Rodney Street, Liverpool

Rodney Street in Liverpool, England, is noted for the number of doctors who practise there and its Georgian architecture.

They were erected in pairs or short runs by different developers which led to an inconsistent roof line.

62 (built 1792–1793) was the birthplace in 1809 of William Ewart Gladstone, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on four separate occasions through the 1860s to the 1890s, and the home of his father John.

59 Rodney Street was home and studio to photographer Edward Chambré Hardman from 1947 to 1988,[3] and his wife, business partner and fellow photographer, Margaret Hardman until her death in 1969,[4][5] and is now owned by the National Trust and open to the public.

On the north side of Rodney Street stands the disused Scottish Presbyterian Church of Saint Andrew, built in 1823–1824.