Showing posts with label bollards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bollards. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 March 2008

More Bollards

 

When I did a blog on bollards GB commented I would find many in ‘new’ Liverpool compared to my 1960s trips around the side streets. How right he was!


There are bollards everywhere.



Unfortunately I couldn’t find a single old-fashioned one though one of the styles was at least a reproduction of an earlier style. (I could tell they weren’t 1960s ones by the material they were made of and by the .com advert on them!)



Above are a just a few of the styles to be found nowadays.


In Chinatown the bollards are in keeping with the style of some of the other street furniture like lamp posts.

Thursday, 14 February 2008

Bollards

 

Dr Johnson is said to have touched bollards for good luck. Nowadays he would find it hard to indulge his superstition as most of them have disappeared – along with a lot of other old street furniture. These photos were all taken in Liverpool in the 1960s. I am hoping to have a wander around the city centre in the near future and shall see if I can find any that still survive.


Bollards, also called stumps or carriage posts, were usually placed so as to bar traffic in small roads and alleyways (such as here in Temple Lane), protect the edges of doorways into yards, or to keep carts from parking on the pavements. Some bollards were quite elaborately made.


Many bollards were erected around the time of the Napoleonic wars and were created from old cannon muzzles, their ends filled in with small domes. This one was at the corner of Wood Street and Colquitt Street.


Bollards with rings on them were also used as tethering or hitching posts for horses.


Most iron bollards are now painted white, black or silver. During World War II they were mostly painted white to enable them to be seen in the blackout. This bollard was near Rainford Square and has the style of painting that was commonly applied in towns in the early 1960s – black and white horizontal stripes.

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