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Liverpool Through Time: From Slavery to the Industrial Revolution, 1766-1900

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Liverpool street and business directories, 1766-1900

The publisher humbly hopes that this Publication will be found of such general utility as to gain the approbation of the Public, and encourage him to continue it Annually
The Liverpool Directory, for the year 1766, img 28

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See Liverpool grow, commercially and street by street, from 1766 to 1900

This collection is composed of directories of Liverpool first established by John Gore in 1766. The directories contained lists of merchants, tradesmen, and principal inhabitants of Liverpool, initially being published sporadically but later taking on a biennial character. The directories demonstrate the changing face of the city of Liverpool over the 18th and 19th centuries. Thus, the collection offers a window into the blossoming of the Industrial Revolution, the rise and fall of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and the establishment of the first social services in the city.

Contents

Liverpool Through Time: From Slavery to the Industrial Revolution, 1766-1900...

Liverpool street and business directories, 1766-1900

Discover 

Volumes

Licensed to access Reprints of the early Liverpool directories

The first five issues of Gore's Liverpool directory were reprinted in the early 20th century. These are reproduced here with...

Licensed to access Gore's Liverpool directory

The first ever printed directory of Liverpool was published in 1766 by John Gore (1738-1803), "Containing an alphabetical list of...

Licensed to access Miscellaneous other Liverpool directories

Over the years, a number of other publishers tried to emulate Gore's success but in vain, as this small group...

Insights

  • Social services are listed in directories from 1790. Listings that emerge include an institution for recovering drowned persons, a school of industry for blind persons, and the juvenile reformatory association.
  • The years 1766 to 1900 saw some of the most dramatic social change in Liverpool's history. The slave trade fueled Liverpool's growth in the 18th Century. It was followed by the industrial revolution in the 19th century.
  • These directories enable the reader to see how each street in Liverpool was shaped by the dramatic changes happening around it.
  • Gore's directories were the only directory which managed to survive for over 140 years. The other directories reveal elements of Liverpool's history as they try to produce a more tempting rival offer.

Licensed to access The Church of England and Social Change in Manchester, 1635-1928

1635   1928

Licensed to access The Industrial Revolution: Technological Innovation in the Textile Industry, 1672-1929

1672   1929

Licensed to access Essays and Dissertations of the Scottish Royal Medical Society, 1751-1801

1751   1970

Licensed to access British Poor Schools in the Nineteenth Century, 1812-1901

1812   1901
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