Brindle Lodge – the Preston connections

The latest offering from the excellent Lancashire Past website is a history of Brindle Lodge, possibly slightly outside our catchment area. But it’s a fascinating account with far more information than included here, and there are a couple of Preston connections.

Brindle Lodge, near Preston

Brindle Lodge was built by William Heatley, a devout Catholic, in 1808. So devout was Heatley that he left the bulk of his vast fortune to his friend and spiritual advisor, the Rev Thomas Sherburne, to fund churches and charities. The Rev Sherburne was living in Kirkham at the time, and he used part of the bequest to fund the church of St John the Evangelist in the town.

Heatley had also provided well for his heirs, his nieces Catherine and Anne. He left Brindle Lodge and its estate to Catherine. Her husband, Thomas Eastwood, was unhappy with this arrangement and pursued the Rev Sherburne through the courts for the rest of the inheritance, alleging undue influence in the framing of the will. He was partially successful.

Eastwood was clearly a quarrelsome man. He next turned his attention to the priest at the local church, St Joseph’s, refusing to pay his pew rent. The dispute dragged on and in the end he turned his back on Catholicism, began worshipping at the neighbouring Anglican church and took his two sons out of the college where they were studying to be priests.

If it hadn’t been for Eastwood, there would have been no Fulwood Barracks. The government originally wanted to site the barracks at Brindle, but Eastwood was having none of that, protesting that his ‘mansion would thereby be materially reduced in value’. So Fulwood was chosen instead.

Eastwood died in 1867 and was buried at St Leonard’s Church in Walton-le-Dale. His widow sold Brindle Lodge to a Mr Whitehead, a Preston coal merchant. His descendant Thomas Whitehead, of the firm of Whitehead, Marsden and Hull in Winckley Square, was still living there in 1937 when he died aged 84.



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