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Liverpool Audio Tour: Below the Liver Birds

Audio guide13 stops

Liverpool's waterfront looks like an empire of merchants but is really a working hierarchy in disguise — clerks pen-pushing at Pier Head, sailors paid off on the dock road, dockers picked at the seven-o'clock pen, and women, children and Black seafarers cut out of the wage but doing the unpaid labour that ran the port. This self-guided audio tour walks the working day of a port city — from the Sailors' Church on Chapel Street, past the Cunard clerks' palace and the Royal Liver Friendly Society founded by nine working men in a pub, into the Albert Dock warehouses that handled bonded tobacco and the gates of the Sailors' Home that tried to break the crimps' racket, through the Bluecoat charity school for the orphans of the port, into the Cotton Brokers' Ring that ran the world cotton market from Old Hall Street, through the Cavern's lunchtime sessions where typists and apprentices spent their dinner-hour, onto the very plateau where on 13 August 1911 the police hidden inside St George's Hall baton-charged a strike rally of eighty-five thousand, up the steps of the Walker — free to the working public since 1877 — past Lewis's 'Friend to the People' department store, into the Catholic Cathedral built on the floor of the Brownlow Hill Workhouse where the city's poor picked oakum twelve hours a day, and finishing at the Philharmonic Dining Rooms — a pub built for the wage-earner by trade-school craftsmen and listed Grade I for its trouble. Walk slowly. The Liverpool you came to see was made by people who paid for it with their working day.

Tour preview

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About this tour

  • schedule
    Duration 130–150 minsGo at your own pace
  • straighten
    6.4 km walking routeFollow the guided path
  • location_on
  • wifi_off
    Works offlineDownload once, use anywhere
  • all_inclusive
    Lifetime accessReplay anytime, forever
  • location_on
    Starts at Cunard Building

Stops on this tour

Cunard Building
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Cunard BuildingBuilding in Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK
Liver Building
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Liver BuildingGrade I listed office building located in Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK
Liverpool Parish Church (Our Lady and Saint Nicholas)
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Liverpool Parish Church (Our Lady and Saint Nicholas)Church in Liverpool, England
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Cotton Exchange Building Old Hall StreetThe 1906 Cotton Exchange Building, designed by Huon Arthur Matear and Frank Worthington Simon and opened by the Prince and Princess of Wales on 30 November 1906 at a cost of around £300,000, was the first purpose-built cotton exchange in England. Its trading floor housed the famous 'ring' or 'pit' where brokers 'from Germany, Prussia, Russia, Greece, North America, India and Britain stood around this ring in the centre of the dealing floor … to strike business deals'. Firms like M & J Pool and Reynolds & Gibson — the latter earning £22,510 from futures brokerage and only £12,345 from selling actual cotton in 1913 — ran the world cotton market from this floor under the Cotton Brokers' Association's 1867 standard contract. The Old Hall Street front was demolished 1967-69, but the Edmund Street rear, with its larvikite columns and 'north light' windows for sample inspection, survives. The last prices were called at noon on 31 March 1941.
The Cavern Club
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The Cavern ClubMusic venue in Liverpool, England
Royal Albert Dock Liverpool
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Royal Albert Dock LiverpoolComplex of dock buildings and warehouses in Liverpool, England

Frequently asked questions

How do I start the tour?

After purchase, download the AudaTours app and enter your redemption code. The tour will be ready to start immediately - just tap play and follow the GPS-guided route.

Do I need internet during the tour?

No! Download the tour before you start and enjoy it fully offline. Only the chat feature requires internet. We recommend downloading on WiFi to save mobile data.

Is this a guided group tour?

No - this is a self-guided audio tour. You explore independently at your own pace, with audio narration playing through your phone. No tour guide, no group, no schedule.

How long does the tour take?

Most tours take 60–90 minutes to complete, but you control the pace entirely. Pause, skip stops, or take breaks whenever you want.

What if I can't finish the tour today?

No problem! Tours have lifetime access. Pause and resume whenever you like - tomorrow, next week, or next year. Your progress is saved.

What languages are available?

All tours are available in 50+ languages. Select your preferred language when redeeming your code. Note: language cannot be changed after tour generation.

Where do I access the tour after purchase?

Download the free AudaTours app from the App Store or Google Play. Enter your redemption code (sent via email) and the tour will appear in your library, ready to download and start.

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Satisfaction guaranteed

If you don't enjoy the tour, we'll refund your purchase. Contact us at [email protected]

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This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
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Christoph
Brighton Tour
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Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.
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