Count the Pedders …

The board displaying the sixty-one vicars of Garstang from 1190 on display in St Helen’s, the parish church of Garstang, carries a testament to the abiding power of privilege and represents a shrewd investment by a wealthy Preston merchant in the middle of the eighteenth century.

Garstang vicars

In 1750 Richard Pedder, one of the early Pedders of Preston whose descendants went on to own Preston’s first bank, bought the perpetual advowson of the vicarage of Garstang for £600. This allowed him to choose the parish vicar.

In the conveyance he is described as ‘linendraper’. Earlier in the negotiations, a price £500 was being set, and earlier still charges of defrauding the rightful inheritors of the advowson had to be defended.

Five years after making the purchase, Richard settled his youngest son, James, there as vicar. At the time, James was in his early twenties and had just graduated from Oxford, the first member of the family to attend university.

When he died in 1772, James left two young boys, James junior and John, and a vacancy for vicar. And so, a James Fisher was appointed vicar to serve as placeholder until a Pedder was old enough to take his rightful place. It was the younger brother, John, who succeeded in 1794 at the age of twenty-six, his elder brother having died some years earlier.

Four young Pedders succeeded John as vicar down to 1923, when another placeholder was found in the shape of John Charles Fulton Hood, who kept the office warm for the final Pedder to serve as vicar, Roland Wilson Pedder.

The Pedder clerical dynasty lasted just short of two hundred years, ending with the appointment of James Percy Evans in 1945.


More on the family: the Pedders of Preston


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