An aerial photo of the Woodside area,what was the large chimney and what building was it attached to?
Don't know when the Grasshopper was installed on that site?
What was going on in Hamilton Square?
Do you have a date?
The date is 1923, as far as i know, nothing was going on in Hamilton Sq, other half of photo below.
I'm sure the building is the Shore Road Pumping Station, which housed the giant steam pump called the Grasshopper. The chimney was the exhaust for the pump, which was used to keep the Mersey underground railway clear of water.
The chimney was 280ft tall.
when was the chimney demolished, seem to remember it in the late 40s early 50s and thought it was still there.
Yes indeed. Shore Road Pumping Station. Up until the late 1950's the former Mersey Railway generated it's own juice there. When they switched over to the National Grid, the steam plant was closed down. Grid supplies were then used for traction and lighting, also for pumping. The "Grasshoppers" were shut down. One was scrapped and one survives. Pumping is now done by "down the hole" Sulzer pumps with spider bearings concentric within the pumping main. Can't recall the output, but I remember being told when on a visit down the pumping shaft that if all pumps stopped, you have 4 hours before river water rises to conductor rail level under the river bed. It's then "Game Over" !!
The chimney was clad in scaffolding and demolished brick by brick in 1960/61 (?). No room for a Fred Dibnah job !!
Extract from "The Mersey Railway" by G.W.Parkin.... "and on Thurday 25th June 1959, Mr Robert Varley, the Company's last General Manager and Engineer formally closed the station down"
Sorry for the long-winded reply !
It was fully scaffolded in the late fifties and early sixties, and I remember seeing it in the early sixties.
Here is a 1961 picture ...
Thank you all, excellent info as usual.
Moonstar: The Grasshoppers were installed in 1884. Built by Andrew Barclay & Sons, Kilmarnock.
Thanks for that Pin. I seem to remember some years ago seeing the engines working - are they still open to view?
Its been closed since the middle of last year, there are talks about mersey-travel taking it over.
Brilliant one that. It's amazing how much I've forgotten over the years and these sort of things were the big landmarks of our area. I think each time I take in some new stuff it must shove some old stuff out of the file.
That chimney was BIG by any standards! It frightened me every time I looked up at it and thought 'what if it blew down'! It would have obliterated Woodside!
When you see how black and dirty everything was, you have to say that for once the Government got something right with the clean air act.
Referring to Pinz's report, game over in 4 hours if the pumping stopped. I wonder if jerry had a deliberate attempt to take it out, a big chimney like that may well have been on their shopping list. Anyone got any evidence they had a pop at it.
I've never heard of any damage caused by Adoph's Aero Club to Shore Road. I think standby emergency electric pumps were installed "just in case". These were dual fed either from L'pool Corp. electricity supplies or B'head. If one side went down, juice was still available.
There's a chapter devoted to pumping arrangements in one of my Mersey Railway books. I'll try and dig some info. out if anyone's interested. This might be more reliable info. than what's stored in the old swede !
I think the swede does very well, mine sometimes worries me, just a thought, i wonder if there was a no smoking at night for these big chimneys when the blackout was on, probably not if they had to keep pumping.