Annie
Costello lived on Canning Street (no 48) when I first knew her and
she then moved to 156 Bedford St South.
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| Canning
Street 1974 |
Her
door was always open, most definitely not because of her friendly
nature, but because she told us that she was a Romany, and as such
could not be fenced in. So this woman of indeterminate age would
take a coal axe to every lock that was ever fixed to the front door
of the house. Local legend had it that reminding the staff of the
Housing Department that you lived in the same building as Annie
Costello was a sure way of getting re-housed quickly.
Her
ground floor flat consisted of a living kitchen and a living bedroom.
The rooms were alive, mice, bedbugs, fleas, flies all visited and
most of them stayed.
Every
morning Annie got dressed up in several layers of clothing, none
of it very clean, and then under her coat she put on her market-trader's
pinny. No market stall for her though. Oh, no. As the car horns
chimed out rush hour she would wander along to the corner of her
street and the main road, and loiter. When a passer-by approached,
she would block his way and demand assistance across the road. Having
delivered her safely to the other side, the good Samaritan would
then be relieved of his loose change - "Got ten pence, lad?". She
was never known to fail. When greeted with a mumbled apology for
having no change of a pound, she could produce 90p from the pocket
of her pinny with the speed of light. Then she would loiter on that
side of the road until another hapless pedestrian came along, ask
for help back across the road and then repeat the demand for money.
She could keep this up all day, every day - and usually did.
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| Falkner
Street |
In
the shimmering heat of the 1976 drought, Annie devised an extra
little earner - she would sit on the steps leading to her ever-open
front door, and request help from anyone around to get her to the
corner. There she would perform the usual routine; and then once
she was safely returned to "her" side of the road she would loiter
on the corner and add a request for assistance back to her steps
from the next passer-by. This brought in a small fortune, and gave
her a bit of breathing space and somewhere to sit between road crossings.
I don't remember anyone ever complaining about her.
She
was as much a part of the place as the architecture, but not quite
as magnificent, and was tolerated by all the residents.A visit by
mandarins, including the Minister for Merseyside, didn't bother
her at all - she still begged for ten pence off them as they were
swept past, and got her money by using her knack of having the change
ready.
This
character of Liverpool died almost 20 years ago.
Story courtesy of Val Horton
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