LIVERPOOL Travel Guide – The Best City in the UK

Welcome to Liverpool. This isn’t your average 
travel destination. It’s the city that gave us The Beatles, two football clubs who hate each 
other more than anything, and an accent so strong it should come with subtitles. Liverpool 
has chaos. Charm. A waterfront that built empires. This city’s got attitude baked into 
its bricks, and music that changed the world. Liverpool sits on the eastern side of the Irish 
Sea, on the River Mersey – that famously brown, churning, untrustworthy body of water. The name 
“Merseyside” was invented to confuse outsiders and give the BBC something to say instead 
of “Liverpool” when something explodes. Geographically speaking, Liverpool is basically 
the edge of England near the border with Wales. Liverpool’s official weather forecast is 
“wet with a 90% chance of wind slapping you in the face.” Sunny days are 
viewed with suspicion, like a setup. Liverpool was built on Seven Hills, just 
like Rome. Except instead of emperors and marble statues, Liverpool’s hills come with 
dodgy pavements and breathtaking views of Tesco. The city’s rivalry with it’s neighbour 
Manchester is ancient, bitter, and completely ridiculous – and yet, very real. It started back 
in the Industrial Revolution when Manchester built a canal to avoid paying port fees to Liverpool. 
To this day, Liverpool sees Manchester as a beige concrete blob, and Manchester sees 
Liverpool as a noisy seaside village. Liverpool’s history is rooted in water. Actually, 
it was one of the world’s greatest ports. Once upon a time, around 1207, some bored king with a 
fondness for bad weather decided to give Liverpool a royal charter. But its rise as a global port 
began in the 18th century. It’s said the sun never set on the British Empire – and for a while, 
half its ships left from Liverpool. By the 19th century, the city had gone full Victorian 
gothic nightmare. The docks were buzzing. The air was polluted. Children were working 
in factories while being chased by cholera. In short: business was booming. Also, the 
Irish showed up. A lot of them. They were poor, and very good at fighting. Naturally, they became 
part of Liverpool’s DNA. That’s why half the city sounds like Dublin got drunk and crashed into 
Manchester. Today, the Royal Albert Dock is the crown jewel of the waterfront. What used 
to be warehouses and sweat is now museums and tapas bars. The Merseyside Maritime Museum, 
the sobering International Slavery Museum, and the Museum of Liverpool, offer great 
insights into a city that changed the world. Liverpool has a younger population than the 
UK average, due in part to its large student population. Liverpudlians, or “Scousers”, as 
they proudly and very loudly call themselves, are a fascinating sub-species of Homo 
sapiens distinguished by their melodic accents. You haven’t truly lived until you’ve 
witnessed a Scouser in their native plumage: a full Adidas tracksuit, white 
socks pulled up like flags of war, and a tan so deep you’d think they were commuting 
from Ibiza. With a population nearing 500,000, and over 2 million in the broader 
metropolitan region, Liverpool combines urban density with coastal openness. That’s a 
lot of Scousers per square mile, and each one louder than the last. But they have a welcoming 
spirit and a willingness to share stories and laughter. They will also politely… or sometimes 
not-so-politely, tell you which football club you should support. Though be warned, picking 
the wrong one could see your pint confiscated. Speaking of football, Liverpool 
is football. It is ritual, identity, and social glue. Liverpool FC and 
Everton FC represent more than mere teams. They are historical institutions – mirrors of class, 
neighborhood, and civic pride. On match days, the city is electric. But here’s a controversial 
truth for you: Everton is the better club. Why? Because Everton fans understand true 
loyalty. They know pain, they know patience, and most importantly, their captain has never 
slipped on the halfway line and handed the title to Chelsea. Evertonians walk with dignity, 
even if it’s straight into the Championship. If you’re a true Everton fan, hit the 
like button to support our channel. Liverpool is both birthplace and museum of popular 
music. The Beatles are everywhere. From the statue at Pier Head to the Beatles Story Museum to 
the legendary Cavern Club, they are as much a part of Liverpool’s identity as the River 
Mersey. They are sites of collective memory, deeply embedded in global pop consciousness. 
But to understand their roots is to understand Liverpool itself. The Beatles emerged not 
just from talent, but from a mix of Irish, Welsh, Caribbean, and working-class 
influences that defined the post-war city. And then there’s the cheeky alternative 
theory: The Beatles were great because they left Liverpool. After all, one can only get so 
much inspiration from fog and fish and chips. The River Mersey is more than just a body of 
water running past Liverpool. It’s the force that shaped the city’s identity, industry, 
and global reach. Flowing for about 70 miles, the Mersey begins in Stockport and runs 
westward, eventually opening into the Irish Sea between Liverpool and the Wirral Peninsula. 
Once heavily polluted by industrial waste, the river is now much cleaner, home to wildlife such 
as salmon, otters, and various bird species. The riverbanks have been revitalized, with promenades, 
parks, and art installations along both sides. Immortalized by Gerry and the Pacemakers 
in the 1964 hit “Ferry Cross the Mersey”, the river’s ferry service is a cultural icon. 
Operated today by Merseytravel, the ferry still runs between Liverpool and terminals in the 
Wirral, offering a practical commuter service and scenic cruises for tourists. The view of the 
Liverpool skyline from the ferry, with the Liver Building and Royal Albert Dock in frame, is one 
of the most iconic sights in the United Kingdom. Liverpool’s skyline tells a story. A bold, 
layered, sometimes unexpected story. One told in stone, brick, glass, and vision. And at 
the heart of it are four landmarks that sum up the city’s spirit better than any guidebook ever 
could. Let’s start with the grand dame herself: St George’s Hall. Opened in 1854, it was built during 
Liverpool’s 19th-century boom. The result? One of the finest examples of neoclassical architecture 
in the world. With its grand columns, sculptures, and sweeping staircase, the hall is a temple 
to civic pride. Just up the hill is something entirely different: the Liverpool Metropolitan 
Cathedral, opened in 1967. With its striking circular structure and iconic crown-like spire, 
this is modern architecture with spiritual punch. It was built in response to a growing Catholic 
population, and its unique design was the product of both faith and necessity. A few streets away, 
towering above the city from its sandstone perch, stands the Liverpool Anglican Cathedral, 
one of the largest in the world. Designed by a 22-year-old Giles Gilbert Scott (yes, the 
same man who later designed the red phone box), the cathedral took over 70 years to complete. 
It’s a true Gothic revival masterpiece, but also very much a product of its time. 
Across the river, on the Wirral Peninsula, sits Birkenhead Park, a peaceful oasis with 
a surprisingly global legacy. Opened in 1847, it was the first publicly funded park in the 
world. Designed by Joseph Paxton, it was meant to give working-class families the kind of beauty 
and fresh air once reserved for aristocrats. It was a revolutionary idea, and it worked. A young 
American architect named Frederick Law Olmsted visited in the 1850s and was so inspired that 
he went on to design New York’s Central Park. Liverpool is roughly 220 miles from London and 
just 35 minutes from Manchester (or slightly more if your train was built before the Industrial 
Revolution). At the heart of Liverpool’s rail network is Merseyrail, one of the most extensive 
local rail systems in the UK outside London. It comprises the Northern Line, Wirral Line, and 
parts of the City Line, connecting Liverpool to nearby towns such as Southport, Chester, and 
West Kirby. It’s a public transport masterclass. Underground, overground, and shockingly punctual. 
Want to get from the suburbs to the city centre in 20 minutes? Go ahead. Want to sit in a clean, 
air-conditioned carriage while your friend in Manchester cries on the Metrolink? Even better. 
The Liverpool John Lennon Airport offers regular flights to domestic and European destinations. 
Although the airport lacks a direct rail link, it is accessible by bus services. 
Two tunnels under the River Mersey, the Queensway and Kingsway tunnels, provide 
key road links to the Wirral Peninsula. If you liked this video, give it a thumbs up, drop a comment and don’t forget to subscribe 
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Liverpool is a famous travel destination on the River Mersey in the UK. Liverpool is the city that gave us The Beatles, two famous football clubs, and countless tourist attractions. Liverpool has chaos, charm, and a waterfront that built empires. In this travel vlog, we’ll explore the best things to do in Liverpool, landmarks like the Royal Albert Dock and Liverpool Cathedral. We will visit Anfield and walk the streets that shaped rock ‘n’ roll history. The River Mersey is the force that shaped Liverpool’s identity, industry, and global reach. Today, Liverpool has a population nearing 500,000, and over 2 million in the broader metropolitan region.

▬ Content of this video ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

0:00 – Intro
1:37 – History of Liverpool
2:49 – Population of Liverpool
3:52 – Football in Liverpool
4:41 – Liverpool & the Beatles
5:28 – River Mersey
6:34 – Attractions of Liverpool
8:32 – Transport in Liverpool

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7 Comments

  1. Good afternoon, lovely video. I have a question: If I want to travel by bus all day, would I have to get a "day ticket," right? But when I get on a different bus, do I have to show it to the driver? Do I have to swipe it through a machine or get on with my ticket in case someone asks for it? How do I request it from the driver? Day ticket? Daily ticket? Or one ticket for all day? I'm not English, so excuse my English.

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