icburns
pyar sauced
TL;DR
Where are some good places around the city to experience what life may have been like in late '40s/'50s Liverpool (relegation aside)? Does anyone have familiarity with records at the University of Liverpool, or somewhere I could find preserved documents from that period?
I'm hoping you all can help me out here with some suggestions. My girlfriend's grandfather passed away recently. Without boring you too much with family history, here is some context:
In addition to being one fly motherf***er, he was a respected academic and historian in China, which made him a politically controversial figure. Anyway, after being arrested by occupying Japanese forces and facing internal opposition in the aftermath, he sought to complete his doctorate from the Department of Geography at the University of Liverpool in 1946.
Though my girlfriend and I are unable to make the trip, her father is planning to spend a few days in Liverpool later this month in his father's memory. General visiting advice is welcome, but there are loads of existing threads on that topic. I'm more curious how to get a Chinese-American man into libraries to look at old newspapers and stuff. He's a photographer, so even areas with striking visuals of the crumbling remains of 1940s Liverpool might be of particular interest.
Thanks all, it's good to be back on GOT.
Where are some good places around the city to experience what life may have been like in late '40s/'50s Liverpool (relegation aside)? Does anyone have familiarity with records at the University of Liverpool, or somewhere I could find preserved documents from that period?
I'm hoping you all can help me out here with some suggestions. My girlfriend's grandfather passed away recently. Without boring you too much with family history, here is some context:
In addition to being one fly motherf***er, he was a respected academic and historian in China, which made him a politically controversial figure. Anyway, after being arrested by occupying Japanese forces and facing internal opposition in the aftermath, he sought to complete his doctorate from the Department of Geography at the University of Liverpool in 1946.
Though my girlfriend and I are unable to make the trip, her father is planning to spend a few days in Liverpool later this month in his father's memory. General visiting advice is welcome, but there are loads of existing threads on that topic. I'm more curious how to get a Chinese-American man into libraries to look at old newspapers and stuff. He's a photographer, so even areas with striking visuals of the crumbling remains of 1940s Liverpool might be of particular interest.
Thanks all, it's good to be back on GOT.