On this day … 10 November 1630

Plague came to Preston and the extent of its devastation, mirroring that of the Great Plague of London that afflicted the capital in 1665, is captured in the town’s documents from the time and from the accounts of its nineteenth-century historians.

All those historians are agreed that Preston was the worst hit of all the towns in Lancashire. Its arrival was recorded in the parish register with the following words, ‘so terrible in their simplicity’:

‘heare begineth the visitation of Allmighty god, the Plague.’

Part of the page of the Preston parish register, with the chilling words underlined in red (source: Ancestry)

The register then lists more than 1100 deaths in the course of the following year: in a normal year the average was just eighty. The plague carried off a third of the population. It was at its worst during the following July and August, when the register records the burial of 599 men, women and children.

The town’s Guild Order Book contains these words:

‘The great sickness of the plague of pestilence, wherein the number of eleven hundred p’sons and upwards dyed within the Towns and Parish of Preston, begann about the tenth day of November, in Anne 1630, and continued the space of one whole yeare next after. Will’m Preston, Maior.’

In his history of the parish church, Tom Smith wrote:

‘From the list of burials printed in Chapter IV. of this work, it will be seen that in some instances whole families were swept away; that many of the best inhabitants bearing the oldest names in the district were carried off by the contagion. So calamitous was the effect of the plague upon the trade of the town that prosperity was not restored when the Civil War broke out eleven years later.’

So serious was Preston’s plight, the county magistrates ordered the whole of the county to contribute to the relief of the inhabitants. Food and fuel was brought to the town and left at as afe distance outside the town where the inhabitants could later collect.

The cost of this relief reduced steeply as the months passed and there were fewer and fewer survivors to support. By the middle of August it was reckoned that so many had died or fled the town that there only 887 people still living in the town.

The Rev. Edward Burghall, minister at Acton, Cheshire, recorded in his diary that at Preston the plague ‘so raged that the town was depopulated and corn rotted upon the ground for want of reapers’.

The following petition was presented by Preston traders to the Privy Council a few years later, which shows how the plague had disrupted the normal working of their trades, allowing in unskilled competitors who they complained were robbing them of their business:

‘Your petitioners at the present doe consist of very neere 80 poore persons which doe bear Scott and Lott with their neighbours in all layes and taxacons imposed upon them according to their rank and abilityes, which heretofore they have beene the better enabled to doe in regard that in former tymes few or none did intermeddle in the exercise of your Petitioners trades and occupacons but such as were enabled by law to use the same.

‘But nowe soe it is, that the said Burrough having beene within these three yeares last past grieviously visited with the Plague and Pestilence, which infee’eon continued amongst them a whole yeare or thereabouts; and thereby your Petitioners and others of the surviveing Inhabitants for that tyme were altogether barred from the exercise of their Trades, and soe are become very much impoverished and weakened in their estates.

‘And divers persons boarding to the said Towne, taking advantage of that woefull tyme, have sett up and doe take upon them to exercise and imploy themselves in your Peticoners severall trades and occupacons, having never served any apprenticeshipps to the said trades and misteries, &c., to the great discouragement of your Peticoners and the generall impoverishment and discountenancing of the Inhabitants of the borough, which have since the said late Visitacon amongst them (through the wrongful usages aforesaid) lost a great part of their former trading, and their Marketts are become smaller.

‘Your petitioners pray &c., your Honors to direct some speedy course for suppression.’


Sources: the nineteenth-century histories of the town in the Preston History Library


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply