IT'S coming back…Liverpool’s much loved Mersey River Festival.
City events boss Judith Feather revealed the revival of the late lamented event from next year as the first liner to depart from the Pier Head set sail.
'The city is returning to its roots and doing what it is best at: Namely it is the ideal place to get on a boat and go somewhere else' - Lady Derby
Ms Feather told a crowded cruise terminal that Mayor Joe Anderson has ordered her to restore the event, ditched a few years ago when the Pier Head and Kings Dock were building sites.
The Mayor has given her a new role, which essentially means building the city’s historic waterfront as one of its key tourism and visitor attractions.
Ms Feather's association with the waterfront goes back 21 years when a concert was held at Kings Dock.
And although it will mean even more work on her shoulders, she said she was delighted to see the re-introduction of the River Festival.
Judith FeatherShe told the gathering: “In its heyday, it brought over 300,000 to our wonderful waterfront and it is great our new mayor wants to bring it back as soon as next year. I’m sure it will become a firm annual favourite not only for people across Liverpool, but for visitors from around the world.”
Future events for the Mersey include celebrations to mark the Battle of the Atlantic in 2015, also the year that marks the 175th anniversary of Cunard’s founding in Liverpool.
That event, believes Ms Feather, will in scale rival the recent Sea Odyssey, featuring “three giants of the oceans” – or Cunard’s three queens (Mary, Elizabeth and Victoria), all in the Mersey at the same time.
The taster of things to come was outlined as crowds gathered to watch the first true cruise liner departure from Liverpool since the 1970s.
In the ceremony, the Countess of Derby scattered silver coins in the Mersey from the landing stage and told the crowd: "Liverpool is no longer at the end of a branch line. The city is returning to its roots and doing what it is best at: Namely it is the ideal place to get on a boat and go somewhere else - and of course, coming back."
The big question was...would Southampton send in a squad of water bailiffs to halt the event.
There were whispers the spoil-sport southern cruise port would dampen Liverpool’s chips by seeking an injunction. There was even talk of Southampton and the North East ganging up on Liverpool to sink the city’s ambitions to become a port. Excuse me, hasn’t Liverpool been, like, a port since King John realised a ferry across the Mersey was just what was needed.
Countess of DerbyIn a nutshell, the burghers of Southampton are cheesed off because Liverpool has restored a tradition that ended when they more or less stole the likes of Cunard from Liverpool.
What irks them is Liverpool received public dosh on the basis the city would have no more than the maritime equivalent of a bus stop, with ships popping in to say hi, but not being allowed to start or finish sea journeys on the Mersey. Didn’t something like 8m European embark from Princes Landing Stage at the start of life-changing sea-voyages?
Media outlets in Hampshire had been trying to entice Mayor Joe to do interviews, but minders of the city’s new guv’nor would have none of it.
Mayor Joe, rather than keeping his powder dry, was more in a mood to fire a few cannonballs towards the English Channel, saying the new river terminal will be the first of many for Liverpool.
Among the approving audience was John Whittaker, head of Peel Group and owners of the Port of Liverpool.
Mayor Joe sanctioned the cruise programme before the ‘i’s had been dotted and the ‘t’s crossed, but for it’s water off a duck’s back.
As the Ocean Countess disappeared towards the Mersey Bar - heading for a breakdown that would see it diverted to Anglesey - Judith Feather muttered…..”now about that river festival.”