SEVERAL memorials have been erected in memory of the victims of the Hillsborough disaster.

Flames were added either side of the Liverpool FC crest in memory of the 96 fans who lost their lives in the Hillsborough disaster.

Alongside the Shankly Gates at Anfield, Liverpool’s home stadium.

A memorial at Hillsborough stadium, unveiled on the 10th anniversary of the disaster on 15 April 1999, reads: “In memory of the 96 men, women and children who tragically died and the countless people whose lives were changed forever.

“FA Cup semi-final Liverpool v Nottingham Forest. 15 April 1989.

You’ll never walk alone.”

A memorial stone in the pavement on the south side of Liverpool’s Anglican cathedral.

A memorial garden in Hillsborough Park with a ‘You’ll never walk alone’ gateway.

A headstone at the junction of Middlewood Road, Leppings Lane and Wadsley Lane, near the ground and by the Sheffield Supertram route.

A Hillsborough memorial rose garden in Port Sunlight, Wirral.

A memorial rose garden on Sudley Estate in South Liverpool.

Each of the six rosebeds has a centrepiece of a white standard rosebush, surrounded by red rosebushes, named ‘Liverpool remember’. There are brass memorial plaques on both sets of gates to the garden, and a sundial inscribed with the words: ‘Time Marches On But We Will Always Remember’.

In the grounds of Crosby Library.

The Memorial at Old Haymarket, Liverpool.

An 8ft high clock, dating from the 1780s, was installed at Liverpool Town Hall in April 2013, with the hands indicating 3.06pm (the time at which the match was postponed).

It’s about time we had something in Warrington for the four from the town that died.

COL HOYLES Warrington