On this day … 6 August 1689

The entries in the diaries of Thomas Bellingham and Lawrence Rawstorne provide a glimpse of daily life for the gentry in seventeenth-century Preston:

𝐁𝐞π₯π₯𝐒𝐧𝐠𝐑𝐚𝐦 𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐲
Ye 6th. A fayr day. Mr. Bankes went hence to Kendall. I walk’d to Penwortham to visitt Mr. Fleetwood, who is very ill. I was att night wth Mr. Preston, of Hooker, Cousen Bellingham, and others. My sister is removed to Mrs. Bushells.

π‘πšπ°π¬π­π¨π«π§πž 𝐞𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐲
6 at Preston & at prayers, went after dinner to Penwortham & Capt. Bellingham wth mee, was ith’ evening at Swanseys ith’ weend wth. Coz: Preston & Lawier Bellingham, Mr Mayoe came to ’s

Mr Bankes was Tim Banks, the agent for the Westmorland and Cumberland magnate James Grahme, the owner of Levens Hall, which he had bought from Thomas Bellingham’s cousin, Alan Bellingham. Both Banks and Graeme were suspected Jacobites.

Levens Hall with its famous topiaries
Levens Hall with its famous topiary from Morris’s Country Seats (1880): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Levens_Morris_edited.jpg

Banks had probably also been the agent for Alan Bellingham, who had inherited Levens on the death of his father in 1680. Bellingham, elected MP for Westmorland five times, did not live at Levens for long, for he β€˜was destined to ruin the estate and die in exile’.

Penwortham Priory Preston in 1855
Preston Digital Archive ‘Penwortham Priory near Preston. The Seat of Lawrence Rawstone (sic) Esq. Image taken from the History of the Borough of Preston and Its Environs in the County of Lancaster, By Charles Hardwick 1857.’ https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4062236227/

After Thomas Bellingham had seen Banks on his way and Rawstorne had been to morning prayers at the parish church, they walked β€˜after dinner’ over to Penwortham Priory, the home of Rawstorne’s brother-in-law Edward Fleetwood.

Holker Hall
Holker Hall from Morris’s Country Seats (1880):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Holker_Hall_(1880).jpg

That night the pair were out again at the hostelry known as Swanseys in Mainspit Weind, where William Swansey was the innkeeper in 1685. The company included Thomas Preston of β€˜Hooker’, that is Holker Hall, the owner of a vast estate on the Furness peninsula, William Bellingham, a lawyer and Alan Bellingham’s younger brother, and the mayor, Thomas Winckley.

Bellingham’s sister, Anne Bickerton, married into one of the most prominent Anglo-Irish families in Ireland, had sought refuge in Preston when their home in Ireland was threatened by Jacobites. Bellingham found accommodation for her and her daughter with Elizabeth Bushell, the third wife and widow of Seth Bushell, vicar of Preston and Lancaster, and step-mother of William Bushell, the curate of Goosnargh, and later also the rector of Heysham.


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