UCLan public seminars

The speaker at the next UCLan public seminar is Brandon Reece Taylorian, a historian with strong local connections: he went to Brownedge St Mary’s High School in Bamber Bridge, then on to Newman College and UCLan, where he is now an associate lecturer.

The title of his talk is The Mormon & Quaker Moons of Lancashire: Stories of Religious Conversion & Migration:

‘In 1653, a branch of the Moon family of the Fylde coast made the radical decision to join the newly formed Religious Society of Friends. Edward Moon and his sons faced fines, harassment and imprisonment at Lancaster Castle for this decision but remained steadfast in their Quaker beliefs and close to their leader George Fox.
The Moon family continued the trend of religious dissidence when another branch converted to Mormonism in 1837 and set sail for New York on 6th June 1840, becoming the first British Latter-day Saints to emigrate to America. There, the Mormon Moons endured angry mobs, witnessed the assassination of their prophet and became pioneers, eventually settling in the wasteland of the Great Salt Lake Valley in modern-day Utah.’

The seminar is on Wednesday 20 March, Room 013, Livesey House, Heatley Street, 4-5.15pm.


Two plaques in the Japanese Garden in Avenham Park commemorate the first baptisms of Mormons in the Ribble near this spot: http://ldsbritain.blogspot.com/…/cotton-part-10…

Some background to Mormonism in Preston
There was a large emigration of Mormons from Preston to America in 1856. Preston was where the first Mormon missionaries from America had established themselves when they arrived in Britain in 1837, and, soon after their arrival, they conducted the first baptisms in the Ribble. Before long they were attracting converts for miles around.

The place where they had most success was Longton where they were so successful that the Methodist chapel in the village was soon empty of worshippers. A good many of the converts were among those who emigrated to Salt Lake City.

The story of their arrival and establishment in Preston was told at length by the Preston historian and journalist Anthony Hewitson in his book, Our Churches and Chapels, where he dipped his pen in vitriol before proceeding to devote more than three thousand words to his subject. It shows why modern readers can find his journalism so offensive.

‘There are about 1,100 different religious creeds in the world, and amongst them all there is not one more energetic, more mysterious, or more wit-shaken than Mormonism. It is a mass of earnest “abysmal nonsense,” an olla-podrida of theological whimsicalities, a saintly jumble of pious stuff made up – if we may borrow an idea – of Hebraism, Persian Dualism, Brahminism, Buddhistic apotheosis, heterodox and orthodox Christianity, Mohammedanism, Druidism, Freemasonry, Methodism, Swedenborgianism, Mesmerism, and Spirit-rapping.’

By the time Hewitson came to write his book, in 1869, the Mormon numbers in the Preston area had shrunk to just seventy. He paid a visit to one of the Mormon services, which were then held in the Temperance Hotel in Lune Street. This was his verdict:

‘The whole of the speakers at this meeting–which may be taken as a fair sample of the gatherings–were illiterate people, individuals with much zeal and little education; and the manner in which they crucified sentences, and maltreated the general principles of logic and common-sense, was really disheartening. They are very earnest folk; we also believe they are honest; but, after all, they are … beyond the reach of both physic and argument.’


If you are interested in learning more about the history of Preston and wish to join lively discussion on the subject, why not visit the new Preston History FB group?


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