More on Preston street names

A member of the Preston History Facebook group asked the following in a comment on an earlier post:

โ€˜I would like to know the origins of Lord’s Walk where my dad was born in 1911 โ€“ roughly where the Unicentre Office stands adjacent to the south end of the bus station.โ€™

The Preston window cleaner/local historian John Bannister has the answer in his The Street Names of Preston and it brings in the earls of Derby and other members of the Stanley family:

โ€˜Edward Geofrey Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, was elected Member of Parliament for Preston in 1820. His town house was situated on the north side of Church Street, near to what is now Derby Street. The house was known as Patten House, taken over by the Stanleys after the marriage of Sir Thomas Stanley in 1688 to Elizabeth Patten, the only daughter and heiress of Thomas Patten.
โ€˜Patten House was demolished in 1835 and replaced by a smaller house situated in Lordโ€™s Walk at the corner with Everton Gardens which, together with Spring Gardens, were part of the grounds of Patten House.
‘In 1809, Everton Gardens and Spring Gardens were described as โ€œtwo rows of cottages with veritable vegetable enclosures interveningโ€. These have now been erased, the site forming part of the Central Bus Station.
‘Derby Street, Lord Street, Lordโ€™s Walk, Stanley Buildings, and Stanley Chambers are all within the former Derby Estate.
โ€˜The Stanleys also held land in other parts of Preston. The Preston Royal Infirmary was built on the Stanleyfield and names Stanleyfield Road. Stanley Street is not far away, while at the west end of town are Stanley Place and Stanley Terrace. There is a Derby Square in the New Hall Lane area, a Derby Place in Ashton, Derby Road in Fulwood, and Derby Terraces in Watery Lane, Addison Road and Lytham Road.โ€™

What John Bannister omits to mention is that the Stanleys exited Preston in high dudgeon after Edward Stanley was defeated at the next election by the radical Henry Hunt. The family demolished Patten House, Prestonโ€™s most impressive residence, and developed the site and its surrounding estate for housing and business premises.

Patten House - Lang's map
Patten House on Lang’s map of Preston of 1774
Patten House - Baines' Map
Patten House on Baines’ map of Preston of 1824
Patten House - OSM
The area today as shown on Open Street Mapย https://www.openstreetmap.org/

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