On this day … 25 August 1900

The Preston Guardian carried a review of Henry Fishwick’s recently published History of Preston by his fellow local historian Henry Clemesha which criticised its ‘sad deficiencies’.

Such spats between local historians were not unknown in nineteenth-century Preston. Poor Richard Cookson came in for particularly stinging criticism when he published his entertaining and informative History of Goosnargh. Fortunately, we now live in more amicable times.

With Clemesha and Fishwick, the division was between the ‘academic’ historian Clemesha, with his MA degree, and the ‘antiquarian’ historian Fishwick, who had no academic qualifications. The fashion has been to sneer at the efforts of the antiquarians and laud the offerings of the academics.

Time is proving such sneers misplaced, as the case of Clemesha and Fishwick demonstrates. What the antiquarians did was to record, transcribe and document their sources, a service for which later historians should be eternally grateful.

Henry Fishwick of Rochdale, in his mayoral robes
Henry Fishwick in his mayoral robes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fishwick

Fishwick’s publications are now far more useful to researchers than Clemesha’s. A similar service is today being provided by the useful on line offerings of family historians. As one of those family historians, David Murray, commented:

‘How he found the time to fulfil the vast range of his responsibilities in an age without so many of our modern “efficiency aids” is quite remarkable. He was a leading citizen of Rochdale for decades, and a national figure in the development of municipal education, as well as playing major roles in the antiquarian and historical associations of the County.’

In fact, Henry Fishwick (1835-1914) could possible lay claim to being the father of Lancashire local history. His publications for our area included not only his History of Preston, but histories of Goosnargh, Kirkham, Garstang, Poulton-le-Fylde, Bispham, St Michael’s-on-Wyre and Lytham. All are available on line and all were produced before the wonders of the world wide web.

Born in Rochdale, where he was twice mayor, he was a founder member of three of Lancashire’s historical societies: the Record Society of Lancashire and Cheshire, the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire and the Lancashire and Cheshire Antiquarian Society. He served as president of two of them, and contributed many papers to all three and several other societies.

His contribution to the history of Lancashire was recognised by his election as a fellow of both the Society of Antiquaries and the Royal Historical Society.

Bulsnape Hall, Goosnargh
Bulsnape Hall from Fishwick’s History of Goosnargh

He devoted a good deal of his research time to the Preston area, probably because his family took its name from the Preston township of Fishwick, where their name was recorded in the thirteenth century, and later they were settled in Goosnargh for many generations at the ancestral home, Bulsnape Hall.


Sources
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Fishwick
https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~fishwick/genealogy/fishwick/fish03-Henry-Rochdale.htm
And, of course, Henry Fishwick’s own publications


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