On this day … 24 June 1865

Thomas Miller, the leading cotton king of Preston, died aged 55, fabulously wealthy, owning a town house in Winckley Square and a large country estate in the Fylde at Singleton. He was buried at Lytham, where he had a summer residence.

Thomas was the son of Thomas Miller senior, who had moved to Preston from Bolton to manage the Horrockses cotton enterprise in 1801, becoming partner in the firm and then the sole owner. On his death in 1840 the company passed to his two sons, Thomas junior and Henry Miller. Henry left the firm, and Thomas junior took sole charge of the vast Horrocks empire.

No 5 Winckley Square Preston
Thomas Winckley’s home, 5, Winckley Square: https://islesofthesea.wordpress.com/2017/04/05/thomas-miller/

After Miller’s death in 1865 the firm passed into the hands of Edward Hermon. Although the name Miller was retained in the company title, the Miller family connection with the firm ended, as had the Horrocks connection a generation earlier.

Miller had provided well for his two sons, who opted out of the family business and established themselves as country gentlemen. The elder son, Thomas Horrocks Miller, who was nineteen when his father died, became squire of Singleton. His younger son, William Pitt Miller, then aged sixteen, inherited the near by Thistleton estate.

Thomas junior and William were both educated at Harrow. Their father and his brother were educated by the Preston Unitarian minister at a school he kept at his house in Church Street.

Thomas Horrocks Miller’s estate stretched to 3,223 acres and earned him £5,856 a year in rents in the 1870s. His leisure pursuits included membership of the Royal Thames Yacht Club

Miller, his sons and their descendants used the family wealth to develop the Singleton estate. Thomas Miller had bought the estate for £70,000 in 1853, and went on to buy adjoining land and the nearby Thistleton estate. The following year he led the victorious cotton lords of Preston in their defeat of the striking cotton workers, who were seeking the restitution of a ten per cent cut in their wages.

Singleton Hall, built in 1873, was designed by Edward Milner, the designer of Preston’s Miller Park on land left to Preston by Thomas Miller in his will. The estate stayed in the family until 2003 when it was left to a charitable trust that now manages the estate.

On the estate’s home farm they kept a stable of a hundred shire and carriage horses, which would have their horseshoes fitted at the village smithy, which the family built. The smithy was later converted into a garage and has since been demolished.

The whole estate had been developed as a model village by the Millers, as the trust’s website describes:

‘For their tenants they built new cottages, a new church, a post office, a reading room, the village school and a village hall. They helped the community to prosper by investing in Singleton Mill, the Smithy, the fire station and even building a new road to the railway station. They also renamed the village pub – the Miller Arms.’


Sources
https://singletonhistory.wordpress.com/history/
https://www.singletontrust.co.uk/
https://prestonhistory.com/sources-2/harrow-schools-preston-pupils-1799-1906/
https://prestonhistory.com/sources-2/batemans-great-landowners-lancashire/
Hewitson’s History of Preston

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