On this day … 17 October 1643

The Preston lawyer turned military commander, Colonel Alexander Rigby, who lived at Middleton Hall in Goosnargh, wrote to the Speaker of the House of Commons to describe his rout of a large force of Royalists gathered in Furness to relieve the siege of Thurland Castle, north of Lancaster.

Portrait of Alexander Rigby
A portrait of Alexander Rigby reproduced from Fishwick’s History of Goosnargh

Rigby had been laying siege to the castle for seven weeks, and his defeat of the relieving force persuaded Sir John Girlington, the owner of Thurland and a leader of Royalist forces in Lancashire, to surrender the castle, which the Parliamentarians then set about wrecking to render it incapable of playing any further part in the Civil War.

Charles Hardwick, in his History of Preston, reproduces the letter that Rigby, who was also MP for Wigan, wrote to the speaker, describing his success in defeating the relieving force (the original has no paragraph breaks):

โ€˜God so struck the hearts of these our enemies with terrour, that before a blow given their horse began to retreat, our foot gave a great shout, our horse pursued, theirโ€™s fled; their foot dispersed and fled; they all trusted more to their feet than their hands; they threw away their arms and colours, deserted their magazine drawn with eight oxen, and were totally routed in one quarter of an hourโ€™s time.

โ€˜Our horse slew some few of them in the pursuit, and drove many of them into the sea; we took their colonel Hudleston, of Millam, two captains, and an ensign, and about foure hundred prisoners, six foot colours, and one horse colour; and their magazin, and some horses, and more arms than men.

โ€˜And all this without the losse of any one man of ours; wee had only one man hurt by the enemy, and only another hurt by himselfe with his own pistoll, but neither mortally; upon the close of the business, all our men with a great shout cried out, โ€˜Glory be to Godโ€™; and wee all, except one troop of horse, and one foot company, which I left to quiet the countrey, returned forthwith towards our seige at Thurland.โ€™

Thurland Castle near Lancaster
Watercolour view of Thurland looking towards the west and north by J Buckler in 1818. Courtesy of Lancaster City Museum: https://lahs.archaeologyuk.org/Contrebis/whitethurland.pdf

Andrew White, in an article on the archaeological remains of the siege, includes the following contemporary account, in which the death of Edward Breres of Preston is described (again the original is all one paragraph):

โ€˜He [Col. Rigby] about the beginning of August marched his Armie thither setting them downe about it. The maine bodie of his foote or his mayne guard was at the house of Mr Cansfield about half a mile from the Castle. It [the Castle] was moited about [moated] so that it could not be come to.

โ€˜He planted his Ordenance on the East side of the Castle in a very fair plot betwixt Cansfield and it. They plaied oft against it with litle execution. It was stronge. Out of it they shot desperately when they spyed occation.

โ€˜They killed many that aduentured to near it. Edward Breres a Captaine of the Volunteers of Preston was killed by adventuring to neare. The Colonell himselfe did lye at Hornby Castle and came every day to the leagers [siege-works]. The horse lay up and down in the Country. Captain Edward Robinson lay at a towne north from the Castle called Tunstall.โ€™

Rigby later returned to the law, becoming a baron of the exchequer, a post he held for only a year. Hardwick has the following in his history:

โ€˜Mr.W.Beamont, in his observations on โ€œSome Obsolete Peculiarities of English Law,โ€ says that when the civil wars were over, Colonel Alexander Rigby โ€œdoffed his scarlet coat for a scarlet gown, and going the circuit with Baron Gates, in 1650, they were both fatally struck with gaol fever and died at Croydenโ€.โ€™

Rigby was not without his critics, one of whom accused him of profiting from his position, alleging that he was โ€˜never knowne to bee worth one [thousand] till hee became a publicke robber by law: but you must remember hee had beene a lawyer and a bad oneโ€™.


Sources:
Hardwick’s History of Preston
Andrew White’s article: https://lahs.archaeologyuk.org/Contrebis/whitethurland.pdf
Alexander Rigby — short biography


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