On this day … 20 September 1589

Thomas Langton, lord of the manor of Walton-le-Dale, gathered his supporters on Preston Marsh and that night attacked Lea Hall, then the home of Thomas Hoghton. Langton armed his men with a variety of weapons, including guns and scythes, and, giving them the watchword ‘The crow is white’, split them into groups to approach Lea from different directions.

They were planning to recover cattle belonging to Thomasine Singleton, a widow, of Singleton, which had been seized and impounded at Lea. It is not known why Langton should have espoused the cause of the widow.

Hoghton had learned of the planned attack, and arming his servants, gave them the watchword ‘Black, black’, and prepared to resist. The clash between the two groups was violent. Thomas Hoghton was killed, as was one of Langton’s men.

Some forty-seven of the Langton followers were charged with involvement in Hoghton’s death, but none of them was brought to trial. The dispute and the death of Thomas Hoghton was resolved by Langton surrendering his Walton-le-Dale manor and Walton Hall to the Hoghton family.

Map showing the location of the Grade 1 Old Lea Hall and adjoining Grade 2 listed buildings: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1361663?section=official-list-entry

The Walton-le-Dale manor had been acquired by John de Langton by marriage to the daughter of the previous lord of the manor in 1293 or 1294. That Langton had ambitious plans for his new manor. In 1301, he obtained permission to hold a weekly market and an annual three-day fair, and built bridges across the Ribble and Darwen rivers.

The Langtons were a violent bunch, as the inhabitants of Fishwick discovered. There was a right of way along the banks of the Ribble through Sir Thomas Langton’s estate in Walton-le-Dale to the Fishwick inhabitants’ turbary (a place where peat was cut for fuel) at Penwortham.

In 1541, the Fishwick inhabitants were met by men ‘armed with staves, bucklers, daggers, knives, and other-like weapons’, who blocked their way, preventing them from fetching the fuel for their homes. The result was an appeal to the Duchy Court, and the dispute was resolved for ‘the eschewing of further troble and busynes’.

The inhabitants of Fishwick secured their right of way by the Ribble to Penwortham, where ‘a place on Penwortham Moss known as Fyshewyk Rowmes was appointed, from which the tenants were to get their turves. The place now known as Rowe Green’.

In 1545, the same Sir Thomas Langton sent men armed with ‘swords, bylls, and long pyked staves’, to plunder the former Preston Friary off Marsh Lane. They took away a thousand ‘wayne loods of ston called walle-ston or stone for walles’, and left the land ‘beaten, worn, and trodden, as welle with the fete of the beastes and cattail, as with the wheles of the waynes’.

After the Hoghtons gained Walton Hall following the killing of Thomas Hoghton, Walton Hall became the home of members of the Hoghton family, the main Hoghton residence then being Hoghton Tower. But later, the Hoghtons abandoned Hoghton Tower and moved to Walton Hall, to become the resident lords of the manor of Walton-le-Dale.

In the nineteenth century, Walton Hall was in turn abandoned, and soon after pulled down. The Hoghtons returned to live in a restored and refurbished Hoghton Tower later in the century.


Sources
Clemesha’s History of Preston
Fishwick’s History of Preston
For Old Lea Hall: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1361663?section=official-list-entry
For old Walton-le-Dale: Domesday Preston


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