On this day … 18 September 1852

The Preston Chronicle published a four-page supplement to mark the death of the Duke of Wellington. In fact, only three of the pages were devoted to the death of the duke, with the fourth carrying an assortment of news and features, including a poem by Longfellow.

The Chronicle had simply lifted the obituary from the Times to fill the first page and nearly all the second, followed by โ€˜Opinions of the Pressโ€™ consisting of long extracts from the other national newspapers.

No concern for copyright in those days, clearly.

By the end of the third page, the compositors had run out of Wellington type, and so simply filled up the bottom of the last column on that page with a paragraph on the accidental poisoning of five children in Scotland with arsenic intended to kill an infestation of rats in their home. All five survived.

Front page of Preston Chronicle Death of Wellington supplement

Within weeks of his death, the town was proposing to place an equestrian statue of the duke in the Market Place. Thomas Duckett, the Preston sculptor of the statue of Sir Robert Peel in Winckley Square, soon after made a model for the proposed monument that went on display in the window of the Chronicleโ€™s office in Fishergate.

However, nothing came of the proposal, and instead the town contributed to the national monument in London.

The usual way for Preston to celebrate Wellingtonโ€™s many victories was a public dinner at the Bull [and Royal] Inn on Church Street, attended by the great and the good of the town. Such a one was provided in 1813 in honour of the many victories in Spain of the then merely Viscount Wellington.

Wellingtonโ€™s memory is preserved around the town in street names, public houses and commercial buildings, although many have now disappeared. John Bannister, in his Street Names of Preston, lists some of them, noting that Wellington:

โ€˜โ€ฆ finds special favour in Ashton, where there is a Wellington Road, a Wellington Street and a Wellington Terrace. His victory over Napoleon at Waterloo overshadows his other battles which were equally successful, but less well-known. As General Arthur Wellesley, he was victorious in several battles in Spain and Portugal against the occupying French, resulting in the Convention of Cintra, in which the French had to evacuate Spain and Portugal. Cintra Avenue, also in Ashton, is named after this event. In the second Peninsular War, Wellington, or to be more correct, Wellesley, won his greatest victory so far at Vittoria, in recognition of which he was awarded the title of Duke of Wellington. In the part of North Road now swallowed up by the bus station, was a hotel with a painted sign depicting Wellington with sword raised and mounted on a charger, bearing the inscription โ€œThe Hero of Vittoriaโ€.โ€™

Hero of Vittoria public house Preston
The Hero of Vittoria Public House, North Road, Preston 1937: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4319984828/

Sources
The Preston Chronicle, available for free on line to members of Lancashire County Library, is a superb source for the history of nineteenth-century Preston: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/libraries-and-archives/libraries/digital-library/newspapers-old-and-new/
The Street Names of Preston
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Wellesley,_1st_Duke_of_Wellington


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