On this day … 6 September 1862

The Preston Guardian reported that illegal cockfighting was taking place in Preston in a schoolroom adjoining the Sir Walter Scott public house on North Road.

This shows that the ‘sport’, in earlier years a favoured pastime for the gentry of Preston, still had its supporters in the town. In fact, cockfights were still being staged as late as 1883, when the Preston Chronicle carried a report from a correspondent expressing his disgust at an impromptu cockfight staged in the town:

‘ A few days since four Preston men of business, who pose – especially on Sunday – as Christian gentlemen, were, with two “commercials”, dining at a well frequented hotel not far from the old Cockpit [in Stoneygate]. One of the Preston gentlemen has a game cock, presumably for the protection of his premises, and in a yard in close proximity to the hotel was another game cock owned by an employee of a manufacturer.

‘… it was arranged that the birds should be pitted against each other … and the “gentleman’s” bird defeated the “man’s” bird on his own ground.’

The men had so ‘enjoyed’ the contest that they decided on a second bout the following day:

‘A gentleman – a “carriage gentleman”, mind you – went himself for the victorious cock of the preceding day and brought him secreted under his arm and beneath his coat … to the extemporised pit.

‘… the feathers flew in scores. The excitement was immense, the christian gentlemen highly edified, and the “man’s” bird though awfully punished … nearly killed the “gentlemen’s”, which was stealthily borne away; the victor being left in a wretched plight …’

Such cases were usually dealt with by the magistrates when reported, as with an earlier illegal cock fight in 1850 at the Fox and Grapes on Ribbleton Lane. The landlord, John Knowles, and two other men were convicting of arranging a cock fight behind the public house. The mayor fined all three, ‘after making some very appropriate remarks on this relic of barbarism’.

The Cruelty to Animals Act of 1835 had banned cockfighting in England and Wales, but it continued as a legal ‘sport’ in Scotland for a further sixty years, until finally banned in1895. In 2017, the RSPCA reported that cockfighting was at a five-year high.

When legal, cockfighting was extremely popular in Preston, as can be judged by the prominent position of the Fighting Cocks Inn (now the Adelphi) at the bottom of Friargate. The field behind was named ‘Cockpit Field’ on Lang’s 1774 map of Preston.

In the seventeenth century, the corporation sponsored cockfights and owned the town cockpit, which in 1650 was in danger of falling down. The bailiffs were ordered to repair it and move it to a new site.

The former cockpit in Stoneygate Preston
The cockpit when it had become the Temperance Hall as shown in The Illustrated London News Nov. 12 1853: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4081579871/

The last ‘legal’ cockpit was in Stoneygate, near the parish church. Hewitson provided a good description in his History of Preston:

‘The building … was, it is said, erected at the expense or through the instrumentality of the great grandfather of the present Lord Derby, at the beginning of this century. The rabble were not admitted to this place when fighting was going on. The results were shouted out of the windows to the crowd below.

‘An old woman, named Jenny Bell, who lived near the building, used to get the killed cocks for sale. The birds, when she sold them, were labelled with the names of their owners.

‘Singular to say, the building wherein this cockfighting took place was, on Sundays, used as a school, in connection with the Parish Church. The game of cockfighting was indulged in here only one week in the year — the race week; but, though thus limited, Sunday school teaching, in such a place, sounds none the less singular or incongruous.

‘One who used to be associated with the Parish Church at this time informs us that he has gone into the Cockpit on a Sunday morning – after the week’s fighting to straighten up the place for school work, and that he has helped to clear away blood and feathers, shed and scattered during the combats.’

In 1814, a preacher at the parish church complained of having to compete with ‘the infernal yells, the diabolical oaths and curses’ coming from the cockpit.

This cockpit closed in 1830 when the Earl of Derby withdrew his support, along with support for the town’s horse races, in disgust at the defeat of his grandson in the recent general election. It was part of the withdrawal of the Stanleys from the life of the town, culminating in the demolition of their Preston mansion, Patten House on Church Street.


Sources
Hewitson’s History of Preston
Fishwick’s History of Preston


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