On this day … 1 October 1859

The front page of the Preston Chronicle, which in those days contained nothing but adverts, provides a shop window of the various forms of entertainment offered in Preston at that time. After the usual church notices, attention was directed to more secular pursuits, not all of which sound very enticing. For example, the Young Men’s Elocutionary Association was promising an entertainment, nature not specified, at the Avenham Mechanics’ Institution.

Over at the Exchange Rooms on Lune Street, Mr Sam Cowell was giving a farewell performance, before sailing for New York at the end of the month, ‘when he will sing several new songs in character’ assisted by the Miss Henrys and Master Haydn Corri.

At the Theatre Royal on Fishergate, the vocalists Mesdames Louisa Vinning (‘Formerly the Infant Sappho’) and Fanny Huddart were due to appear, along with M. Remenyi, ‘Solo Violinist to Her Majesty’.

They were following Mr and Mrs Howard Paul who had taken the Theatre Royal for four nights, having come …

‘From the Egyptian Hall and St James’s Hall, London (where they appeared 700 consecutive nights), will give their Musical, Comical and Fanciful Entertainment “Patchwork”, pronounced by the press to be the wittiest and most varied and sparkling entertainment of the day.’

The audiences were clearly going to be given value for their money, for the Howard Pauls were offering a performance packed with delights, including:

’14 impersonations of character, Scotch, English and Irish ballads, operatic selections, fanciful costumes, whims and oddities, cribs from “Punch” and many floating jests of the day, which are woven into this curious fabric by way of comic entertainment.’

Mrs Howard Paul’s new dualogue ‘Dog and Cat’, in which ‘two persons are represented at once, was apparently pronounced by the Times to be ‘Very novel and peculiar’.

Ticket prices were: boxes 2s 6d, upper boxes 1s 6d, pit 1s, gallery 6d. If the audience enjoyed the performance, they could then purchase ‘Patchwork’, just published by Routledge, from Miss Lambert at the Station Hotel across the road from the theatre. It was, the advert promised, ‘a volume of pun and fun, containing many of the drolleries of the entertainment’.

Theatre adverts from the Preston Chronicle

Turning to more worthy leisure pursuits, the Young Men’s Christian Association was offering literary and arithmetic classes at its home in Fishergate, where there was a reading room ‘well supplied with papers and periodicals’, which was open from eight in the morning until 10.30 at night.

Those wanting to escape the town were offered a ‘cheap trip to Liverpool’, marketed as ‘positively the last of the season’:

‘An excursion train, via the East Lancashire Line, will leave Preston at eight in the morning, returning from Liverpool at half-past six the same evening.
Fares there and back, 1s 3d; children, 9d
Visitors are admitted on board Her Majesty’s Line-of-battle Ship the Donegal, 101 guns.’

At Dent’s Bowling Green at Ribble Side, the last bowling match of the season was due to take place. Thirty-two bowlers had each subscribed five shillings to make up the prize money, to which Mrs Dent had added two pounds.

An advert placed by Preston Grammar School gives an indication of the value of money in those days, for it cost six guineas a year to send a boy aged under twelve there, rising to eight guineas above that age. Extra classes in German, French and Drawing cost another guinea.

The headmaster, the Rev. G. T. Tatham MA, promised in return that ‘pupils will be prepared for the Universities, Military Colleges, or Middle Class Examinations’. He announced that he would be taking boarders after Christmas.


According to the National Archives currency converter, in 1860 a skilled tradesman earned about a pound a week and a ticket to the gallery at the Theatre Royal would have cost £1.50 in today’s money.


Source
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/


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply