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Thurstaston Holiday Camp was a holiday park overlooking the River Dee built by the Lever Brothers for their employees.

History
The land for the holiday park was acquired by the Lever Brothers in 1919. In August 1919, the 1st Port Sunlight Cadet Company of the Boys Brigade held their summer camp at the new site, the firsy time they had been able to hold their annual event since 1915.

The camp reopened in 1921, with room for 90 campers in the mens wing and 50 in the womens. Visitors were housed in army huts and in 1921 the charges were 1/- per night or 5/- per week for adults, and 9d per night or 3/9 per week for juniors.

The site was available for use from Easter until the end of September. Families could stay during the week but had to vacate the premises for the weekend when the majority of employees visited. The site could be reached by train, car, or bike, and some employees even walked the nine miles from Port Sunlight.

Thurstaston closed as a holiday camp at the outbreak of the Second World War and was requisitioned by the army. It did not reopen at the end of the hostilities and was sold in the 1950s to Wirral Urban District Council.

Present Day
The site is now a caravan park.

Other Sites
Lever Brothers also had another employee holiday camp at Rivington Pike.