Leo H Grindon, author of
Summer Rambles In Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and Yorkshire writes of his visit to the Palace Hotel:"Over 700 species of our native plants are to be found there; nearly a hundred kinds of shells may be collected upon the sands, along with at least a score of Crustaceans and Annelids, and the fresh-water shells amount to at least thirty. Especially rich are the low wet sandy grounds that lie beyond Birkdale, and the plateaux that occur among the sand-hills beyond that noble edifice which, calling itself the 'Palace Hotel,' will some day be a first-class Sanatorium. It is of this building that, by the courtesy and liberality of the proprietors, a view is prefixed as frontispiece to the present volume. No other at Southport is so truly a seaside place, being quite away from town-disturbances, yet enjoying the advantages of a rail-way station close at hand. The look-out in all directions is very pleasing, that over the water particularly so; and from the gallery at the summit is obtained a panoramic view so vast and varied, that Southport need never be contemned again for its flatness."Developed by the Southport Hotel Company (funded mainly by Manchester merchants), the Birkdale Palace Hotel was built on a site at the end of Weld Road, fronting the
Birkdale shore. The long luxurious hotel opened in 1866 at a cost of £60,000 and was a very grandiose building, having magnificent reception rooms and 75 bedrooms. A long-standing rumour was that the hotel had been built the wrong way round, so instead of the hotel front facing out to sea, it in fact faced inland. It was also said that the architect, William Mangnall then committed suicide by jumping off the roof of the building. There have been stories of how the architect's ghost was heard to travel up and down in the lifts and was heard walking along the second floor stone floors whilst the building was being demolished. Unfortunately for lovers of ghost stories, recent research has revealed that there is no evidence that the hotel was built the wrong way round and William Mangnall actually died of
consumption at
Lord Street, Southport, two years after the hotel was opened. In 1881 the hotel was completely refurbished and the grounds were reduced to , as the hotel had previously gone into liquidation, because it was not accessible by road or tram. The
Southport & Cheshire Lines Extension Railway (
SCLER) opened
Birkdale Palace railway station adjacent to the hotel in 1884. A variety of baths were installed, a pipe built to draw in salt water from the sea and a lift installed to all floors. It re-opened with over 60 staff, as a
hydropathic establishment to rival the very successful
Smedley Hydro.{{Cite journal| last1=Bradley| first1=James| last2=Dupree| first2= Mageurite|last3=Durie|first3=Alastair | title=Taking the Water Cure: The Hydropathic Movement in Scotland, 1840–1940|journal=Business and Economic History|volume=26|issue=2|page=429 The Birkdale Palace had extensive surrounding grounds providing facilities for Croquet, Bowling, Archery, Children's Playground, Walks, Bowers, Seats and Stables. Local residents could buy contracts to use the facilities. A high embankment on the seafront kept the facilities sheltered from prevailing winds, the structure being topped with a promenade to overlook the shore. ==The twentieth century==