Dawpool was a village and port in Cheshire, England. The village was located between Thurstaston and Caldy on the Wirral Peninsula.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
^"Dawpool Cottages, Dawpool Bank, Dawpool and Dawpool School :: Survey of English Place-Names". The English Place-Name Society. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
^Weston, Alan (23 May 2021). "Vanished villages from Wirral's past that no longer exist". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
^Chappell, Gavin. "Lost Villages of Wirral". Gavin Chappell. Retrieved 1 May 2024. In the eighteenth century, Dawpool, which lay between Caldy and Thurstaston was a significant harbour, based on the anchorage at Dawpool Deep. It had seen the writer Jonathan Swift pass through on his way to and from Dublin, and had employed two customs men, due to extensive smuggling operations in the area.
^Hewitt, William (1922). The Wirral Peninsula: An Outline Regional Survey. University Press of Liverpool, Limited.
^Fenwick, George Lee (1896). A History of the Ancient City of Chester from the Earliest Times. Phillipson and Golder.
^Young, Harold Edgar (1909). A Perambulation of the Hundred of Wirral in the County of Chester: With an Account of the Principal Highways and Byways, Old Halls, Ancient Churches, and Interesting Villages Situated Between the Rivers Mersey and Dee ... Henry Young & sons.
^Institution of Civil Engineers (Great Britain) (1898). Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. The Institution.
^Craig, Robin (18 October 2017). British Tramp Shipping, 1750-1914. Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-1-78694-911-0.
Thurstaston and Caldy on the Wirral Peninsula. "Dawpool Cottages, Dawpool Bank, Dawpool and Dawpool School :: Survey of English Place-Names". The English Place-Name...
was managed and partly a family holiday. On 26 October 1887, they left Dawpool and travelled by train across Europe, seeing the sights of France, Switzerland...
'Dawpool', designed by Richard Norman Shaw, was demolished by explosives in 1927. Still standing in the village is the original building of Dawpool Primary...
at Cragside, two notable examples were created for the now-demolished Dawpool Hall on the Wirral. One of these now forms the porch of The Pantheon at...
great hall at Haddon Hall, Derbyshire, although Saint considers Shaw's Dawpool Hall, Cheshire as the more likely source. Pevsner and Richmond mention...
implement shed at Dawpool Farm, Thurstaston (1075379)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 16 December 2014 Historic England, "Dawpool Farmhouse,...
in 1880 includes a chronological list of some ships launched in 1880. "Dawpool". The Yard. Retrieved 18 February 2017. "Launch from the Queen's Island"...
harbouring facilities developed at Shotwick, Burton, Neston, Parkgate, Dawpool, and "Hoyle Lake" or Hoylake. However, there was not a gradual progression...
Broughton Hall Calderstones Mansion House Carnatic Hall Croxteth Hall Dawpool (demolished) Eccleston Hall Formby Hall Gayton Hall Ince Blundell Hall...
facilities developed on the Wirral bank at Shotwick, Burton, Neston, Parkgate, Dawpool, and "Hoyle Lake" or Hoylake. The excavation of the New Cut in 1737, to...
Helen & Mary Great Britain The ship was driven ashore and wrecked near Dawpool, Cheshire. She was on a voyage from Liverpool to Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône...
Cape Finisterre, Spain. Her crew were rescued. She was on a voyage from Dawpool, Cheshire to Venice. Nossa Senhora do Carmo Portugal The ship was lost...
Llandudno. A secondary beam shone up the River Dee, towards the hamlet of Dawpool, in Cheshire, on the English side of the estuary. Whilst in service, the...