Liverpool Lives
by Mo việt
Mar 20, 2025
#liverpooltrip Wayville Close, Mossley Hill, early 1940s and 2022
"Have you picked up our Liverpool Blitz walking trail? Its focus is on the devastation within the city and waterfront but did you know the Liverpool suburbs were also severely hit?
Pick up the free walking trail from our welcome desk at the Museum of Liverpool
The powerful exhibition Blitzed: Liverpool Lives, closes on 30 November
This exhibition reveals the devastation the Blitz brought to the lives and city of Liverpool in photographs taken by Liverpool City Police between 1940 and 1941. The photographs are accompanied by personal accounts, which bring to life the impact of the war through the eyes of those directly affected by the bombings.
The port city of Liverpool and surrounding areas were key targets for German bombers during the Second World War (1939-45). In Merseyside more than 4,000 civilians were killed, 10,000 homes were destroyed and 70,000 people made homeless during air raids, which peaked in the Blitz of May 1941.
Liverpool itself suffered the second highest number of civilian deaths in air raids in the country and, due to censorship, press reports often didn’t tell the whole story.
At the heart of this exhibition is the people of Liverpool; those affected by the Blitz – their memories, struggles with the aftermath and how they rebuilt their lives in the face of a terrible onslaught.
Sensory elements enable visitors to experience wartime aromas and hands-on tactile images.
Post by Mo việt | Mar 20, 2025























