthia.
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47 m
Liverpool Homeopathic Hospital
The Liverpool Homeopathic Hospital was a hospital in Liverpool, England, that specialized in homeopathic treatments.
62 m
Unity Theatre, Liverpool
The Unity Theatre is a theatre in Liverpool, England.
Formed by directors Gerry Dawson and Edgar Criddle as the Merseyside Left Theatre in the 1930s, the theatre became known as the Merseyside Unity Theatre in 1944. The company was known for being radical and experimentalist, staging classics alongside contemporary left-wing theatre; an aim was to make theatre accessible to the working class. Its first artistic director was Graeme Phillips, for 33 years until 2015. He also served as theatre director until her death in 2025.
Today, the theatre provides workshops and performance space and is based in a converted synagogue (the former home of Liverpool Reform Synagogue) on Hope Place off Hope Street.
81 m
Liverpool Institute High School for Girls
Liverpool Institute High School for Girls, Blackburne Place, Liverpool, England, was a girls' grammar school that was established in 1844 and closed in 1984. It was situated off Hope St to the north-east of Liverpool Cathedral in the area close to the University of Liverpool and Catharine Street (A5039).
87 m
Sheppard-Worlock Statue
The Sheppard-Worlock Statue is a statue located in Liverpool, England, commemorating two of the city's former bishops; David Sheppard (the Anglican Bishop of Liverpool), and Derek Worlock (the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Liverpool). It was designed by Stephen Broadbent.
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