Surprising views and surprising friendships

‘How can we bishops confide in an authority which listens to women?This is the beginning of decline and of moral disorder.’ This insight into the thinking of the leaders of English Catholics in the nineteenth century is a snippet discovered among the correspondence of Cardinal Manning, archbishop of Westminster. It’s in a letter to Herbert … Continue reading Surprising views and surprising friendships

A final slice of pre-war Preston schooldays

In this final post from the recorded recollections of pre-war Preston schoolchildren, the recollections touch on subjects that were routinely shrouded in silence or, if mentioned at all, treated as shameful. Again, the extracts from the article, titled ‘An oral history of schooling in Lancashire 1900-1950: gender, class and education’, are given verbatim Lucy Nickson … Continue reading A final slice of pre-war Preston schooldays

More on school life in pre-war Preston

The alarming accounts given in the last post about the schooldays of Preston children continues here, beginning with life at Lark Hill Convent. Again, the extracts from the article, titled ‘An oral history of schooling in Lancashire 1900-1950: gender, class and education’, are given verbatim Barbara and Kathleen, sisters who attended Lark Hill House Convent … Continue reading More on school life in pre-war Preston

Is this what school was like in pre-war Preston?

A member of the Preston History Facebook group pointed a new member who was looking for information on a Preston school to an article in an academic journal that included revealing interviews with Preston pupils who were at school between 1900 to 1950. The interviews were revealing in that they recalled schooldays that were far … Continue reading Is this what school was like in pre-war Preston?

A Preston link to an ancient earthwork

A member of the Preston History Facebook group asked for information on the oddly-named Danewerke Street, and as usual the Preston window cleaner/local historian John Bannister supplies the answer in his The Street Names of Preston: ‘In the 1860’s, the fields and farmland around what is now Meadow Street were built on. This building programme coincided … Continue reading A Preston link to an ancient earthwork