Oh my thank you all so much for all of your hard work.
This side of the tree is my daughters paternal side and there is no one to ask to unravel it. I decided to pick this up as my tree has come to an almighty halt!
The only info I had on Maisie was she was a Landy, married a William Hagland (she had 2 children with him which Barbara H has picked up), then she married a William Bennett. I knew they lived in Liverpool but didn't know if they were originally Liverpool people.
I have no idea when Maisie died but after Christmas I will send off for certificates of her marriages, the Prescot death in 1966 Carol W found and the William Landy death crisane found.
From some family gossip it was rumoured her first husband was sent down for fraud and died in jail, how true this is I have no idea. If he was in jail are death records kept somewhere else? Was also wondering did we still ship prisoners off to Australia as late as the 1930s?? This may explain why we can't find a death.

Fabulous find Barbara with the school collapsing (how tragic was that!) but it does confirm the relationship with Maisie and Bertha C.
If Bertha C was Maisie's mum then she would have been around 47 when she had her so maybe she did bring up Maisie as her own from one of her children.. good thought there Ruskie.
I have a feeling she maybe the Margaret Landy in the 1911 census (I will invest in some credits and take a look).
I have looked back through the census reports and discovered that William Landy's father was Irish so it looks like that is where the name came from.
It is quite spooky as my McKinnelly clan came from Ireland and lived in the same area of Liverpool ... in 1881 William's brother was noted as a ships cook... the same as one of my McKinnelly's .. maybe they actually knew each other
I can't thank you all enough

... great detective work every one it has got me going. I have found that Bertha Catherine Landy is buried in Toxeth Park Cemetery (which is where my McKinnelly's are too) so I will pop along and visit her soon.
Cal