Dingle is an area entirely within the boundaries of the old
Toxteth Park. It is named after Dingle
Brook (
Dingle meaning a wooded valley), which rose at High Park Street and roughly followed Park Road towards the Old Toxteth Chapel, just south of Dingle Lane, and entered the
River Mersey at Knott's Hole, which was a narrow bay or inlet next to where the Dingle flowed out to the Mersey. On either side were steep rocky cliffs, with Dingle Point to the south west. In the 1850s, the Dingle area was purely rural. Liverpool lay to the north west, but this was an area of large houses, vast gardens, babbling streams and a long beach. It was a mainly
Protestant area, which developed from the influx of
Welsh settlers, whilst the north end of Liverpool such as
Everton and
Vauxhall was settled by
Irish immigrants, and became mainly
Irish Catholic. Between 1896 and 1956, the
Liverpool Overhead Railway's terminus and only underground station was
Dingle railway station, located on Park Road, the Dingle. This was the end of the line for services from Seaforth Sands in the north of the city, not to be confused with Seaforth and Litherland on the
Merseyrail line to Southport. ==Description==