On this day … 11 July 1747

Lancashire Jacobites supposedly wrote from Carlisle urging sympathisers in Preston to attack the squire of Walton-le-Dale, Sir Henry Hoghton, at his home, Walton Hall, to ‘plague him and fire his house’, and divide up his estate among local Catholics.

Their letter, supposed to have been taken from a woman on the old bridge across the River Darwen in Walton-le-Dale, was almost certainly a forgery, produced by supporters of George II and the Hanoverian succession, to stir up anti-Catholic hostility. It was reprinted as a handbill in 1815, again, presumably to inflame no-popery hysteria.

Sir Henry would have been a natural target because he was a fervent anti-Jacobite, ‘… playing a prominent role in suppressing both the Fifteen and Forty-Five, and in the ensuing pursuit of Jacobites and Catholics after both rebellions.

The document opens as follows, ‘A copy of a letter found the 18th of October, 1747, upon Darwent-Bridge, in Walton, near Preston, in a Woman’s Pocket, which contained besides, a Papist Book and two Crosses.’

A modern parallel for the contents of the document would be the sort of on-line hate issuing from Isis websites, for it purportedly urged Catholics:

‘… steadfastly believing that King J[ames] is the true, right, an lawful Heir of the Crown of England, and that G[eorge] is a damned Heretick, a Bastard of Hanover, and Usurper to the Crown of England; and that all Heretics are damned; and to kill, burn and destroy them, or all their Families, or Houses, or Goods, or anything they have; whoever Doth it, shall save his soul from Hell, and merit thereby.’

The letter then goes on to name several local Catholics apparently willing to carry out such urging, including several members of the Tootel family, one of whom:

‘… James Tootel enlisted when I did, and stay’d in Preston whilst we did [during the 1745 Jacobite rebellion], and walked with us, and swore he would kill some of the Hereticks in a little Time, for he was sure it was no sin; and I am sure he is very loyal to the cause …’

Others named included a Peter Wearden, of Penwortham, who ‘has been very Kind to us’. And another Wearden, named Thomas, had apparently sent word that he and his fellow Catholics were building a chapel at Cuerden.

Thomas and his brother William, along with a Benjamin Waddington were to share the Hoghton estate after the family had been ousted:

‘Pray think of Rump Hoghton, of Walton, plague him and fire his house; Benjamin Waddington must have Part of his Estate, and Thomas Wearden & William his Brother, must have all the rest. Pray now begin to drop Letters and Hostilities upon the Rumps and Hereticks.’

That such a collection of gross libels against Catholics could be in circulation in Preston in 1815 is a mark of the hostility they faced from certain sections of the community. Catholic emancipation that came a few years later in 1824 did little to lessen that hostility.

Walton Hall, Walton-le-Dale c. 1820
Walton Hall, the home of Sir Henry Hoghton, squire of Walton-le-Dale, taken from David Hunt’s History of Walton-le-Dale. No source given but possibly from an original in the possession of a local family.

Source
Charles Hardwick’s History of Preston, where the full contents of the document can be found.


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