On this day … 2 October 1654

The Preston Corporation decided to sink a well in the Market Place to provide a free water supply for the inhabitants of the town who did not have access to a well on their own property. The decision is found in the White Book, a hefty tome now preserved at Lancashire Archives, in which the activities of the corporation from 1608 to 1781 are recorded. This is the instruction that the corporation issued:

โ€˜Ordered yt a draw well shalbee made in the Bottom of the Market Stidd in such convenient place as shalbee thought fitt by Mr. Tho. Sumpner, Mr. Tho. Bickerstaffe, and Mr. Tho. Walmesley, who are Appointed to oversee the work โ€ฆโ€™

Preston White Book corporation records
The not-so-white spine of the White Book

The council members decided that if there was not enough money in the corporation kitty to pay the three men who were to oversee the work, and they clearly thought there wouldnโ€™t be, they were to go cap in hand to the owners of neighbouring properties:

โ€˜And the said overseers are for ye better pfectinge ye work to borrowe from the neighboringe Inhabitants to the Markett stidd such sume or sumes of money as they will willingly lend.โ€™

These Market Place neighbours were to be reassured that as soon as there was money in the corporation kitty, there would be โ€˜speedie paymentโ€™ of the money they had lent.

Preston White Book 2 Oct 1654
The page from the White Book from which the above account of the sinking of the Market Place well is taken

During the course of the seventeenth century the corporation records show that more public wells were sunk: in 1664 in Church Street, near Manchester Road, and, in 1666, in Fishergate, between Cannon Street and Guildhall Street.

Over the following centuries these wells were replaced, firstly with pumps, much more convenient than having to pull up a bucket from the bottom of a well, and then by a piped water supply. These changes were somewhat piecemeal, and for quite some time, all three systems of water supply were in use in Preston. The last public well to close was the Spa Well on land below Wellington Terrace. That was in the 1860s.

1685 plan showing the location of the Main Sprit Weind Well: https://prestonhistory.com/maps-and-plans/preston-1684/main-sprit-weind/

Public wells are mentioned in the first surviving records of the townโ€™s court leet: one in Main Sprit Weind, another, the Goose Well, at the bottom of Church Street, and a third in Friargate. The Main Sprit Weind well first appears in the townโ€™s records in the court leet held in October 1653. Edward Eccles had built a pigsty in the weind close to the well, and the court fined him and ordered him to remove it:

โ€˜Wee find and p’sent Edward Eccles hath not removed his swyne Coate or Co’t, erected in the highway to Minespitt well, to the annoyance of the Highway, according to the time limited in the 35th p’ntm’t of the same Inquest, and therefore to pay his fine of vjs. viijd., and for every Month it continues unpulled downe after notice given vis. viijd.โ€™

It’s probable that the townsfolk preferred to drink weak beer rather than the water from the wells that was often polluted, despite the best efforts of the corporation to keep them clean:

โ€˜The now Bailiffes of this Towne shall cause the free Wells of this Towne betwixt the Goose well and the Mince Spitt well to be cleansed fower tymes in the yeare (the same beinge filthie in Summer if not often closed) And shall uphold and maintaine the Rayles to keepe horses and Cattell from defylinge the same.โ€™


Sources
Hewitson’s History of Preston
The Preston White Book (held at Lancashire Archives CNP/3/1/1)
David Berry’s transcript of the Preston Court Leet Records: https://www.wyrearchaeology.org.uk/index.php/areas-of-interest/preston?view=article&id=162


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