There are few streets in the world that are more famous than a little street in Liverpool, in the north of England called Penny Lane. The small lane is famous (if you didn’t already know) for inspiring the 1967 song of the same name by The Beatles. Penny Lane served as a symbol of the lives the Beatles independently and collectively led in Liverpool before becoming the world renowned band that they eventually became. It was this street that as the song says is off the thoroughfare, that spoke to the Paul McCartney in a way that no other street or area in the city possibly could have.

The fireman and fire engine referred to in the lyrics, are in fact located at the Mather Avenue fire station which is close to Penny Lane. The shelter in the middle of a roundabout, is at one end of the street and is now a restaurant (currently Sgt. Pepper’s Bistro). The barbershop where the barber showed the photos of all the heads he had the pleasure to know, is still just a barbershop.

The street has for a long time been a tourist destination and roadside attraction in its own right, and the street signs were constantly being stolen and carted away to the far reaches of the world. There was a time that the theft of Penny Lane street signs was so prevalent that the city began painting the street name on the sides of buildings. It is much more difficult to steal a building than a sign. Since 2007 “theft-resistant” street signs have been in use but they are still sometimes stolen.

The Name of Penny Lane

If you are interested in a wealth of information on the naming of Penny lane, please check out the exhaustive work of Glen Huntley in his article “Was Penny Lane really named after the slave merchant James Penny?”. Huntley’s blog The Priory and Cast Iron Shore is dedicated to uncovering the long and complicated history of the area in South Liverpool known as the Cast Iron Shore.

It is noted many places however (falsely I believe), that Penny Lane is named after James Penny. Penny, an eighteenth century slave trader who like many other “industrialists” of the time became quite wealthy from the international slave trade was a resident of Liverpool and owned as many as eleven slave ships has become inexorable linked to the street but it seems by all accounts to have only happened sometime in the 1990s.

National Museums Liverpool and The International Slavery Museum, Liverpool, have been contacted with a request for information about the connection between the street and James Penny but have not been able to provide any evidence that a tangible connection actually exists.

Liverpool does have a deep connection with the slave trade though and served as a stopover for slave ships traveling between Africa and the United States. It is very important to make the facts clear that some of their streets have most certainly been named for slave traders and people that profited from the enslavement of Africans.

In 2006, a Liverpool councilor proposed renaming Penny Lane and several other streets because their names were directly, or have become over time connected to the international slave trade and the role that Liverpool played in continuing and prospering from it. It was decided that because Penny Lane had a stronger connection to the city from the Beatles and less from James Penny, that it would be excluded from the renaming.

Penny Lane Facts