Coordinates: 53°23′53″N 2°56′01″W / 53.398°N 2.9337°W / 53.398; -2.9337
Wavertree is an area of Liverpool, in Merseyside, England, and is a Liverpool City Council ward. The population of the ward taken at the 2011 census was 14,772.Historically in Lancashire, it is bordered by a number of districts to the south and east of Liverpool city centre from Toxteth, Edge Hill, Fairfield, Old Swan, Childwall and Mossley Hill.
The name derives from the Old English words wæfre and treow, meaning "wavering tree", possibly in reference to aspen trees common locally. It has also been variously described as "a clearing in a wood" or "the place by the common pond". In the past the name has been spelt Watry, Wartre, Waurtree, Wavertre and Wavertree. The earliest settlement of Wavertree is attested to by the discovery of Bronze Age burial urns in Victoria Park in the mid-1880s. The Domesday Book reference is "Leving held Wauretreu. There are 2 carucates of land. It was worth 64 pence".
Wavertree was part of the parish of Childwall in the West Derby hundred.
Wavertree is a historic iron-hulled sailing ship built in 1885. Now the largest iron sailing vessel afloat, it is located at the South Street Seaport in New York City.
Wavertree was built in Southampton, England in 1885 and was one of the last large sailing ships built of wrought iron. She was built for the Liverpool company R.W. Leyland & Company, and is named after the Wavertree district of that city.
The ship was first used to carry jute between eastern India and Scotland. When less than two years old the ship entered the "tramp trades", taking cargoes anywhere in the world. In 1910, after sailing for a quarter century, the ship was dis-masted off Cape Horn and barely made it to the Falkland Islands. Rather than re-rigging the ship its owners sold it for use as a floating warehouse at Punta Arenas, Chile. Wavertree was converted into a sand barge at Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1947. This ship was discovered in 1967 at the Riachuelo River in Buenos Aires by an American citizen working on a sand barge and acquired by the South Street Seaport Museum in 1968. The ship was sent to the Arsenal Naval Buenos Aires for restoration. In 1969 after restoration was complete, the ship was towed to New York. The vessel was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 13, 1978.
Wavertree is a Liverpool City Council Ward within the Liverpool Wavertree Parliamentary constituency. It was formed in 2004 taking in parts of the former Picton, Childwall and Church wards.
The ward has returned six Councillors
Warren Bradley was suspended and eventually expelled from the Liberal Democrats following allegations of electoral fraud which he later admitted in Court, he contested the 2012 elections as an Independent.
In May 2013, Liberal Democrat Rosie Jolly, who faces re-election in 2014, defected to the Labour Party...
In June 2013, Jake Morrison resigned his membership of the Labour Party, due partly to internal disputes with the local Labour MP and partly over disillusionment with national Labour policies.
After the boundary change of 2004 the whole of Liverpool City Council faced election. Three Councillors were returned.
• italics - Denotes the sitting Councillor.
• bold - Denotes the winning candidate.
I don't know why I have to look at the sky
Always strive to reach that high
I don't know why everybody tries to fly
Do we need to be so high
From all directions the warnings are drawning near
Close to the bring of ruin
It's getting dark and lost souls
Don't know where they belong
Or where they are
Or where they're from
But somewhere there's a distant light
It's warm and nothing shines so bright
The moment is now to realize
No hope anymore when the light burns out
The spring of fame everyone is searching for
Is just a legend of a dreamer
The sense of life
A mystery like stars above
Borderland of mankind's mind
From all directions the warnings are drawning near
Close to the bring of ruin
It's getting dark and lost souls
Don't know where they belong
Or where they are
Or where they're from
The signs are here
The meaning is clear
We do wrong
We do right
A constant inner fight