Preston Remembered

Preston Remembered is a fascinating collection of articles written by author and Lancashire Evening Post historian Keith Johnson. Take a nostalgic journey into Preston's colourful past, recalling the events that transformed this historic cotton town into a university city. Take a peep at the days of cotton mills, factories, public houses and endless rows of terraced homes that shaped the lives of many. Return to the traditions of Whitsuntide, Easter, Wakes Weeks and Christmas that continued from generation to generation. Recall the churches and chapels, the streets, parks and, of course, the people who lived and worked in Preston. Richly illustrated with over 50 pictures, this nostalgic volume will appeal to everyone who knows this part of Lancashire.

1107765392
Preston Remembered

Preston Remembered is a fascinating collection of articles written by author and Lancashire Evening Post historian Keith Johnson. Take a nostalgic journey into Preston's colourful past, recalling the events that transformed this historic cotton town into a university city. Take a peep at the days of cotton mills, factories, public houses and endless rows of terraced homes that shaped the lives of many. Return to the traditions of Whitsuntide, Easter, Wakes Weeks and Christmas that continued from generation to generation. Recall the churches and chapels, the streets, parks and, of course, the people who lived and worked in Preston. Richly illustrated with over 50 pictures, this nostalgic volume will appeal to everyone who knows this part of Lancashire.

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Preston Remembered

Preston Remembered

by Keith Johnson, Mike Hill
Preston Remembered

Preston Remembered

by Keith Johnson, Mike Hill

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Overview

Preston Remembered is a fascinating collection of articles written by author and Lancashire Evening Post historian Keith Johnson. Take a nostalgic journey into Preston's colourful past, recalling the events that transformed this historic cotton town into a university city. Take a peep at the days of cotton mills, factories, public houses and endless rows of terraced homes that shaped the lives of many. Return to the traditions of Whitsuntide, Easter, Wakes Weeks and Christmas that continued from generation to generation. Recall the churches and chapels, the streets, parks and, of course, the people who lived and worked in Preston. Richly illustrated with over 50 pictures, this nostalgic volume will appeal to everyone who knows this part of Lancashire.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780750960007
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 05/01/2011
Sold by: INDEPENDENT PUB GROUP - EPUB - EBKS
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 13 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Keith Johnson has worked in the printing press industry for 35 years. He is the author of seven books on Lancashire and has written numerous articles on local history, including the nostalgia page for the Lancashire Evening Post. He lives in Preston. Mike Hill is the deputy editor of the Lancashire Evening Post.

Read an Excerpt

Preston Remembered


By Keith Johnson

The History Press

Copyright © 2014 Keith Johnson
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7509-6000-7



CHAPTER 1

The People Who Made Preston Proud


Industry, arts and literature have been blessed by the contribution of Preston folk. Once the winter residence of the rich gentry, the town was to take its place at the very heart of the cotton trade. Some residents went on to local or national fame, or prospered despite the poverty of their surroundings – many earning their place in history through feats of human endeavour and achievement, at a time when heroes were not manufactured.

Mention the cotton industry and John Horrocks springs to mind. His life was short, a mere thirty-six years, yet in the thirteen years he spent in Preston he left a lasting impression, having developed a cotton business that would span centuries. Almost yearly he added another cotton factory to his booming business, attracting mill hands from far and wide.

Nor can Sir Richard Arkwright's contribution to industry be ignored. This Preston-born lad developed his spinning frame in Stoneygate, and then headed to Nottingham to develop the factory system of production with his water-powered machinery. Who would have thought that a lad who worked cutting hair and pulling teeth in Bolton would end up with a knighthood?

Local industry still owes a debt to Joseph Foster, a pioneer in the newspaper-printing world. A revolutionary web-feed printing press for the Preston Guardian in 1872 was to firmly establish Foster at the front of technology, his inventiveness leading to employment for thousands of local people through the years.

Back in 1948, at a cost of £98, the first Bond Minicars rolled off the production line in Ribbleton Lane. For over a decade these three-wheelers, designed by Lawrence Bond, were a popular mode of transport throughout the UK, said to need just one gallon of petrol to travel 100 miles. Bond's groundbreaking design brought cheap transport to many and a hundred vehicles were produced per week, giving employment to many local folk.

Also providing employment was William Henry Woods. In the days before government health warnings, he ran a tobacco factory in Derby Street. With a shop on the corner of Church Street and Avenham Street, the business, begun by his father, thrived, employing hundreds of local workers at the dawn of the twentieth century. He not only built up the business but also played a significant part in the town's affairs, being thrice elected as an alderman.

Another local hero, John Huntington, fought on behalf of workers over a 10 per cent wage reduction imposed by the cotton bosses. The feud was long and bitter, and starvation brought an end to operatives' hopes. The factory gates were locked in Huntington's face and he was forced to flee to America to earn his living. Fate was with him; soon he was instrumental in the discovery of oil and the development of the Standard Oil Co. In his later years, this modest man paid a visit to Preston and his old friends welcomed home a millionaire.

Edith Rigby, a doctor's wife from Winckley Square, also fought hard for her cause, becoming the secretary of the Preston Suffragette Movement and proudly proclaiming 'Votes for Women'. Imprisoned for over-zealous protests, she did not shirk from her beliefs and was a true champion for women's rights.

Another doctor's wife, Avice Pimblett, was a pioneering lady on the local political scene. She was the first woman elected on to Preston Town Council in 1920, the first woman to be Mayor in 1933, and was rewarded for forty years of public service with the Freedom of the Borough.

Other Preston women of note include Frances Lady Shelley and Emma Lyon. The former, of Winckley family descent, became part of high society – mixing with the likes of the Duke of Wellington and Queen Victoria – after marrying a descendant of poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Emma Lyon, said to have been born of poor parents at Preston, Lancashire in 1764, became the much adored Lady Hamilton, a woman who was to steal the heart of Lord Nelson following their liaison in Naples.

Preston can boast numerous entrepreneurs and businessmen. Many of the inns and taverns of old Preston carried the name of Matthew Brown, who took over a brewing business from his father and developed a thriving company. It all began in Pole Street, near to where his beloved Anglers Inn once stood, and with the abolition of Beer Duty he soon owned numerous public houses around the town and supplied ale to many others. With similar success, errand lad Edwin Henry Booth built up a chain of stores from his grocery store in the Preston Market Place. The business grew and prospered under his guidance and his belief was 'To Thine Own Self Be True', a philosophy that guided his ways.

Joseph Livesey was also guided by his values, and is regarded by many as one of Preston's most kindly men. A scroll upon his grave in Preston Cemetery declares him to have been a great moral and social reformer during his ninety-one years on earth. Besides his great work with the Temperance Society, he was a very significant publisher, starting the Preston Guardian newspaper and The Struggle, a publication that highlighted the plight of nineteenth-century Prestonians in poverty.

The name of Edmund Robert Harris is surely etched forever into Preston's history. The son of a vicar of Preston, he showed his love for the town by leaving his family's fortune for the benefit of local people. An orphanage, an Institute for Knowledge and of course the free library, art gallery and museum were all to bear the Harris name thanks to the solicitor's generous legacy. His fortune planted the university seed, gave hope to the orphan and enabled ordinary folk to read for free.

Also renowned for generosity was Sir Robert Charles Brown, who for sixty-four years was a Preston physician. Day trips for nurses and the costs of a new operating theatre were samples of the generosity of one who, in his latter years, local folk referred to as 'Preston's Grand Old Man'.

On Preston's Miller Park stands a statue of the 14th Earl of Derby; it is a reminder of a man who was to thrice hold the office of Prime Minister in the mid-nineteenth century. In a time when the Derby mansion stood on Church Street, the local voters rejected him, but his steely determination took Edward Geoffrey Stanley to the height of political matters.

Our skyline out Maudland way gives us a permanent reminder of the work of Joseph Aloysius Hansom, who was the architect and inspiration behind the building of St Walburge's Church with its magnificent spire. He spent some twenty years of his busy life in our town, and buildings in Liverpool, Hull and Birmingham are further testimony to his talent. Throw in the Hansom Cab, which he patented in 1834, and you have a measure of the man.

For architecture in our city, few could have a greater claim than James Hibbert, a former Mayor of Preston who earned much praise after building the Fishergate Baptist Chapel. So much so that the building of the Harris Museum in the Market Place was entrusted to his care and, after a decade of dedication, it became Preston's pride.

Builder John Turner, who was born in Havelock Street in Preston back in 1876, started in a humble way, repairing brickwork on a property in Inkerman Street. From that beginning he developed a business along with his three sons, being responsible for various landmark buildings in the town: the Guild Hall, Moor Lane Telephone Exchange, Preston Magistrates' Court and the ring road – all helping to shape the Preston of today.

Another local architect – of the more recent past – to earn deserved praise was Sir George Grenfell Baines, the founder of Preston-based Building Design Partnership. With contracts for universities, libraries, hospitals and numerous other buildings, his company was soon employing hundreds of people locally.

Preston folk also made numerous developments to the field of transport. Harold Bridges, the son of a Warton gamekeeper, became known as Preston's Mr Transport as he built a vast motor-haulage empire with over 100 vehicles and 400 employees. His company was taken over by a national enterprise in the mid-1960s and, in the years that followed, he was a generous benefactor for many charitable trusts.

Roland Beaumont joined English Electric in Preston in 1947 as Chief Test Pilot as the world's first jet bomber was being developed. He was soon taking the Canberra on its maiden flight, and down the years was at the controls of numerous pioneering aircraft. In all, his flying career lasted forty years; he was the first Briton to reach true supersonic flight, travelling at twice the speed of sound in a Lightning prototype.

When walking down Winckley Square, you may notice a commemorative stone embedded in an office wall. It reads simply: 'JT 1863–1931'. It is a reminder of accountant James Todd, who expanded his business interests worldwide. Motor companies and aircraft suppliers were amongst his portfolio, and his last request was that his ashes be placed in the office wall behind the stone.

In eighteenth-century England, the role of Town Clerk was important; there was one in every borough and Richard Palmer served Preston for over fifty years. His stint began in 1801 and ended with his death in 1852, when he was aged seventy-eight – at which time he was the oldest Town Clerk in England.

Sir Harry Cartmell is a Preston knight worthy of consideration. Throughout the years of the First World War, he was at the helm of Preston's civic matters as Mayor of Preston. Under his guidance, local folk played their part in the war effort, enlisting in their thousands to bolster the soldiers needed to fight at the front. His book, entitled For Remembrance, offered fascinating insight into his war work. He was on hand to take the salute as the regiments departed, and on hand to welcome them back home. Another local hero of those war years was Private William Henry Young, whose bravery on the battlefield earned him a Victoria Cross. He was hailed a 'conquering hero' when he returned to town but, tragically, he died in the operating theatre before he could collect his award.

Jesuit missionary Revd Joseph 'Daddy' Dunn was instrumental in the building of the chapel and school for St Wilfred's; he also found time to inspire the formation of the Preston Gas Co. in 1815. His fundraising earned him the tag 'best beggar in town'.

When talking of church builders, the Revd Roger Carus Wilson is owed a debt of gratitude by Preston folk. St Peter's, St Paul's, St Thomas's, St Mary's and Christ Church were all erected during his years as the vicar of Preston. The quality of the buildings is reflected in their preservation long after the congregations dwindled.

Let's not neglect our poets either, who earned fame far and wide. Robert Service from Christian Road made his name abroad; his travels to the Yukon in gold rush days earned him worldwide fame as the 'Bard of the Yukon'. Francis Thompson, a poet born in Winckley Street, wooed the nation with the brilliant lyrics in his 'Hounds of Heaven'. Ill health dogged his latter days, which were spent in London, but his roots were firmly planted in Preston.

The work of Preston's artists is also still treasured, the eighteenth-century art of Arthur William Devis and his Preston-born sons being much admired. The father was a prolific painter; his eldest son Arthur, said to have a striking resemblance to Bonnie Prince Charlie, painted many a landscape too, and half-brother Anthony contributed numerous drawings and sketches to the family's collection.

Towards the end of the nineteenth century, Edwin Beattie produced a series of watercolours and sketches for which the city will be forever grateful. His work reminds us how the old town used to be. No fortune ever came his way and in his latter days he'd sketch buildings for a glass of ale or two.

Long admired is the statue of Robert Peel in Winckley Square, the work of local sculptor Thomas Duckett. His talent with mallet and chisel was unsurpassed, and in Preston Cemetery there are many examples of his fine work.

When one talks of entertaining the public then Hugh Rain, who was professionally known as Will Onda, had few equals locally. He was a pioneer in the early days of the cinema after his acrobatic stage career ended following an accident. He set up his own Preston film company, with royal visits, Preston Guild and football matches all being recorded by him. The Picturedome and the Princes were amongst the places crowded to watch the early films that this prominent town councillor provided. His productions were in black and white but his life was very colourful.

These days Prestonians take pride in the exploits of film animator Nick Park, a local lad who found his creative ability, coupled with a Preston education, was enough to earn numerous Oscars. The creation of Wallace and Gromit took him to the top of his profession and he continues to astound and entertain with his character creations.

Alfred Aloysius Horn, who spent his early years down St Ignatius Square, took the literary world by storm in the 1920s when the tales of his life as a trader on the West Coast of Africa were published. A Hollywood film, Trader Horn, was even made to chronicle the old man's life of adventure, trading in ivory and rubber.

Likewise, Angela Brazil, who was born in West Cliff Terrace, earned recognition for her literary works. Her schoolgirl adventures, including Schoolgirl Kitty and The Fortunes of Philippa, were a must for thousands of teenage devotees in the early years of the twentieth century.

Preston-born Albert Edward Calvert earned fame when he became known throughout the world as 'The Man with the Golden Trumpet'. For Eddie Calvert, who had started life in the Preston Silver Band, there was chart success as he recorded 'Oh, Mein Pappa', a tune that was number one in the UK chart in December 1953 and sold over a million copies in America.

On the sporting front we have, at times, excelled and of course the legendary Invincibles brought fame for Preston and their beloved North End. At the helm in Preston's all-conquering days was William Sudell, a local mill manager, whose passion for football led him to recruit the first champions of the Football League. Amongst those brought to Deepdale by him were Jimmy Ross and Johnny Goodall, top strikers of the early days.

Then there is the Preston plumber Sir Tom Finney, who earned 'living legend' status for his sporting achievements. His career blossomed after the Second World War, and for both club and country he was an inspiration. Twice named 'Footballer of the Year', his skill and sportsmanship were second to none. The Sir Tom Finney Stand is testimony to the high regard with which he is held.

Andrew Flintoff, the former Lancashire and England cricketer, was born in Preston in 1977. In 2005 he was named 'player of the series' as England overcame Australia to win the Ashes. He played in seventy-nine test matches, scoring 3,845 runs and taking 226 wickets.

For endurance, few could ever compare with Tom Benson, whose record breaking circuits of Moor Park made him the World Champion of long distance non-stop walking. His performance of 1984 – walking over 400 miles in 155 hours – was recognised with the naming of Tom Benson Way.

So Preston has its share of benefactors, businessmen, entertainers, artists, sportsmen and heroes, but Robert Service had his own opinion of who contributed most to the welfare of his birthplace, and indeed the world, with this verse from his poem 'The Ordinary Man':

    We plug away and make no fuss,
    Our feats are never crowned;
    And yet it's common coves like us
    Who make the world go round.
    And as we steer a steady course
    By God's predestined plan,
    Hats off to that almighty Force
    The Ordinary Man.

CHAPTER 2

The First Citizens of our City


Arguments will often rage, these days, before the annual choice of Mayor of Preston is finalised. Fortunately, the prestigious role as first citizen is still sought with enthusiasm, the successful candidate having their name added to a list dating back to Aubrey, son of Robert, in 1327.

Sadly, the early records are incomplete, coming as they do from the Herald's College and the manuscripts of Dr Kuerden. Only from the middle of the seventeenth century are the lists of mayors and bailiffs held by the Corporation of Preston. The Municipal Reform Act of 1835 abolished the office of bailiff in those days when the municipal year ran from November to November.

Adam Morte was elected to be Mayor in 1642 but declined to take the office and was consequently fined 100 marks. By the following February, when the Parliamentarians stormed Preston, he chose to defend the Royalist cause and, along with his son, fought bravely before being slain. A year later, the Mayor William Cottam and his bailiffs were seized by Prince Rupert, who accused them of apathy towards the Royalist cause and imprisoned them for three months at Skipton Castle.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Preston Remembered by Keith Johnson. Copyright © 2014 Keith Johnson. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

About the Author,
Acknowledgements,
Foreword,
Introduction,
1. The People who Made Preston Proud,
2. The First Citizens of our City,
3. Freemen Fit for a City,
4. Making a Lasting Impression,
5. In the Footsteps of the Friars,
6. In Search of Preston's High Street,
7. Tithebarn – Times They are A-Changing,
8. Those Taverns in the Town,
9. Read All About It,
10. On the Buses,
11. What a Picture: The Golden Age of the Silver Screen,
12. Our Green and Pleasant Lands,
13. First Class: the Post,
14. Remember, Remember the Fifth of November,
15. Banking on Preston,
16. Preston Bobbies on Parade,
17. Full Steam Ahead,
18. Thank God for Churches,
19. Hallowe'en Hauntings,
20. Dawn of the Dead,
21. Grave Matters Once More,
22. Fulwood – Pride of Preston?,
23. Bypassing Broughton,
24. Who Were the Invincibles?,
25. The Golden Days of Doctor Syntax,
26. Goodbye Old Stand,
27. Imagine an Easter when ...,
28. All the Fun of the Whitsuntide Fair,
29. Waking Up to Wakes Weeks,
30. Those Twentieth-Century Christmas Times,

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