On this day … 16 September 1893

The Preston Chronicle carried a report from an angry meeting at Freckleton at which residents protested about ‘the abominable nuisance caused by the Preston Corporation and other public bodies bringing their sewage into the village’.

The main target for the protests was Freckleton Farm. The sewage of both Preston and Fulwood was carried eight miles by pipe to the recently-established 500-acre site at Freckleton, where it was spread on the fields.

For Preston, the development was a solution to a problem that had plagued the town throughout the nineteenth century, made much worse when the Ribble was diverted to make way for the planned Preston Dock. The diversion meant that instead of the town’s sewage being piped into the Ribble as previously, much of it was now ending up in the old blocked-off river bed.

The plan for Preston Dock
The Ribble Dock plan. The dried up old river bed became for a short while the dumping ground for much of the town’s sewage: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/8028547093/

Preston faced major public health problems, with the town’s inadequate sewerage system blamed for the town having the highest death rate of all the major towns in England. But the surrounding districts were not much better.

The problem was that a heavily-industrialised region was having to cope with vast quantities of sewage and industrial effluent with a medieval sewerage system that used streams and rivers as open sewers.

The Walton-le-Dale Local Board, for example, was desperate for a solution because it had two rivers running through its district, the Darwen and the Lostock, that carried the sewage from all the industrial towns upstream.

As a board meeting in January 1891 was told there was ‘no sewage scheme of any kind’ for the five villages of Bamber Bridge, Higher Walton, Walton village, Lostock Hall and Gregson Lane.

The Darwen and the Lostock rivers:

‘… were really open sewers. The Lostock received the greater part of the Wigan sewage, and the Darwen that from Darwen, Blackburn and East Lancashire generally.’

That Darwen open sewer emptied straight into the Ribble at Walton-le-Dale, just a few hundred yards above Avenham Park.

What was angering the residents of Freckleton was that as these problems were slowly being dealt with, the solutions pushed the problem downstream to their banks of the Ribble. And so, they called their meeting, at which the chairman declared:

‘He thought that one and all must feel aggrieved that the Preston Corporation and other public bodies had thought it necessary that they should bring their filth, their atrocious and abominable sewage in its crude state into their midst.’

He asked:

‘… how the Corporation of Preston or any public body had got the right or power … to come and deposit these death-traps at their very doors … So long as those bodies kept it from their own doors what did it matter to them?

‘How very different it was for them at Freckleton. It was brought to their very doors, nay it was even brought into their houses, and they had during both day and night to breath that dreadful smell.’

The residents called on Preston Corporation to install settling tanks to treat the sewage and ensure that Freckleton Pool was not polluted by raw sewage ‘as black as ink and as thick as treacle’ at present being poured into it.


Source
The Preston Chronicle, available for free on line to members of Lancashire County Library, is a superb source for the history of nineteenth-century Preston: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/libraries-and-archives/libraries/digital-library/newspapers-old-and-new/


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