GREAT CROSBY
Crossebi, 1176; Major Grosseby, 1211; Crosseby,
1212; Micle Crosseby, 1292; Much and Great
Crosby were both used in the sixteenth century.
The ancient township of Great Crosby, which includes Waterloo, lies on the northern shore of the
estuary of the Mersey, with a level sandy beach extending over three miles from north-west to southeast; it stretches inland some two miles, and has an
area of 2,168 acres, (fn. 1) of which 1,907 acres belong to
the present diminished township. The population in
1901 was 7,555, and that of Waterloo 9,839.
The country is flat and sandy, being in places still
very marshy, so that deep ditches, especially in the
north, are required to drain the fields and meadows.
The crops grown are principally oats, rye, and potatoes. At Hall Road there are golf-links on both
sides of the railway, and a broad stretch of sandhills,
yet unbuilt upon, extends along the northern half of
the sea coast. The geological formation consists of
the keuper series of the new red sandstone or trias,
being represented almost entirely by lower keuper
sandstones, but in the southern part of the township
the waterstone is found overlying the former. From
the shore inland for three-quarters of a mile the
underlying formation is obscured by blown sand.
The village, which lies more than a mile inland, is
becoming modernized and growing quickly, especially
along the principal road, that from Liverpool to
Southport, which crosses the township in a northerly
direction, with roads branching off to the shore and
to Thornton. The Liverpool and Southport line of
the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, opened in 1848,
with stations at Waterloo and Blundellsands, also
passes through the township. An electric tramway
connects Great Crosby with the Seaforth terminus of
the Liverpool Overhead Railway.
The township of Waterloo has been carved out of
the southern part of Great Crosby. To the north of
it are Brighton le Sands and Blundellsands; these
places consist principally of modern residences, which
afford Liverpool people convenient dwellings at the
seaside. In 1889 Colonel Nicholas Blundell gave
3½ acres to the local board for a recreation ground. (fn. 2)
Crosby Channel forms the principal entrance to
the Mersey; it is about three-quarters of a mile
wide. By constant dredging a sufficient depth of
water for the passage of the great liners is maintained.
There is a lightship in the channel.
A copper token was struck in 1667 by a Crosby
man. (fn. 3) A view of the place in 1715 is extant. (fn. 4)
The village festival, known as the Goose Feast, was
kept in October. (fn. 5)
The Crosby races used to be held once or twice a
year—the first week of August was the proper time—
on a course on the shore side of Great and Little
Crosby, which had been 'stooped out' by William
Blundell in 1654 at the request of Lord Molyneux.
The date is noticeable. (fn. 6)
The little triangular green of the village is now
paved. Here is the ancient St. Michael's Well, which
has been covered in, and is surmounted with steps and
a wooden cross. (fn. 7) There are sundials dated 1766
and 1795 at the Mulberries and Crosby House.
The 'submerged forest' off the coast of Great and
Little Crosby was described as visible in 1796. (fn. 8)
A great boulder stone, found close by, is placed in
the village, protected by an iron railing.
Lawrence Johnson, educated at Oxford and Douay,
executed in 1582 and declared 'Blessed' by Leo XIII
in 1886, was son of Richard Johnson of Great Crosby,
and laboured for a short time in Lancashire. (fn. 9)
A local board for the part not included in Waterloo-with-Seaforth was formed in 1863; (fn. 10) this in 1894
became an urban district council with nine members.
MANOR
GREAT CROSBY is not mentioned by name in Domesday Book,
being in 1066 one of the six berewicks
dependent on the royal manor of West Derby. (fn. 11) This
dependency continued after the Conquest, the manor,
assessed as four plough-lands, forming part of the
demesne of the honour of Lancaster (fn. 12) attached to
West Derby, until it was sold by Charles I in 1625
to Lord Mandeville and others. (fn. 13)
From this time it descended
with Sefton until in 1798 it
was sold, the purchaser being a
trustee of the Blundells of Little
Crosby. (fn. 14) The present lord of
the manor is Mr. William Joseph
Blundell. (fn. 15)

Blundell of Little Crosby. Sable, ten billets, 4, 3, 2 and 1, argent.
This family's connexion with
the place began in the twelfth
century, John, count of Mortain,
having granted it between 1189
and 1194 to his forester, Robert
de Ainsdale, at a yearly rent of
100s. (fn. 16) This grant was probably revoked after John's
rebellion in 1194, (fn. 17) for on coming to the throne he
confirmed it. (fn. 18) It was, however, very soon resigned
or forfeited, for in 1212 it was found that Robert
de Ainsdale held only an eighth part of the manor,
that is four oxgangs of land, and that by the service
of being steward; (fn. 19) the tenure was converted during
the reign of Henry III into fee farm, for 10s. yearly. (fn. 20)
This portion remained with Robert's descendants, (fn. 21)
whose history is given in the account of the adjacent
manor of Little Crosby.
Another eighth portion or the manor was in 1212
held by Simon de Crosby. (fn. 22) He was followed about
1225 by Robert de Crosby; (fn. 23) Richard de Crosby (fn. 24)
and others bearing the local name (fn. 25) occur later; but
during the thirteenth century one Sturmi de Crosby
succeeded, and sold it to William son of Henry de
Walton. (fn. 26) This William was followed by his son
Simon (fn. 27) and grandson Henry, the latter being returned as holding half a plough-land here in 1323–4. (fn. 28)
Yet it would seem clear that before this date Simon
de Walton had sold his lands to Nicholas Blundell, (fn. 29)
for they were settled as dower upon Agnes, (fn. 30) the
widow of Nicholas's son David; and were afterwards granted to his grandson Richard, who married
Emma daughter of Thomas de Molyneux of Sefton. (fn. 31)
They were in 1346 held by Emma's brother Thomas
de Molyneux, perhaps as trustee. (fn. 32) There were no
children by the marriage, and in 1352 William, as
son and heir of Nicholas Blundell, a brother of David,
claimed from Thomas son of Thomas de Molyneux
two oxgangs of land in Great Crosby which he alleged
should have descended to him. (fn. 33) It does not appear
whether this estate reverted to the Blundells of Crosby
or passed to the heirs of Thomas. (fn. 34)
Another portion, also originally an eighth, was
held in 1212 by Roger Mallot or Malloc, (fn. 35) and descended soon afterwards to Robert Mallot. (fn. 36) Thomas
Banastre held it by charter in 1298; (fn. 37) while in 1323–4
John and William sons of Roger had the same portion. (fn. 38)
A sub-division followed, and in 1346 the tenants of
each of the three oxgangs of land which composed the
tenement were separately recorded thus: Richard de
Wall, paying 1s. 6d.; Robert de Wyresdale, Roger
Bolymer, and Margery daughter of Thomas Jordanson, 3s.; and William Rogerson with John del Dale,
half; and Henry Woodward, half, 3s. (fn. 39) Some fragments can be traced further, and appear to have been
acquired by Molyneux of Sefton. (fn. 40)
The greater part of the land of the manor was held
in villeinage, and in the extent of 1323–4 already
quoted is a list of the twenty-four holdings, the tenements ranging from a quarter of an oxgang to three
and a half oxgangs, with a note appended that the
oxgang of land contained 5 acres, the assized rent
being at the rate of 4s. 6d. for each oxgang of land.
It is further stated that 'the commonalty of the town
of Crosby holds a certain field called the Ford, and
pays 10s. yearly at Michaelmas.' (fn. 41) The extent of
1346 enters much more minutely into the customs
and conditions of the township. (fn. 42) The free tenants
remained as formerly, but William de Liverpool,
clerk, and Nichola his wife, had acquired 6 acres next
Balifield by charter of the lord's father. (fn. 43)
In 1246 the town of Great Crosby was amerced
40s. for wreckage found on the shore, because the
booty was taken without warrant and hidden. (fn. 44)
In the reign of Henry VI there was a dispute
between Henry Blundell, lord of Little Crosby, and
the king's tenants of Great Crosby about the boundaries. By the assent of Sir Richard Molyneux, steward
of the latter place, Thomas Lathom, then escheator,
was made arbitrator, and taking sixteen of the tenants
he rode with them himself to survey the boundary, setting up the meres then and there, after which Henry
Blundell made a ditch along the boundary so marked
out. (fn. 45)
It was an established rule that no man should
build any house except within the precincts of the
town, wherefore the king's tenants in 1532 complained that a certain Nicholas Johnson, supported by
James Blundell of Ince and about forty companions,
had built a house on a new site, in defiance of the
other tenants and the constables of the town. Moreover 'the said Nicholas, with eight others, for about
three weeks after the said house was built, armed
with bows, arrows, bucklers, &c., kept watch by
night, so that the said tenants durst not walk out in
the evening as they had been accustomed to do, and
see their goods.' Further, on the Eve of St. Michael
in Monte Tumba he had gone into the chapel and
kept the door shut, so that neither 'strange pilgrims'
nor the townspeople could enter to pray or make
their offerings. (fn. 46)
Queen Elizabeth in 1602 enclosed 200 acres of
the common or waste lands of the manor, to be enjoyed by the tenants in severalty by copy of court
roll according to the custom of the manor, paying
4d. for every acre improved, and to be subject to the
usual fines. (fn. 47)
The Johnson family appear to have been among
the principal tenants in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, but it is difficult to trace the family back
with certainty owing to the use of the christian name
as surname in the precise sense, as 'son of John,' so
that the surname varied from generation to generation. (fn. 48)
A number of 'Papists' registered their estates here
in 1717—Henry Aspinwall of Croxteth, Richard
Cartwright, Edward Hatton, John Hunt, John
Johnson, Robert Johnson, John Lurting, Thomas
Syers and Mary his wife, Thomas Thelwall, and
Richard Westhead. (fn. 49)
The court rolls of the manor, dating from the
time of Henry VIII, are kept in a box in St. Luke's
church gallery. A few earlier ones are at Croxteth. (fn. 50)
Great Crosby Marsh was enclosed in 1816. (fn. 51) The
old bull-croft, belonging to the township, stood in
Marsh Lane; the assembly rooms are built upon a
portion of it. (fn. 52)
CHURCH
Although from its name it may be
supposed that there had been a chapel
at Great Crosby from an early time, the
first direct reference hitherto noticed is that quoted
above, in 1532. From this it will be seen that it
was a place of pilgrimage, and it may further be
gathered that the feast day was St. Michael in Monte
Tumba, 16 October. (fn. 53)
The Parliamentary Commissioners of 1650 described
it as 'an ancient chapel well situated, the present
incumbent being Mr. John Kidd, an able minister,
who hath for his salary the tithes of the said place,
being worth £30 per annum,' and they considered
that it might be made an independent parish
church. (fn. 54)
The old chapel of St. Michael was replaced in
1774 by a brick building with a tower. (fn. 55) This was
pulled down in 1864, though the tower continued to
stand until 1880. The present church of St. Luke,
on the main road, some quarter of a mile from the old
one, was built in 1854. There is a graveyard.
The church plate includes a paten (date 1724)
given by Mrs. Elizabeth Martin in 1766; and a
chalice (initials I.L.) of Elizabethan style, but apparently of eighteenth-century manufacture, the corresponding paten of which is among the Sefton church
plate. There is a sundial (date 1752) in the churchyard.
The following is an imperfect list of curates-incharge and incumbents since the beginning of the
seventeenth century (fn. 56) ; several of them were also
masters of the grammar school:—
|
| Bef. |
1650 |
John Kidd, M.A. |
|
1680 |
John Wareing, B.A. (? Emmanuel Coll. Camb.) |
|
1711 |
Gerard Wareing, B.A. |
| oc. |
1733 |
Robert Bellis |
|
1733 |
Anthony Halsall |
|
1756 |
Edward Owen, M.A. (Jesus Coll. Oxf.) |
|
1758 |
Wilfred Troutbeck |
|
1783 |
Nicholas Rigbye Baldwin, M.A. (fellow of Peterhouse, Camb.) |
|
1817 |
Jacob Hodgson |
|
1840 |
Edmund Boteler Chalmer, M.A. (T.C.D.) |
|
1844 |
Richard Walker |
|
1855 |
Joseph Clark |
|
1870 |
Robert Love, M.A. (T.C.D.) |
|
1902 |
Frederic Arthur Bartlett, M.A. (Pembroke Coll. Oxf.) |
Modern churches connected with the Establishment are those of St. Nicholas, Blundellsands, and
St. Faith, Great Crosby. The former was built in
1874, (fn. 57) the latter in 1900. The incumbents are presented by bodies of trustees.
The Presbyterian Church of England built a chapel
at Blundellsands in 1898. There is a Wesleyan
Methodist church at Blundellsands, built in 1891; it
has a tall and graceful spire. The Congregationalists
have a school church near the village, built in 1884. (fn. 58)
The Roman Catholic church of SS. Peter and
Paul, Great Crosby, was opened in 1894. The
mission was inaugurated in 1825. There are convents of the Sisters of Nazareth and the Sisters of
St. Paul, the former occupying Crosby House. At
Blundellsands the church of St. Joseph was opened in
1886. (fn. 59)
The grammar school was founded in 1619 by the
will of John Harrison, citizen and merchant tailor of
London, whose father had been born in Great Crosby. (fn. 60)
Another school, at first called the Mistress's School,
was founded by the will of Catherine Halsall, 1758. (fn. 61)