On this day … 4 August 1877

The Preston Chronicle reported that Dr Thomas Monk, the former mayor of Preston jailed for life for forging a patient’s will twenty years earlier, had retired after seven years as medical officer to the United Order of Free Gardeners, a benefit society.

The society made a presentation to him at a dinner organised to mark his retirement, at which he was heaped with praise for the service he had rendered to the society and its members.

This represented a remarkable turn round in the fortunes of the disgraced mayor and a measure of the extent to which he had rebuilt his reputation. Sentencing him at his trial in 1858, the judge told him he was lucky that he had not been convicted a few years earlier when forging wills was a capital offence and ‘so sure as you stand there a living man, so sure would you have been hanged for this offence’.

He was released from prison in 1868 after serving ten years’ hard labour and was later pardoned. He returned to Preston, his wife and son having died while he was in prison, and resumed his medical practice, which included serving the needs of a number of friendly societies in the town, of which the Free Gardeners was one.

In the days before the National Health Service, working-class families relied on doctors employed by friendly societies. There were several of these in Preston, many with exotic names such as the Grand and Noble Order of Female Druids and the Loyal Order of Ancient Shepherds. One of them, the Oddfellows, gave its name to a good number of Oddfellows’ Arms around town, including the one renamed Hartleys Wine Bar in Mount Street.

The Free Gardeners was one of these, and had ten lodges in Preston, such as the Model Lodge that met at the Britannia Inn in Adelphi Street, the Masters’ Lodge that met at the Roast Beef Inn in Friargate, and the splendidly named Gallant Sergeant Lodge, meeting place unknown.

The trust the societies placed in Dr Monk in caring for their members shows that they and many others in the town believed he had been badly treated. This was reflected in the way the Chronicle reported the Free Gardeners’ presentation to him:

‘The energy, solicitude, and skill, which distinguish the professional career of Dr Monk have been met with a substantial token of reward from one section of a numerous body who entrusted themselves and their ailments to his charge.’

At the time, Dr Monk was recovering from a ‘serious and well-nigh fatal illness’, and it was that which had forced him to relinquish much of his medical work, including with the Free Gardeners, which they accepted sadly:

‘It was out of a deep regard for past services, mingled with heartfelt regret at losing them, the Free Gardeners took the initiative and presented to the Doctor a splendidly illuminated address, which must be very gratifying to him in his latter years.’

He died in 1888, aged ninety.

Sir Robert Peel statue, Winckley Square, Preston
The abiding symbol of Thomas Monk’s disgrace: the statue of Sir Robert Peel in Winckley Square, unveiled by him when he was mayor. After his conviction, the corporation excised his name from the monument.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/16467196232/

For more on Thomas Monk and his trial, see Keith Johnson’s article: https://www.winckleysquarepreston.org/heritage/thomas-monk/


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