(Redirected from Liscard Battery)'Liscard' is an area of the town of
Wallasey, on the
Wirral Peninsula in
England. The most centrally located of Wallasey's townships, it is the main shopping area of the town, with many shops located in the
Cherry Tree Shopping Centre.
'Liscard Hall' was built in 1835 by a Liverpool merchant, Sir John Tobin. Its grounds later became Central Park, and the building itself later became an art college. A “model farm” was also developed nearby by his family.
'Central Park' is now the largest park in Wallasey. It has two areas for young children, with swings, slides and other games, large areas of greenery, a large listed former arts building and a popular walled garden. There is also a cricket ground and a large duck pond. It links Liscard to
Poulton and
Egremont.
'Liscard Battery' was built in 1858 to help protect shipping on the
Mersey and defend the port of Liverpool. It was equipped with seven 10-inch guns. Set back from the river and hidden by new building, it was known as "the snake in the grass" to local inhabitants. The battery was obsolete by
1912, and sold on, and houses were erected on top, and now the site has an odd appearance with only the curtain wall and ornate crenellated gatehouse surviving.
Liscard is situated three miles from
Birkenhead, and four miles from
Liverpool (via the
Kingsway Tunnel). It originally had a railway station as part of the
Wirral Railway known as
Liscard and Poulton railway station which was part of a branch which included
Seacombe Railway Station as its terminus. This branch is long-closed and its route now forms the approach to the Kingsway Tunnel.
Liscard is also a local government ward of the
Metropolitan Borough of Wirral and is represented by
Conservative Party Councillors
Leah Fraser and Karen Hayes, and by Labour Party Councillor Dave Hawkins.