On this day … 24 August 1881

The Preston Guardian recorded Queen Victoria’s train passing through Preston on her way to Balmoral for her annual autumn stay. The outward and homeward rail journeys were faithfully recorded in the town’s papers each year, together with fuller accounts when she chose to break her journey at Preston.

Those fuller accounts could spread to several pages in the papers, as when she and Prince Albert stopped at Preston for a quick lunch break on their return from Balmoral in October 1852.

Queen Victoria's train in 1843
Queen Victoria’s train in 1843

This was a carefully contrived visit, with the Earl of Derby seeking a meeting with the prime minister to urge that the royal pair make the stop at Preston, and the mayor of Preston, Thomas Monk, and the town’s MP, Robert Townley Parker, visiting the queen at Balmoral with a formal invitation to lunch at the railway station. A special meeting of the corporation was convened to plan the arrangements for the railway luncheon.

Come the day, come a great contretemps, when the railway authorities attempted, unsuccessfully, to shift the lunch venue from Preston to Lancaster. An attempt that brought down on them all the fierce invective that an editorial in the Preston Chronicle could muster.

The paper was outraged by this attempt ‘to deter the Queen from resting for half an hour at this the third town in her own Duchy!’ The railway company had decided that her safety could not be guaranteed if she were to stop at the station, prompting the following xenophobic response from the Chronicle:

‘This foul libel upon the inhabitants of this town was uttered by some Mr, or Monsieur, or Signor, or Mynheer Bruyeres, an official of the London and North Western Railway Company.

‘It was further alleged that the station was such a busy one that Queen’s personal safety could not be guaranteed were she to rest here, and so arrangements were made for transferring the royal charge to Lancaster, without even the sovereign’s pleasure being first taken on the subject, a station not even covered over, a station not half the width of that a Preston, nor one tenth the extent!’

When the corporation discovered this attempt to spike their plans, they quickly forced the railway company to back down and the visit went ahead without a hitch. The Chronicle’s verdict on the unfortunate Bruyeres’ machinations:

‘The best answer to such a piece of absurdity is, that the thing has been done, and without the slightest accident of confusion, or even the stoppage or the alteration of a single passenger train. Mynheer Bruyeres appears to have about as much knowledge of the capabilities of our station, as he has of the temper of the capabilities and disposition of the people of Preston.’

It was a last-minute rescue of the royal visit, for, according to the Chronicle:

‘While, however, these things were going on at the station here, and the representatives of the company were co-operating, or pretending to co-operate, with the Council in their arrangements, Signor Bruyeres’s libel upon the inhabitants of Preston was in royal hands at Balmoral, and the inhabitants of Lancaster were, according to the orders of the railway authorities, fitting up their little station to receive the Queen!’

Having defeated the railway company, the members of the corporation treated themselves to a slap-up meal at the Bull Hotel (now Bull and Royal) to celebrate their victory. It probably lasted a little longer than the royal couple’s half-hour lunch.

Artist's interpretation of Queen Victoria’s train
Artist’s interpretation of Queen Victoria’s first train journey
Interior of Queen Victoria's railway carriage
The interior of Queen Victoria’s railway coach

Source
The Preston Chronicle, freely available on line to members of the Lancashire County Council library: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/libraries-and-archives/libraries/digital-library/newspapers-old-and-new/

Images
The images are taken from The History Girls website, which includes an article by Janie Hampton on Queen Victoria’s first railway journey
http://the-history-girls.blogspot.com/2017/06/queen-victorias-first-railway-journey.html


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply