On this day … 21 October 1823

The foundation stone for St Paul’s Church on Ringway was laid in what was then open fields. Anthony Hewitson in his Churches and Chapels provides a description of the district shortly before the planting of the church:

‘There are nearly 13,000 people in the “district” of this church. What a difference time makes! At the beginning of the present century the greater portion of the district was made up of fields; whilst lanes, with hedges set each side, constituted what are now some of its busiest streets.

‘Volunteers and militiamen used to meet for drill on a large piece of land in the very heart of the locality; troops of charwomen formerly washed their clothes in water pits hard by, and dried them on the green-sward adjoining; and everything about wore a rural and primitive aspect.

‘St. Paul’s Church is situated on a portion of land which, 50 years ago, was fringed with trees and called “The Park;” and this accounts for the name still given by many to the sacred edifice–namely “Park Church.” … A road, starting opposite the Holy Lamb, in Church-street, and ending near the top of High- street, formerly passed through “The Park.”

‘Years ago a ducking or cucking stool was placed at the northern side of it, adjoining a pit, and at the edge of the thoroughfare known as Meadow street. This ducking stool was intended for the special benefit of vixens and scolding wives. It consisted of a strong plank, at the end of which was a chair, the centre working upon a pivot, and, after the person to be punished had been duly secured, she was ducked into the water.

‘If this system were now in force, it would often be patronised, for there are many lively termagants in the land, and lots in Preston.’

The church owed its existence to a ‘million pound fund’ provided by parliament in the early years of the nineteenth century to provide churches in those districts where the population was swelling as the industrial revolution gathered pace.

It was a political as much as a religious move, for these were radical times when Anglican clergy were possibly viewed by the government as useful instruments of social control, bringing a pacifying influence to their districts.

Preston got £12,500 from the fund to build a church in the town, with the district round the present UCLan campus being earmarked for what would become St Peter’s. But the vicar, the Rev Carus Wilson, persuaded the Bishop of Chester to divide the grant to build two churches: St Peter’s and St Paul’s.

As Hewitson commented:

‘Some people might consider this like “robbing Peter to pay Paul,” but it was better to halve the money for the benefit of two districts, than give all of it for the spiritual edification of one, and leave the other destitute.’

St Paul’s proved very popular, and by the time Hewitson was writing in 1869, Sunday attendances were averaging eight hundred, divided along class lines, as were most of the town’s Anglican churches at that time. Hewitson was well aware of this division, labelling the working class worshippers ‘the million’:

‘The gallery is patronised extensively by the “million”; the ground floor pews are occupied by more select and fashionable individuals. The great majority of the worshippers sit above, and few vacant spaces can as a rule be seen there. Down stairs the crush is less severe. The congregation is a mixture of working and middle class people; the former kind being preponderant.’

One of the problems with the church noted by Hewitson was that its interior design meant that there were several blind spots blocking the view of the minister in his pulpit. The pulpit was shifted to different positions to try to overcome the problem, without success.

Hewitson suggested a solution to the pulpit problem:

‘If it were put upon castors, and pushed slowly and with becoming reverence up and down the church during sermon time, all would get a view of its occupant; but we believe the warders have an objection to pulpits on castors, so that there is no hope in this respect.


Source
Hewitson’s Our Churches and Chapels: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10479


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