Gambier Terrace
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53°23′53″N 2°58′16″W / 53.398°N 2.971°W
Gambier Terrace | |
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General information | |
Town or city | Liverpool |
Country | England |
Construction started | 1832 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | John Foster |
Gambier Terrace (Liverpool, England) is a street of 19th-century houses overlooking St. James's Mount and Gardens and Liverpool Cathedral. It is generally reckoned to be in Canning, although it falls within the Rodney Street conservation area, together with Hope Street and Rodney Street.
It was named after James Gambier. Numbers 1 to 10 are Grade II* Listed Buildings,[1] as is the northernmost house in the terrace, which has the address of Canning St around the corner. They were probably designed by John Foster, Junior. The terrace was built in 1832–1837. It was originally planned that the entire row would be built in a single style but construction was halted in the slump of 1837, and the demand for large city houses declined as the middle class moved out to the new suburbs. Number 10 was the last of the original build. The terrace was later completed to a cheaper specification.
During the First World War Number 1 Gambier Terrace was the location of the Women's War Service Bureau which assisted soldiers and their families. The service expanded into 5 additional premises on Bold Street and Berry Street.[2]
In the 1950s and 60s, 11-12 Gambier Terrace was home to the Liverpool Art High School, the junior section of the Liverpool College of Art. The students were aged 13-16 years of age who won scholarships to attend the school. Cynthia Lennon was a student there before she met John Lennon.
In the 1960s the terrace was in poor condition. John Lennon of The Beatles lived at 3 Gambier Terrace in 1960 with former Beatles bassist Stuart Sutcliffe after Sutcliffe asked the others who lived there, including fellow student and future well-known artist Margaret Chapman if the homeless Lennon could move in.[3] They all attended nearby Liverpool College of Art. The large number of students and artists living there lead to a reporter from The Sunday People paying a visit for a story headlined "This is the Beatnik Horror", inadvertently including the first known published photograph of John Lennon.[4][5]
Also a student there was Peter Chang, a British artist known for his distinctive jewellery. He later trained as a graphic designer and sculptor at the Liverpool College of Art. He won the Liverpool Senior City Scholarship in 1966 which enabled him to study in Paris at Atelier 17 under S.W. Hayter. From the 1980s onward, he focused on jewellery-making. His collection was featured in Rifat Ozbek’s 1987 fashion show. His work is in collections around the world, including the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Cooper Hewitt.
The freehold to the terrace and the garden in front belongs to Liverpool City Council. The land adjacent to Hope Street is maintained, in part, by the City Council and the leaseholders. The exact status of this land is unclear except that it is a public thoroughfare and unadopted by the City Council's highways department.
References
[edit]- ^ Stuff, Good. "Nos. 1-10, GAMBIER TERRACE and No. 2, CANNING STREET, Princes Park, Liverpool". britishlistedbuildings.co.uk.
- ^ "World War One At Home, Gambier Terrace, Liverpool: Women's War Service Bureau". BBC. 20 April 2021. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
- ^ "Stuart Sutcliffe". The Beatles Bible. 14 March 2008.
- ^ Forbes, Peter (24 July 1960). "THIS IS THE BEATNIK HORROR". The Sunday People. pp. 2–3. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
- ^ Bowen, Phil (2008). A gallery to play to: the story of the Mersey poets (Revised 2nd ed.). Liverpool: Liverpool Univ. Press. pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-1-84631-125-3.
External links
[edit]Media related to Gambier Terrace at Wikimedia Commons