In My Liverpool Home

Scenes around the annual Orange Order march in Liverpool, circa July 1982. The parades typically build up to 12 July celebrations marking Prince William of Orange's victory over King James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. The 1980s saw the City of Liverpool's fortunes sink to their lowest postwar point. Although the 1970s 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. One of the most influential figures in Liverpool was Derek Hatton, a former fire fighter who was elected to the city council in 1979. Militant supporters were elected to key positions within the Liverpool Labour Party and, in 1983, the same year that Margaret Thatcher won her second general election by a landslide, Labour won the city council elections on a radical socialist manifesto. It immediately cancelled the 1,200 redundancies planned by the previous administration, froze council rents and launched an ambitious house-building programme targeting the city's most deprived neighborhoods. Former Grenadier Guardsman John Stoddart had returned to the City where he was born after leaving the army. His photographs from the early 1980s provide an important record of those troubled times, and for John Stoddart the city gave him many opportunities to practice his photography. In 1984 he moved to London where he worked as a freelance for magazines and newspapers for more than 35 years. (Photograph by John Stoddart/Popperfoto via Getty Images)
Scenes around the annual Orange Order march in Liverpool, circa July 1982. The parades typically build up to 12 July celebrations marking Prince William of Orange's victory over King James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. The 1980s saw the City of Liverpool's fortunes sink to their lowest postwar point. Although the 1970s 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. One of the most influential figures in Liverpool was Derek Hatton, a former fire fighter who was elected to the city council in 1979. Militant supporters were elected to key positions within the Liverpool Labour Party and, in 1983, the same year that Margaret Thatcher won her second general election by a landslide, Labour won the city council elections on a radical socialist manifesto. It immediately cancelled the 1,200 redundancies planned by the previous administration, froze council rents and launched an ambitious house-building programme targeting the city's most deprived neighborhoods. Former Grenadier Guardsman John Stoddart had returned to the City where he was born after leaving the army. His photographs from the early 1980s provide an important record of those troubled times, and for John Stoddart the city gave him many opportunities to practice his photography. In 1984 he moved to London where he worked as a freelance for magazines and newspapers for more than 35 years. (Photograph by John Stoddart/Popperfoto via Getty Images)
In My Liverpool Home
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クレジット:
報道写真番号:
1220230246
コレクション:
Popperfoto
作成日:
1982年07月01日(木)
アップロード日:
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リリース情報:
リリースされていません。 詳細情報
ソース:
Popperfoto
オブジェクト名:
liverpoolecho.jpg
最大ファイルサイズ:
1576 x 2362 px (13.34 x 20.00 cm) - 300 dpi - 3 MB