On this day … 29 June 1850

The Preston Chronicle reported the auction sale of the Tulketh Hall estate at the Bull Hotel (Bull and Royal). The estate had been put up for sale by John Abel Smith, the MP for Chichester, who had bought it in 1845 for £30,000 or £38,000 (reports differ).

To help put those sums in today’s terms, in 1850, according to the National Archives historical currency converter, the average weekly wage of a skilled worker was a pound a week. At the sale, a pew in the parish church was auctioned and fetched £50, nearly a whole year’s earnings for one of those skilled workers.

Abel Smith, who was partner in a banking firm, had bought the estate from Sir Peter Hesketh Fleetwood, who had been financially crippled by his development of the town of Fleetwood. Abel Smith owned a vast estate in Sussex and would have been an absentee landlord of the Tulketh estate. Apparently, he had his eye on developing the fields that came with the Tulketh estate for housing.

Tulketh Hall in the 1840s

At the auction, the first lot, Tulketh Hall itself, failed to raise the reserve price of £7,500, as did the second lot, a dwelling house and a hundred acres of land (reserve £15,000). Several other lots failed to reach their reserve, but the churchwardens of St Andrew’s successfully bid £530 for three small fields next to the church.

Also bidding successfully was Thomas Walmsley, who bought a number of plots, probably with the intention of building on them. One of his purchases, lot 8, was described as a ‘very eligible Plot of Building Land, fronting to the Kirkham road [now Blackpool Road], and running alongside the Preston and Wyre Railway’.

In fact, the marketing of the sale had been targeted at developers, as the advertisements in the Preston Chronicle made clear:

‘This Estate is well worthy of the attention of the capitalist, the merchant, or the manufacturer. It is of a rich and productive soil, and presents many picturesque and desirable sites for villas, as well as excellent situations for purposes of trade and manufactures. A great part of it contains beds of Sand, a deep bed of good Brick Clay and it possesses the important advantage of immediately adjoining the town of Preston without being liable to the rates and restrictions to which property within the borough is subject.’

Edward Pedder, the Preston banker who lived nearby at Ashton Park, successfully bid £1,250 for a six-acre plot.

Other lots that did not sell included the Ship Inn, together with cottages, gardens and land, near the Ashton Quays. The Quays themselves with their warehouses, offices, cottages, weighing machines, cranes and slip did not sell either.

What did sell was a large family pew, with two servants’ pews behind in the parish church. Mr J. J. Myers paid £90 for them. Another pew in the church sold for £50.

There were no free pews in the parish church at this date. The poor were excluded, a fact that dismayed the Winckley heiress, Lady Frances Shelley, when she visited her home town at about this date. She remonstrated with the church authorities, including the vicar, the Rev John Owen Parr, to no avail.

1850 advert for sale of Tulketh Hall estate
The Preston Chronicle advertisement for the sale

The best history of Tulketh Hall, and the source for the 1840s view of the hall pictured, is Kim Travis’s, The story of Tulketh and Tulketh Hall


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