On this day … 29 August 1814

The Rev Joseph ‘Daddy’ Dunn, the priest at St Wilfrid’s Church, laid the foundation stone for the new Catholic school in Fox Street, then a newly-opened street leading from Fishergate to Friargate. It accommodated six hundred pupils, the girls upstairs, the boys downstairs, and provided accommodation for the schoolmaster and schoolmistress.

It was an innovative establishment for two reasons. Firstly, it was soon to be supplied with gas lighting, a form of illumination then in its infancy. And secondly, it was funded and supported by prominent Protestants, at a time when the town’s Anglican clergy were attracting audiences of as many as three thousand to their ‘No Popery’ lectures.

St Wilfrid's School Preston
Preston Digital Archive. St. Wilfrid’s School, Fox Street, Preston. N.D. Image courtesy of C.N. De Luca, Cornelia Connelly Digital Library. corneliaconnellylibrary.org/ The Society of the Holy Child Jesus http://www.shcj.org
https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/18661516514/

The Rev Dunn had established amicable relations with influential persons of all faiths both in the town and far beyond, as the list of subscribers to his school fund, which Peter Whittle included in his History of Preston, indicates:

‘The following gentlemen are amongst its supporters, viz.:—The Earl of Derby; S. Horrocks, Esq. M.P.; E. Hornby. Esq. M.P.; T. S. Shuttleworth, Esq.; R. W. Robinson, M.D; T. W. France, Esq.; Sir Robt. Peele, Bart. M.P. His Grace the Duke of Norfolk; Duke de San Carlos; Archduke of Austria; P. Horrocks, Esq; Wm. St. Clare, M.D.; Hon. R. Peele; J. Dalton, Esq.; E. Pedder, Esq.; Lady Gerrard; Sir Wm. Jerningham; S. Tempest, Esq.; — Riddell, Esq.; R. Pilkingtone, Esq. ; J. Swainson, Esq.; T. Blanchard, Esq.; T. B. Addison, Esq.; G. Jacson, Esq.; and many other respectable individuals resident in the town, and many distant in other counties.’

Presumably, Whittle was treating Lady Gerrard as an honorary gentleman. Another woman, Mrs Dalton, the wife of the J. Dalton in the list above, was the patron of the girls’ school. The Daltons were prominent Roman Catholics, living in Winckley Square at this time.

Fr Dunn published the list of subscribers, including the following in his preface on behalf of his congregation:

‘Feeling as they do the greatest sense of gratitude to all the supporters of this establishment, they have a peculiar satisfaction in viewing the great proportion of Protestant names, many of them of the highest respectability, which occur in the catalogue, and they consider this circumstance as a demonstrative proof of the spirit of harmony and charity subsisting between them and their friends of other religious denominations.’

The story of Fr Dunn’s role in introducing gas lighting to Preston has been told many times. Peter Whittle captures the excitement occasioned by its introduction in Preston, the first town outside London to be lighted by gas, but soon followed by several others:

‘This invaluable discovery, which at this present time bestows additional lustre on our houses of worship, theatres, inns, coffee-rooms, cotton-mills, shops, houses, and streets, is rapidly spreading its extraordinary benefits throughout the various commercial towns in the kingdom.’

In the Fox Street school, gas was piped up slender iron pillars to burners that provided light in winter. The school also boasted a form of central heating that did away with the need for coal fires.

Additional facilities at the school, included a circulating library for the town’s Catholics, organised by a Mr Carr, ‘a promising young man’, and there was a weekly school for adults.


Source:
Peter Whittle’s History of Preston


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