On this day … 21 August 1861

The Preston Chronicle reported that a culvert supplying water to a cotton mill off Marsh Lane from the nearby canal had burst and the workmen making the repairs had uncovered a medieval graveyard several feet below a coal yard.

They discovered a quantity of human bones including three skulls and two thigh bones, along with fragments of an oak coffin. They dated back to the time when a friary, founded in the thirteenth century, stood on the site. Masonry from the friary, still containing traces of whitewash, was also uncovered.

What proved to be the most interesting find, a medieval gravestone, fell victim to a workmanโ€™s pickaxe and a large portion of it was accidentally buried in the trench.

It was a small gravestone, measuring 19 inches long and roughly a foot wide, with a simple cross incised on it. According to the Chronicle report, it was probably cut from the red sandstone that used to be quarried from the bed of the Ribble.

Preston Friary sculpture
‘A sketch of a rare surviving statue from Prestonโ€™s Franciscan Friary, on display in the Harris Museum’: https://lancashirepast.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/79d666df-137a-4829-9766-a31bb0a873da.jpg?w=768

In recent years, detailed archaeological investigations at the site have revealed much more about the friary. They were carried out in 1991 and 2007, in advance of major developments at the site. The 2007 excavation uncovered the medieval graveyard, in which there were thirty graves, five of which contained coffin boards.

The archaeological evidence has now been treated to a full book on the subject, โ€˜Brothers Minor: Lancashire’s Lost Franciscans: Investigations at Preston Friary 1991 and 2007โ€™ by Jeremy Bradley and Stephen Rowland (two copies in the Harris Library).

An on-line account has been provided by Adrian Bowden on his superb Lancaster Past website, where he supplies a walking route to the site:

โ€˜If youโ€™d like to see the site where the cemetery was recently discovered and look at the area where the friary used to be, arm yourself with a town map and head down the hill on Friargateโ€™s pedestrianized area. Cross over the Ringway dual carriage way and turn left along it, following it until you reach Corporation Street on your right (where Office World is). Head up Corporation Street and take the first left turn after the superstores into Healey Street and follow it to the end. It connects to Ladywell Street, former site of the holy well and probably at the outer edge of the prioryโ€™s precinct.

โ€˜Follow Ladywell Street to the end, and turn left onto Marsh Lane (which used to be called Friarโ€™s Lane). As you follow it down past Brunel Court you can see the Legacy Preston International Hotel on your left. This was built in 2007, and thatโ€™s when the medieval cemetery was discovered underneath where it now stands.

โ€˜If you pass the hotel and take a short path on your left through the trees this brings you out back onto Ringway. With the railway sidings in front of you across the dual carriageway and the railway bridge to the right, you are probably standing in the place where the Friary was located. Looking around, and knowing the recent industrial activity in the area, you can see why not a lot of its remains have been found!โ€™

Plan showing location of Preston's medieval friary
Plan reconstructed from a 1680s survey of Preston. The friary later became the House of Correction, as it is labelled on the plan: https://prestonhistory.com/maps-and-plans/preston-1684/friargate-lower/

Source
Adrian’s site: https://lancashirepast.com/2013/11/07/prestons-lost-medieval-friary/


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