On this day … 18 July 1786

The horse races staged on Preston Moor (now Moor Park) marked a raising of the stakes in the political competition between the corporation of Preston and the Stanley family, headed by the earl of Derby.

Two months earlier, the election contest between the corporation-backed Tory candidates and the Whigs fielded by the Stanley faction had scandalised the country, with armed mobs terrorising the town and Stanley supporters dunking the mayor under the town pump.

Section of William Yates' map of Lancashire, 1786, showing racecourses at Preston
William Yates’ map of Lancashire, 1786, showing the rival racecourses. National Library of Scotland: https://maps.nls.uk/view/220113070

Since 1721 and probably earlier, horse races had been a regular fixture in the sporting life of the town, but after the clash between the corporation and the Stanleys at the election, the Stanleys withdrew their support from the races and established their own racecourse on Duchy of Lancaster land on Fulwood Moor.

The first race was held on Fulwood Moor on 7 August, and the stewards were Sir Henry Hoghton and Colonel John Burgoyne, the two Stanley candidates elected to Parliament at the infamous election. For the next five years, the rival races were held in tandem. Racing was in the Derby blood. The Derby, now probably the most famous horse race in Britain, was first run in 1780, and was named for the 12th Earl of Derby.

The last corporation races were held on Preston Moor in 1791. The starting block for the races, known as the ‘Starting Chair’, is still in place on Moor Park. It is not known when it was placed there or where it was taken from. One thought is that it was a medieval guide stone. There is the base of medieval cross at the duck pond entrance to the park.

The Fulwood ‘Derby’ was held annually until 1833, when the Stanley family abandoned Preston and their Preston mansion, Patten House, in Church Street, which was pulled down soon after.

Later, the corporation staged horse races on Penwortham Holme during Guild Week in 1842, and again in 1845 and for the next three years after. The 1848 races were the last held in Preston. They were possibly abandoned because a running fight between soldiers from Fulwood Barracks and the Preston police at that year’s event meant they were deemed to disreputable.

Spectators and competitors at the Penwortham Holme races would have had to ford or ferry themselves to the events: the Holme was an island at that time.


Sources:
Whittle’s History of Preston
Hewitson’s History of Preston
Lancashire Past website: https://lancashirepast.com/2018/10/21/the-starting-chair-moor-park-preston/


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply