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'''Tue Brook House''', 695 West Derby Road, [[Liverpool]] was built in [[1615]] as a [[farmhouse]]. It is now owned by [[Liverpool City Council]] and must be the city's most unusual council house. It is thought to have been originally owned by John Mercer, a yeoman farmer and during the Victorian period was the home and workshop of a Mr.Fletcher, a wheelwright. Some parts of the building contain sections of it's original "wattle and daub" construction, which can be seen through glass panels.
'''Tue Brook House''', 695 West Derby Road, [[Liverpool]] was built in [[1615]] as a [[farmhouse]]. It is now owned by [[Liverpool City Council]] and must be the city's most unusual council house. It is thought to have been originally owned by John Mercer, a yeoman farmer and during the Victorian period was the home and workshop of a Mr.Fletcher, a wheelwright. Some parts of the building contain sections of it's original "wattle and daub" construction, which can be seen through glass panels.



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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.merseygateway.org/pastliverpool/galleries/housing/gallery/different/images/large/s1.jpg Picture circa 1900]
*[http://www.merseygateway.org/pastliverpool/galleries/housing/gallery/different/images/large/s1.jpg Picture circa 1900]

Revision as of 23:19, 25 April 2008

Tue Brook House
Map
General information
Town or cityLiverpool
CountryEngland
Construction started1615

Tue Brook House, 695 West Derby Road, Liverpool was built in 1615 as a farmhouse. It is now owned by Liverpool City Council and must be the city's most unusual council house. It is thought to have been originally owned by John Mercer, a yeoman farmer and during the Victorian period was the home and workshop of a Mr.Fletcher, a wheelwright. Some parts of the building contain sections of it's original "wattle and daub" construction, which can be seen through glass panels.