I remember that, don't know if it's still there though. Maybe someone could check. Oh, & I used to cycle up Woodchurch Lane & past the Arno on my way to school; pretty steep up by the Arno
Yes, that's the Arno. (anyone know why it got the name of an Italian river)?.
A document dating from the reign of Edward III, dealing with an enquiry into the question of encroachments into the Forest of Wirral, treats with the occasion when Richard de Oxton was called to account for having in his possession a quarter of a rood of land in Oxton, near Arnehowe. At the period of this document, the use of the words erne, earn or arne, for eagle was quite common. Howe is well-known as a word for hill, so could it have been that the name for the Arno in medieval years was Eagle Hill?
Thanks, Colgo, that makes perfect sense; yet another example of how language changes over time. Unless my memory if failing, a rood was a quarter of an acre, so the area in question was only 1/16th. of an acre, or about 253 square metres.
I was on a site today about the viking heritage in the wirral. You all know that the vikings first settled on the wirral?? Anyway the Arno is descended from old viking just like thingwall, bromboruogh,heswall, meols and more. Just Google Wirrals Vikings it is amazing how much there is on the subject.
any body remember riding down the footpath at the top end of the arno which went down towards the playing feilds behind the shops on woodchurch road,there used to be a large tree root sticking out halfway down and if you were not carefull you would fly off your bike as it was quite steep and couldnt stop in time.
I vaguely remember behind the Kwiksave in Woodchurch Rd there used to be what we called the 'Quarries' where there seemed to be hills and hills of an orangey coloured clay.Any info on it Also we used to make bows and arrows from Bamboo bought from a shop in Grange Road How dangerous it must have been if you stuck a nail in as the arrowhead (sometimes you would put a nail on the railway lines to get flattened by a train} I remember there being a duck pond near there where we tried to hit water rats with the arrows until one of the lads turned up with an air pistol and everybody wanted to get one
Also we used to make bows and arrows from Bamboo bought from a shop in Grange Road How dangerous it must have been if you stuck a nail in as the arrowhead (sometimes you would put a nail on the railway lines to get flattened by a train} I remember there being a duck pond near there where we tried to hit water rats with the arrows until one of the lads turned up with an air pistol and everybody wanted to get one
And we survived! how, I can't imagine. Probably because the phrase "Health & Safety" had not yet been dreamed up. BTW, although I don't know exactly where on Woodchurch Rd. Kwiksave is/was, I suspect your "quarries" were the brickworks, near the co-op dairy at the top of Swan Hill. (Oh, of course, that's not there any more either).