1900-1938 During the first part of the 20th century Liverpool continued to expand, pulling in immigrants from Europe. In 1903 an
International Exhibition took place in
Edge Lane. In 1904, the building of the
Anglican Cathedral began, and by 1916 the three
Pier Head buildings, including the
Liver Building, were complete. This period marked the pinnacle of Liverpool's economic success, when it regarded itself as the "second city" of the
British Empire.
Adolf Hitler's half-brother Alois and his Irish sister-in-law
Bridget Dowling are known to have lived in Upper Stanhope Street in the 1910s. Bridget's alleged memoirs, which surfaced in the 1970s, said that Adolf stayed with them in 1912–13, although this is much disputed as many believe the memoirs to be a forgery. The maiden voyage of
Titanic in April 1912 was originally planned to depart from Liverpool, as Liverpool was its
port of registration and the home of owners
White Star Line. However, it was changed to depart from
Southampton instead. Aside from the large
Irish community in Liverpool, there were other pockets of cultural diversity. The area of Gerard, Hunter, Lionel and Whale streets, off
Scotland Road, was referred to as
Little Italy. Inspired by an old
Venetian custom, Liverpool was 'married to the sea' in September 1928. Liverpool was also home to a large Welsh population, and was sometimes referred to as the Capital of North Wales. In 1884, 1900 and 1929,
Eisteddfods were held in Liverpool. Economic changes began in the first part of the 20th century, as falls in world demand for the North West's traditional export commodities contributed to stagnation and decline in the city. Unemployment was well above the national average as early as the 1920s, and the city became known nationally for its occasionally violent religious
sectarianism.
1939-1945: World War II During World War 2, Liverpool was the control centre for the
Battle of the Atlantic. There were eighty
air-raids on Merseyside, with an especially concentrated series of raids in May 1941 which interrupted operations at the docks for almost a week. Some 2,500 people were killed, almost half the homes in the metropolitan area sustained some damage and some 11,000 were totally destroyed. Over 70,000 people were made homeless.
1946-1979 Significant rebuilding followed the war, including massive housing estates and the
Seaforth Dock, the largest dock project in Britain. However, the city has been suffering since the 1950s with the loss of numerous employers. By 1985 the population had fallen to 460,000. Declines in manufacturing and dock activity struck the city particularly hard. In 1956
Liverpool Overhead Railway and its fourteen stations were closed and demolished and in 1957
Liverpool Corporation Tramways closed after the last tram ran in Liverpool. In 1955, the
Labour Party, led locally by Jack and
Bessie Braddock, came to power in the City Council for the first time. In 1956, a
private bill sponsored by
Liverpool City Council was brought before
Parliament to develop a water reservoir from the
Tryweryn Valley. The development would include the flooding of
Capel Celyn. By obtaining authority via an Act of Parliament, Liverpool City Council would not require planning consent from the relevant Welsh local authorities. In the 1960s Liverpool became a centre of
youth culture. The city produced the distinctive
Merseybeat sound, most famously
The Beatles, and the
Liverpool poets. From the 1970s onwards Liverpool's docks and traditional manufacturing industries went into further sharp decline. The advent of
containerisation meant that Liverpool's docks ceased to be a major local employer.
Liverpool Central High Level railway station closed in 1972, as well as the
Waterloo,
Victoria and
Wapping tunnels. In 1974, Liverpool became a
metropolitan district within the newly created
metropolitan county of
Merseyside. In 1977
Liverpool Exchange railway station closed, and in 1979 the
North Liverpool Extension Line closed too. In 1972
Canadian Pacific unit
CP Ships were the last transatlantic line to operate from Liverpool.
1980s The 1980s saw Liverpool's fortunes sink to their lowest postwar point. Although the 1970s, along with the rest of Britain, had brought economic difficulties and a steady rise in unemployment, the situation in Liverpool went from bad to worse in the early 1980s, with endless factory closures and some of the highest unemployment rates in the UK. An average of 12,000 people each year were leaving the city, and 15% of its land was vacant or derelict. The club's iconic red shirt had been worn by some of the biggest names in British sport of the 1970s and 1980s, including
Kevin Keegan,
Kenny Dalglish (who also served as manager from 1985 to 1991 and again from 2011 to 2012),
Phil Neal,
Ian Rush,
Ian Callaghan and
John Barnes. The club has since won their first Premier League title and a further three FA Cups, three League Cups, a UEFA Cup and two European Cups, and fielded a new wave of stars including
Robbie Fowler,
Michael Owen,
Jamie Carragher and
Steven Gerrard.
Everton F.C., the city's original senior football club, also enjoyed a degree of success during the 1970s and 1980s. The club had enjoyed a consistent run of success during the interwar years and again in the 1960s, but after winning the league title in 1970 went 14 years without winning a major trophy, although they did hold onto the First Division place which had been theirs since 1954. Then, in 1984, Everton won the
FA Cup under the management of
Howard Kendall, who had once been a player at the club. A league title win followed in 1985, along with the club's first European trophy – the
European Cup Winners' Cup. By 1986, the city's two clubs were firmly established as the leading club sides in England as Liverpool finished league champions and Everton runners-up, and the two sides also met for the FA Cup final, which Liverpool won 3–1. The Everton side of the mid-1980s included some of the highest rated footballers in the English league at the time; goalkeeper
Neville Southall, winger
Trevor Steven, forwards
Graeme Sharp and
Andy Gray, and Gray's successor
Gary Lineker. Everton have enjoyed an unbroken run in the top flight of English football since 1954, although their only major trophy since the league title in 1987 came in 1995 when they won the FA Cup. Everton added another league title in 1987, with Liverpool finishing runners-up. Another all-Merseyside FA Cup final 1989 saw Liverpool beat Everton 3–2. This match was played just five weeks after the Hillsborough disaster.
1990s A similar national outpouring of grief and shock to the Hillsborough disaster occurred in February 1993 when
James Bulger was killed by two ten-year-old boys, Jon Venables and Robert Thompson. The two boys were found guilty of murder later in the year and sentenced to indefinite detention. The 1990s saw the continued regeneration of the city which had started in the 1980s. This is still happening in 2020. ==Recent history==