On this day … 27 July 1630

Alexander Rigby, of Middleton Hall, Goosnargh, wrote to his brother, George Rigby, the clerk of the peace for Lancashire, trying to sort out the education of his two sons, Alexander and Edward. His letter provides an insight into the life of a seventeenth-century schoolboy from a gentry family:

‘I have purposely sent this messenger to be by him acertened from you whether my two boys may be sent to my cosen Raebone. I pray you to signifie to me what a lodging and bed they may have; whether he will allow them wheat-bread; what he expecteth for their dyet, lodging and washing, and what for their scooling; how many schollers he hath, and whether he intend to follow the ministrie or wholy to apply himselfe to teaching children, and what the place is wherein he teacheth the children.’

It is not known if Alexander settled on ‘cosen Raebone’ to teach the boys, but, according to the History of Parliament, they ‘enjoyed’ a strictly puritan education.

Portrait of Alexander Rigby
A portrait of Alexander Rigby reproduced from Fishwick’s History of Goosnargh

Alexander Rigby was one of the leaders of the Parliamentarians during the Civil Wars a few years later, leading the siege of Lathom House, the seat of the Earl of Derby. The two boys, Alexander, aged ten when the letter was written, and Edward, just three years old, would go on to play a prominent role in the public life of Preston. Both were to become MPs, Alexander for Lancashire and Edward for Preston.

Alexander junior served with his father at the siege, becoming a colonel in the Parliamentary army. He was elected to Parliament when Richard Cromwell succeeded his father, Oliver, and very briefly became MP for Preston in 1660 at the Restoration of Charles II, in a contest that was quickly declared void.

In 1663, the hearth tax returns show he was living in what was possibly the largest house in Preston: it had fifteen chimneys, three more than the next highest on the list, Mrs Jane Langton, who only had twelve. He inherited Middleton Hall from his father.

The younger brother, Edward, did not serve with the Parliamentary forces. Instead, he went to Cambridge and then qualified as a lawyer. His early life was not without its troubles: he was jailed for debt while still in his twenties, and had to be rescued from his debtors’ prison by his father.

Later in life, he prospered, buying Longley Hall in Goosnargh and several properties in Preston. He was twice elected MP for Preston, in 1660-1 and again in 1678. One of his four sons, also Edward, was elected MP for Preston in 1701.


Sources
The Kenyon Papers
Alexander Rigby and his sons


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