On this day … 4 June 1873

The Preston Guardian reported the unveiling of the Derby statue in Miller Park, erected in honour of the 14th earl of Derby, three times prime minister, and unsuccessful parliamentary candidate for Preston in 1830.

That last really stung, for Edward Stanley, as he then was known, was the sitting MP and was defeated by the arch radical Henry Hunt in an election for which Stanley thought he was a shoo-in.

His complacency was partly to blame for his defeat, the Stanley family saw Preston as their town, but was probably more due to the radicalism of the times, and Henry Hunt was the leading radical. That Preston would erect a statue to Stanley later in the century would have shocked the townโ€™s radical electors who voted in Hunt.

It would also have shocked the Preston strikers who took on the Preston cotton lords in 1853, and whose campaign Karl Marx saw heralding his longed-for revolution.

Why then did Preston honour the Tory grandee it had rejected back in 1830? The answer rested with two men: Benjamin Disraeli and another Preston MP, Robert Townley Parker.

Disraeli, who pushed through his Reform Act in 1867 to give the vote to a section of the male working class, recognised that the skilled craftsmen he enfranchised were essentially conservative and would bolster the Tory vote at any election.

He certainly had his finger on the pulse of the Preston electorate, which proceeded to vote in Tories for nearly half a century.

When Stanley, now earl of Derby, died in 1869, Robert Townley Parker was determined that there was going to be a fitting memorial to the earl, and that it was going to be a statue in Preston. To achieve this, he had to fight off a rival bid from Lancaster and persuade Preston councillors to shift the belvedere from its original site in Miller Park to make way for the Derby memorial.

Parker was successful. The belvedere now sits at the other end of Avenham Park and the Derby memorial became one of the first sights to greet all those passing through Preston by train from the south, which was precisely Parkerโ€™s intention.


Sources:
Earl of Derby: https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/member/smith-stanley-edward-1799-1869
Robert Townley Parker: https://prestonhistory.com/2022/05/09/a-new-portrait-of-robert-townley-parker/


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