Cast Iron Shore

Coordinates: 53°22′41″N 2°57′43″W / 53.378°N 2.962°W / 53.378; -2.962

Cast Iron Shore (colloquially known as 'The Cazzy') was a name given to the banks of the Mersey in south Liverpool due to the presence of an iron foundry. St Michael's Church, opened in 1815, was known as the Cast Iron Church because of the extensive use of cast iron in its construction.[1][2]

Cast Iron Shore is mentioned in The Beatles' song "Glass Onion".[3] Liverpool poet, Justine Tennant, also mentions the Cast Iron Shore in her poem Norra Lorra Otters.[4]

The "Cazzy" got its name form the rust residue left after ships were scrapped on the foreshore at Dingle. Many famous ships met their end here right up to the 1950s. The area was just beyond the last of the South Docks, the Herculaneum Dock. The Beach in that area turned red from the ferric oxide left in the sand, the riverfront today in that area is now part of the promenade that joins the Otterspool promenade a little farther south.

References

  1. "South Liverpool: Toxteth, Wavertree, Aigburth and Garston". allertonOak. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
  2. "St Michael's Church". SJS Files. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
  3. "Glass Onion". The Beatles Online. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
  4. "Norra Lorra Otters". Liverpool Poem800. Retrieved 9 September 2009.
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