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Anfield and is
The song " You'll Never Walk Alone ", originally from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Carousel and later recorded by Liverpool musicians Gerry & The Pacemakers, is the club's anthem and has been sung by the Anfield crowd since the early 1960s.
* March 15 – The Liverpool Football Club is founded by John Houlding, the owner of Anfield.
Kirkdale Station, about from the stadium, is the nearest station to Anfield.
is: Anfield
The current line-up is: Tony Crane ( founder member ) lead vocals and lead guitar ; Billy Kinsley ( founder member ) lead vocals and rhythm guitar ; Bob Packham ( joined 1974 ) backing vocals and bass guitar ( born Robert Packham, 17 July 1944, Anfield, Liverpool ) ( ex The Galvinsers ); Dave Goldberg keyboards and lead guitar ; and Lou Rosenthal ( also joined 2000 ) drums.
* 13 March — Liverpool Football Club is founded after Everton is split by a faction fight at board level over the proposed purchase of the freehold at Anfield.
The other faction, which owns Anfield, decides to establish a new club there and this is called Liverpool FC.
The town's senior non-league football side is Havant & Waterlooville F. C., On January 16, 2008 they reached the fourth round of the FA Cup for the first time in their history, beating Swansea City 4-2 in a third-round replay, setting up a 4th round match against Liverpool at Anfield, which they went on to lose 5-2 despite having led twice in the first half.
The park is in area and has been designated a Grade II * Historic Park by English Heritage making it one of three such parks in the city, along with the nearby Princes Park and Anfield Cemetery.
Fowler is a supporter of Liverpool F. C and regularly attends matches at Anfield.
Butoh is also created and performed by non-Japanese Canadians – Thomas Anfield and Kevin Bergsma formed BUTOH-a-GO-GO in 1999 billing it a " Second Generation Butoh / Performance Company.
Edgeley Park was ( until County's relegation in May 2011 ) the closest league football ground to the River Mersey-it is actually closer than Liverpool's Anfield, Everton's Goodison Park or Tranmere Rovers ' Prenton Park.
Everton is an inner city area located just north of Liverpool city centre, with Vauxhall to the west, Kirkdale to the north and Anfield to the north east.
Grobbelaar, also known as " Brucie ", is still a firm favourite amongst the Anfield faithful, and was voted as No. 17 in a poll 100 Players Who Shook The Kop conducted in mid-2006 by the official Liverpool Football Club website.
The venue is the Liverpool vs. Manchester United game, in a private viewing box, at Anfield.
Anfield is a residential district of Liverpool bordered by a number of areas including Walton, Clubmoor, Tuebrook and Everton.
This type of property is particularly dense around Anfield stadium, although in 1991, a whole street of terraced houses ( Kemlyn Road ) was demolished to make way for a new stand at Anfield stadium.
The area also contains Stanley Park, one of Liverpool's grand Victorian parks, covering 45 hectares of Anfield and is the primary separator between Anfield Stadium and Goodison Park in Walton.
Although the adoration of brand name clothing stems from the Northern Soul scene, it is generally regarded that the first scallies were supporters of Liverpool FC who stood on the Anfield Road terrace end of their football stadium.
Walton, originally known as Walton-on-the-Hill, in Liverpool, Merseyside, England, is an area situated to the north of Anfield and the east of Bootle and Orrell Park.
The Clubmoor area is situated in north Liverpool and is bordered by the nearby districts of Norris Green, Anfield and Tuebrook.

Anfield and district
The Ordnance Survey map of 1840 shows a house here called Anfield House around which the district developed.

Anfield and Liverpool
* Hillsborough Disaster Memorial ( Anfield at Liverpool )
Anfield, home of Liverpool F. C.
Left with an empty ground, Houlding founded Liverpool in 1892 and the club has played at Anfield ever since.
The Taylor Report and Premier League regulations obliged Liverpool to convert Anfield to an all-seater stadium in time for the 1993 – 94 season, reducing the capacity to 45, 276.
Because of restrictions on expanding the capacity at Anfield, Liverpool announced plans to move to the proposed Stanley Park Stadium in May 2002.
Liverpool fans often refer to themselves as Kopites, a reference to the fans who once stood, and now sit, on the Kop at Anfield.
As the owner of Anfield and founder of Liverpool, John Houlding was the club's first chairman, a position he held from its founding in 1892 until 1904.
To mark the club's appearance in the 1988 FA Cup Final, Liverpool released a song known as the " Anfield Rap ", featuring John Barnes and other members of the squad.
Originally called The Mavericks, Tony Crane ( born Anthony Crane, 17 April 1945, Anfield, Liverpool ) and Billy Kinsley ( born William Ellis Kinsley, 28 November 1946, at The Mill Road Hospital, Mill Road, Everton, Liverpool ) formed their first band in late 1960 and became The Pacifics in September 1961.
On 6 November 1991, after Liverpool's 3 – 0 victory over Auxerre in a UEFA Cup Second Round second leg tie at Anfield, Liverpool manager Graeme Souness was met by Frenchman Michel Platini at the end of the game, who told him that Cantona was available for sale to Liverpool.
* Everton moves as tenant to Anfield, a newly enclosed ground off Anfield Road, Liverpool.
Liverpool then turned to ex-Valencia coach Rafael Benítez as the man they hoped could win the league title which has eluded Anfield since 1990.
Billy Kinsley ( born William Ellis Kinsley, 28 November 1946, Anfield, Liverpool ) was an English musician with The Merseybeats until 1966 ( although he temporary left the band both to form the Kinsleys, and to get married to hairdresser Pat Allman ).
Despite their chances of progression being written off by press on both sides of the Anglo-Scottish border, Celtic defeated Liverpool 3 – 1 on aggregate with Larsson scoring the opener in a 1 – 1 1st leg draw followed by a 2 – 0 Celtic victory at Anfield.
Sayle was born and raised in Anfield, Liverpool, the son of Molly ( Malka ) Sayle ( née Mendelson ), a pools clerk, and Joseph Henry Sayle, a railway worker ,< ref >
" The Fields of Anfield Road " was adopted by Liverpool supporters to the same tune, but with adapted lyrics referencing their history and stadium.

Anfield and Merseyside
The Merseyside derby at Anfield in 2006
His first two league goals came on 10 October 1981 in a 3-0 home win over Leeds United, and a month later he scored in the Merseyside derby at Anfield in a 3-1 win.
The games are only especially remembered for Ian Rush's impressive haul of five goals for Liverpool over the two games ( although these goals are sometimes excluded from his official record-breaking Merseyside derby tally, probably due to them having been scored in a minor competition against what was largely an Everton reserve side ) and for Kevin Sheedy's spectacular goal for Everton at Anfield, scored from a long-range free-kick at the Kop end ( a feat he would repeat later in the season in a league derby match ).
His Liverpool career ended after 332 appearances and 18 goals in all competitions – one of which was the " forgotten fifth " in a 5 – 0 thumping of Merseyside rivals Everton on 6 November 1982, a game in which Ian Rush took most of the headlines by scoring four of the five goals and a place in Anfield folklore.
On 30 March 2008, Neville was assaulted by a Liverpool fan as he took a throw-in during the 1 – 0 Merseyside derby Premier League defeat at Anfield.
After a comprehensive 5-0 win at Anfield, Wolves were favourites to win the game and take the title, but goals from Jack Balmer and Albert Stubbins, plus Sidlow and the backline keeping Wolves down to one meant the Championship trophy would be heading to Merseyside.
His first goal in a Liverpool shirt came against West Bromwich Albion at Anfield in September, and he went on to net seven more league goals that season, including the winner in the Merseyside derby on 20 March 2005.
His first goal came a week later on the 21st in a remarkable Merseyside derby at Anfield.
In March 1994, it was performed by the band and a host of famous Liverpudlians in front of the Spion Kop at Anfield before the last ever Merseyside derby in front of the old Kop, which was demolished later that year and replaced by an all-seater stand.
This was to be the peak of Lindsay's Liverpool career, Shankly, the man who brought Lindsay to Merseyside, shook the very foundations of Anfield by suddenly announcing his retirement.
On 27 September 1999, during the Merseyside derby against Everton at Anfield, Staunton played the last 15 minutes of the game in goal after Sander Westerveld had been sent off for fighting with Francis Jeffers after Liverpool had used all three substitutes.
Renowned for his direct comments, in one of McManaman's broadcasts in February 2008, McManaman found himself criticised in the Liverpool press and by former Liverpool fans when his comments for Setanta after a Merseyside derby, on the ownership issue concerning debt involving Tom Hicks and George N. Gillett, Jr. at Anfield went down poorly with the supporters.
He scored a penalty winner against Spanish side Barcelona in the UEFA Cup semi-final and followed it up with a memorable 44-yard free-kick that won the Merseyside derby against local rivals Everton in the fourth minute of stoppage time, thereby cementing himself into Anfield folklore.
In this role he scored a late equaliser in the Merseyside Derby, becoming the first player since Dixie Dean to score for Everton in three Anfield derbies.
In the first half of the 1999-2000 season, he scored Everton's winning goal in the Merseyside derby at Anfield against Liverpool.

0.152 seconds.