The Institute for the deaf and dumb, Liverpool. Visited February 2020

avatar

Urban Exploring (UE) tends to be seen by many as an interest that should be frowned upon. I agree to a certain extent having seen a lot of childish immature offerings made by millennial goontubers, and Instagram idiots. They think it’s more about them than the actual building/graveyard/ graffiti et all. Never mind the vandals, taggers or thieves. Most of whom lurk on Facebook pages.
As an explorer covering the U.K. and Europe, my aim is to bring an unseen glimpse into places that would otherwise remain silent in decay. I try to take my photographs in as sympathetic a manner as possible, always remembering that I am just a vehicle for other people’s memories. I hope you enjoy my work.

HISTORY

In May 1864 the Liverpool Adult Deaf and Dumb Benevolent Society was established so as to give Deaf People equal access to the Scriptures. They started with just one room in the School for the Deaf and Dumb in Oxford Street.

In 1865 the Society held a meeting where they appointed a committee and decided on the rules. They had no premises where they could meet until 1869 when they were able to rent a room on Pleasant Street.

In 1874 the priest in charge of Liverpool gave permission for Sunday services to be held in the cemetery Chapel, St Mary’s on Cambridge Street as it was not being used. These premises were not suitable and the committee decided they needed somewhere permanent.

In 1877 the Society started a building fund. The Mayor of Liverpool then took an interest in the fund and through him her Majesty Queen Victoria made a donation of £5.

In 1886 the committee got a lease from Lord Sefton for the land of Princess Avenue and Parkway. This lease was given for 2000 years.

On 16th May 1887 H.R.H Princess Louise formally opened the Institute.

The church was designed in tiers so that the congregation could see the ministers sign language.

On 9th November 1927 the Deaf Community suffered a massive loss with the death of the founder George Healey aged 84. Four years later in May 1931 the Society opened the George Healey memorial hall. This would be used as a men’s club where men could play snooker, chess, cards and other activities.

The building also had the women’s room where women could go to socialise. The hall was used for lectures, meetings, dances and social gatherings. The chapel in the building was used for services every Sunday at 11am and 6.30pm.

The society provided an employment bureau and sometimes employment for the jobless, interpreters for all occasions, social gatherings for the Deaf Blind and financial help for the poor.

In the late 1980s the Society relocated to Queens Drive in West Derby.

In 1987 it was purchased for £50k and For 20 years it operated as the Ibo community and social club for the immigrant Igbo people from Nigeria but this ceased when the buildings fabric deteriorated. At an estimated cost of circa £3million to restore it now stands rotting.

MY VISIT IN PHOTOGRAPHS

838B7F0222C04C54A000CDE7A0BFE15E.jpeg

1293F40C20E94020A8A22261EBD968F5.jpeg

Victorian drawing and how it looks today

9D873377C4E7483E87597608DBEC507B.jpeg8CA3CBCCA9CD4A0889EC26F0C6830624.jpeg

E85B2A99ADC54AD4ADC7D17028661267.jpeg91D53348540E4FD58C3C00E8851283C4.jpeg

Views of the ancillary recreational halls

0C18A76DDB814733AC4A9BC221E0D6E2.jpegD02988F1B0904E2C9757EEA396CCAF08.jpeg57B60CC7129E4C7585ADE212BA9A33B4.jpeg![78F0F679C1D847E198D2F9FE9D083DBF.jpeg]

()0A7BCB0DEADF4B5A9DA4540D50F6099A.jpeg1C46DA7A460E4DD1BC924DCAFDA7FEC9.jpeg

Passageways and stairs to the body of the chapel

B364F315E2F54BC298BD95F453ADF2DB.jpegBB223C8521224D1793AE998C32121596.jpeg71915705846D446A87CF6A4AE86915C2.jpegE89D60342FC346DD92713C099EA34744.jpeg62CEB87BB0EA477C9DCB333BE350A6F8.jpeg

Inside the body of the chapel

A4D62B690D4E4F50BDCA09E8CD61507D.jpeg039F2FCFDBD64316BF87ADAAAAFEFEB6.jpegB104285EFCE142BF9190E05062E59455.jpeg

Memorial stones

F43DD4D80A1C427A84ED4AEDD6270A91.jpegC512E6C4759E4C2DABDF51BB2D2B480D.jpegDE8A4C36FC1249DF9ECCC9C162FD8AD3.jpeg3FF797C21A3943E588649FC3607BCB07.jpeg

Detritus, an accounts ledger from 1989, religious text fliers and a mug



0
0
0.000
17 comments
avatar

According to the Bible, How do you influence faith to Christian believers? (Part 1 of 3)

(Sorry for sending this comment. We are not looking for our self profit, our intentions is to preach the words of God in any means possible.)



Comment what you understand of our Youtube Video to receive our full votes. We have 30,000 #SteemPower. It's our little way to Thank you, our beloved friend.
Check our Discord Chat
Join our Official Community: https://beta.steemit.com/trending/hive-182074

0
0
0.000
avatar
(Edited)

That looks way too an impressive building to be left to rot.

Hope someone picks it up and brings it back to life.

Great to see another Steemian in Wales. There are a growing number of us now including @pumpkinsandcats, @welshstacker, @x-53degreesnorth, @stevelivingston, @elizabethharvey...

Are you on Twitter by the way?

0
0
0.000
avatar

Nah have never used twitter

0
0
0.000
avatar

How about Discord? Much of Steem action happens on Discord.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Nope never heard of it. Tbh

0
0
0.000
avatar

You are probably going to need to venture into Discord at some point soon on Steem...

0
0
0.000
avatar

I work on an I pad pro. Is the discord app the correct one? Cheers

0
0
0.000
avatar

I work on an I
Pad pro. Is the discord app
The correct one? Cheers

                 - grindle


I'm a bot. I detect haiku.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Yes the App is best.

I am Pennsif#9921 on Discord. Let me know when you are on and I will send an invite to the Brits on Steem Discord server.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Hi mate have set it up user name grindle 👍

0
0
0.000
avatar

Still haven't managed a church beside St Hilda's in Rochdale, they always seem to be sealed tight when I go have a look.

I do love the old writings you can find, 1989... it's a long time gone.

0
0
0.000
avatar

This one was so easy to get into thanks to some squatters who had set up a camp in a room at the back of one of the halls, I moved the boards away and was in there a good hour, didn't bump into them. When I came to leave the boards had been replaced!! That was fun.

0
0
0.000
avatar

You have more nerve than me doing them solo. The old wrecks of houses I'm OK with but anything solid like this I get the jitters. Doing it with someone else increases bravery by 1000%.

0
0
0.000
avatar

😂 I go solo as then I only have to watch my own back! I have been out with another but I’m more comfortable alone.

0
0
0.000
avatar

It's always such a shame to see beautiful old buildings in decay, but they cost so much to fix. It seems we struggle to build anything new with real craftsmanship.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations @grindle! You have completed the following achievement on the Steem blockchain and have been rewarded with new badge(s) :

You made your First Vote
You made your First Comment
You got a First Reply
You received more than 250 upvotes. Your next target is to reach 500 upvotes.
You got more than 10 replies. Your next target is to reach 50 replies.

You can view your badges on your Steem Board and compare to others on the Steem Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness to get one more award and increased upvotes!
0
0
0.000