Preston Historic Assessment Report

In February 2006, Lancashire County Council published a Historic Town Assessment Report for Preston, Walton-le-Dale and Penwortham as part of the wider Lancashire Historic Town Survey Programme. Preston was just one of the thirty-three Lancashire towns surveyed, and a number of Historic Landscape Character Reports were also published.

Back in 2006, the county council put these reports on line for downloading as a free service to, among others, the county’s council tax payers whose monthly payments had helped finance the project.

It was disappointing to discover recently that they are no longer available on line. The county council offers no explanation other than to regret that ‘this is no longer possible’. It comforts thwarted local history researchers and all others with an interest in the history of Preston and the rest of Lancashire with the advice that they are ‘often available at reference libraries’. It also offers to supply them on CD, which is of course a format few can now make use of.

One of the useful advantages of the pdf format in which they were previously available on line, is that they were searchable; a facility not available to those whose access requires a visit to a reference library to inspect a printed version.

This is what the county council has to say about the reports:

Historic Town Survey Reports and Historic Landscape Character Reports
Previously copies of 33 Historic Town Survey Reports and several Historic Landscape Character Reports were available as PDF downloads from this website, but this is no longer possible. Printed copies of the reports are often available at reference libraries, and copies can be made available on CD (subject to charges for commercial users). The following reports are available:

Historic Towns Survey:
Accrington, Bacup, Barnoldswick, Blackburn, Blackpool, Carnforth (and Warton), Chorley, Church and Oswaldtwistle, Clitheroe, Colne, Darwen, Fleetwood, Garstang, Great Harwood, Haslingden, Hornby, Kirkham, Lancaster (does not cover the town centre), Leyland, Longridge, Lytham St Annes, Morecambe, Nelson, Newburgh, Oswaldtwistle (with Church), Ormskirk, Padiham, Poulton-le-Fylde, Preston, Rawtenstall, Ribchester, Slaidburn, Warton (Lancaster, with Carnforth), Whalley.

Lancashire Historic Landscape Characterisation Programme:
Main Project Report (2002), Perceptions of the Historic Landscape (2003), The Historic Landscape of the Forest of Bowland and the Lune Valley (2004), The Historic Landscape of Chipping Parish (2004); The Historic Landscape of Whittington Parish (2004). A collection of historic landscape documents, including those noted here, can be found on the web at the Pathways to cultural landscapes.

To remedy this loss of a valuable resource I have made the Preston report available here:
Preston Historic Assessment Report

It is a very detailed 160-page account of the surviving remains in the greater Preston area from pre-historic times up to the present day, listing hundreds of sites and illustrated with getting on for thirty figures, maps and images. The report opens with a very useful history of the development of Preston, divided into sections dealing with separate periods: prehistoric, Roman-British, post-Roman and early-medieval, medieval, post medieval, and industrial and modern. In addition, it provides a detailed description and listing of the sources available for the study of the history of Preston.

It is just too good a resource to languish on a reference library shelf (does anyone know if UCLan has copies?).

Preston archaeological site map
Just one of the many useful maps and images from the report

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8 thoughts on “Preston Historic Assessment Report

  1. Thank you for publishing this, particularly as the Reference Library in the Harris is closed, and I wonder what the future of it is to be in the new layout.

  2. What a fantastic document. Thank you for sharing. I’ve now got something interesting to do when the relatives come round on Christmas Day!

      1. Hi Peter, thank you for your kind invitation which I am pleased to accept. It has to be said that I am much more a reader than a writer!

  3. Hello Peter I received your invitation to join Preston History Group. I would like to be a member of the group. Have not used Facebook in years so created a new account but am told I am not allowed to join group. Not sure why. I did enjoy your daily Preston posts and will miss them. Good luck to the Preston History Group.

    Pat

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    1. Well, you’re not alone in getting that reaction from Facebook, Pat. When I sent an invite to my wife to join, she got the same response. I’m afraid the workings of Facebook is still a bit of a mystery to me.
      My wife got round the problem by going to the the Preston History group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/historyofpreston) and clicking the join button there. Try that, and if you’re still having problems, please let me know.

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