I think that it was that the sea wall and prom that were built up as a defence but I may be wrong - hopefully someone will come up with some great piccys of before and after
I've always understood that, when building the prom / sea wall, they made temporary earth embankments to keep the tide at bay. I suppose they kept it as a feature once the work was completed.
What they would of 'dug out' of the dips would of been sand because in those days (1890 - 1910) the area was beaches and sand dunes.
weren't they also used as mini air strips in ww2? i think i read ut in ine of the wallasey books! barry
Yes. The Americans landed small planes on the field nearst to Wallasey Village. There were American troos billeted in the top rooms above the Melody Inn in Wallasey village. I have seen the grafiti in there. Were they always called the Dips, as I had never heard that name until a few years ago?
I but all those years ago you took your rubbish home with you, unlike the ... who seem to be using them lately. The rubbish left behind is unbelievable.
Think they are actually rubbish dumps that have been grassed over. You have to try and imagine that was all beach at one time and then they built the sea wall. It would have taken a lot of stuff to fill it in.
I doubt that the dips were ever rubbish dumps as they weren't in living memory and they wouldn't have been when New Brighton was at its prime as a major holiday resort, which started long before the sea wall was built.
I guess they were created when the sea wall was built (or shortly after) as flood water collection areas and that the term "infilled" has been interpreted as infilled with rubbish.
Alternatively they may have just areas kept low to shield them from sea breezes and were just for public amenity.
I may get proved wrong.
We don't do charity in Germany, we pay taxes. Charity is a failure of governments' responsibilities - Henning Wehn