On this day … 22 October 1717

Sir Henry Hoghton signed a deed giving the land in Grimsargh on which St Michael’s Church had recently been built to the trustees of the church. The Hoghtons had been lords of the manor of Grimsargh from the fourteenth century. For Hoghton his support was part of a deliberate policy on his part to encourage Protestantism and discourage Catholicism in the parish of Preston.

The daily post for 18 October included his letter of 1745 which revealed his desire to persecute and prosecute local Catholics implicated in the Jacobite Rebellion of that year. In this he was following a Hoghton family tradition begun when they switched from being Catholics to Protestants of a very Puritan persuasion, and which continued from the early seventeenth century through into the nineteenth century.

The Hoghtons were for much of that time the rectors of Preston, which gave them the right to choose the vicar. When Sir Henry Hoghton became rector, he had as his vicar that scourge of Catholics, the Rev Samuel Peploe, who had been appointed by his father, Sir Charles Hoghton.

It was Peploe who was the moving force in persuading the Bishop of Chester to agree to a new church in Grimsargh. He did this by provoking the bishop’s fear of Catholicism in his diocese, stirring that fear in a letter he wrote to the bishop in 1715:

‘I beg leave to acquaint yr Lrp yt there are three townships and part of another in this parish wch lie three, four, and five miles from the [Parish] church and have no other convenient place of publick worship. That by this unhappy situation they have still been exposed to temptations and Popery (which is too prevalent in these parts of your Lordship’s Diocese) and are thereby an easier Prey to the Priests of that Communion: we having no less than six of these men in ye one parish.

‘From my first coming to this place I have wished for some hopeful remedy agt this growing evil: and I hope we are now in a way for it if yr L’d please to give approbation. Sir Henry Hoghton, Patron of ye church, has promised land to build a chapel … and wth his assistance I doubt not to procure a decent place for ye worship of God.

‘When the intended chapel is opened I have taken care already yt there shall be ten pounds per ann at least annexed to it, beside which some of the inhabitants will subscribe and wt may be got by teaching school, it being a place where a diligent man can help himself in that way. These together will be a competency for a curate in this cheap country, and I hope if ye work be perfected it wil be of great use to men’s souls as well as of service to our church. I wait only yr Ldp’s pleasure to p’ceed. If I have encouragement I shall immediately set about it, and hope to give you a good account of ye affair in a little time.’

Peploe did indeed ‘immediately set about it’, for by 1716 the church had been built, and soon after Hoghton and a gentlewoman who ‘desired not to be known’ were among those who raised funds to support the church.

In the next century it became the family church of the Crosses of Red Scar, who also became lords of the manor. William Cross, who began the building of Winckley Square, was buried there in 1827, followed by his wife, Ellen, in 1849. By then the original church had been enlarged. A north aisle and chancel were added in 1840, followed by a full restoration in 1868-9, when the tower was added. These later additions were paid for by the Rev John Cross, brother of William.


Source
Fishwick’s History of Preston


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