On this day … 31 August 1867

The Preston Chronicle carried a letter headlined ‘Destruction of an ancient relic’ deploring the removal of the central pier, the last remnant of the old bridge over the Ribble at Walton-le-Dale, replaced in the late eighteenth century, that represents a clarion call to people defending Preston’s heritage today.

Walton Bridge Preston map 1840s
An 1840s map showing the site of the old Walton bridge and its then still surviving bridge pier, downstream from the bridge that replaced it: https://maps.nls.uk/view/231280374

The correspondent, from Walton-le-Dale, complained that, ‘The old pier was linked with almost every historical event that took place within a period extending over many centuries, and it formed part of a bridge which had often raised contests for possession between the warriors in civil feuds.’

‘Anciently, it was esteemed the greatest pass, in a military point of view, in the whole kingdom, and during the Jacobite rebellion particularly so, as it was then considered the most likely place for checking the inroads of the Scotch into the southern provinces’.

The reason for the pier’s destruction and removal was, apparently, that the current caused by it would weaken the new embankment that was being built. This argument was dismissed by the correspondent to the Chronicle, who maintained:

‘That relic was highly prized by many and by Waltonians in particular, who, along with myself, are desirous of protesting against what they deem to be no less than a sacrilegious act.’

The correspondent claimed that the destruction had been carried out by an individual, a Mr Hunt of Frenchwood, without the sanction of the relevant authorities.

The destruction will find echoes in present day regrets at the loss of Preston’s heritage, as when the correspondent writes:

‘Memorial after memorial of by-gone ages – reminders of valiant and historic deeds performed by our forefathers, who slumber in the graveyard of the hamlet – seem to be vanishing day by day; and I think it behoves everyone, not devoid of taste for antiquities, to see to them, and to prevent their desecration and obliteration.’

Another correspondent, writing from ‘Under the Arch, Ribble Bridge’, weighed in, complaining that Mr Hunt had no authority to destroy one of the last traces of Preston’s ancient history, something that seems to happen still today. This correspondent was even more incensed by the destruction, arguing that only the quarter sessions, the forerunner of the county council, had the power to approve its destruction:

‘The sanction, then, for the removal of the bridge, or bridges, or any portion of them, must be obtained, if justice has to be done, from the public through their representatives in court of quarter sessions assembled. Has this been done? I think not; for I cannot persuade myself to believe, that though we have sometimes some great mufties to represent us, the court of quarter sessions would be so careless for ancient relics as to give sanction to the removal of one without absolute cause.’

The vandal would certainly have suffered at the hands of this correspondent:

‘I would, had I the power – and I do really covet it at the moment – quickly bring the wretch, who dare to destroy such loved relics, upon his marrow-bones, or bestow upon him such punishment as would teach him not to meddle with the like again.’

Walton Bridge Preston c. 1860
An early view of the ‘new’ Walton Bridge Walton Bridge, c.1865. Photograph by Robert Pateson: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/5666461469/

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/


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