History
The walking safari revealing hidden Liver Birds around Liverpool
3 years ago
People all over the world know our two most famous Liver Birds, perched on top of the Liver Building keeping a watch over the city and the river.
But there are actually hundreds tucked away high up on buildings and inside landmarks which go unnoticed by thousands of passers-by every day.
Now writer and actor John Maguire is helping to uncover them, leading groups of Liver Bird spotters on walking tours around the city centre.
He launched the Liver Bird Safaris back in May, and theyâve proved so popular with local history fans that theyâre helping to fund a series of outdoor park performances of his childrenâs play, also called The Liver Bird.
John, from Childwall, is the founder of theatre company Arts Groupie CIC and it was when Covid scrapped their tour plans that he first came up with the Liver Birds idea.
âWe did a play about Kitty Wilkinson a few years ago called Kitty, Queen of the Wash House,â he explains. âWe toured it and it did really well so we were meant to take it to London but then Covid struck. Thatâs how the Liver Bird Safari was born.
âI used to do heritage walking tours around Liverpool and I decided to do some research around the Liver Birds.
âIâve written a story about the whole urban myth of the Liver Bird which was adapted into the play for kids and it struck me that everyoneâs got a bit of an idea about the history of the city but thereâs lots we still donât know.
âI knew there were loads of Liver Birds, thereâs actually over 100 sites in the region, and I thought wouldnât it be nice to do a little tour and tie them in with the history of Liverpool?
âSo the safaris arenât an A-Z narrative but by the end you get a real understanding of the history of Liverpool without actually being taught it, itâs just subliminal.â
John says most people who live in the city know about its two famous Liver Building residents and the myth that one is female â keeping watch over the river for seamen coming home – and one is male, facing the city to protect it.
âI always say that the female is really looking to see when Tom Hardyâs coming back!â he jokes.
âBut the story goes that if the two birds were to turn around theyâd fall in love and fly away and Liverpool would crumble into the sea,â he says. âIt sounds like nonsense but when they brought them down in the â50s to be cleaned they kept them in the warehouse in the exact same positions just in case.â
When he was doing his research in lockdown, John says he was struck by just how many Liver Birds there are, hidden in plain sight around the city.
âAnd then once youâve seen them you wonder how you never noticed them before.â
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RerhOemnTfM
The Liver Bird safaris, on Fridays and Sundays, last around 2hrs 15mins and go from Bluecoat across town to St Georgeâs Quarter then up Dale Street to Castle Street, and then down onto the waterfront.
âThe amount we see depends on how eagle-eyed people are, because if you were to stop for every one youâd be there forever, so we have a volunteer from the group whoâs the official bird-o-meter and they add the birds up with me.
âIt could be 64 or 70 â itâs like a proper safari, you donât know what animals youâre going to see, although I do set ground rules because the ones on the wheelie bins donât count!â
Operating with varying restrictions has meant John caps the number on the safaris to around 15, but he says thatâs actually worked well.
âTaking it down to intimate numbers means weâve got the time to really get to know people,â he says. âI think thatâs been key in growing the tours because weâve had so many referrals.
âAt the moment Itâs all local people and whatâs been wonderful is so many are really interested to hear about the history and say, âI feel like a tourist in my own cityâ.â