Another Lewis Carroll Preston connection

A member of the Preston History Facebook group asked whether Dodgson Road in Ribbleton was named after the Alice in Wonderland author Lewis Carroll whose real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. As a previous post pointed out, Lewis Carroll was related to the Lutwidge family of Preston.

The Lutwidge family built houses and factories on their estate in Ribbleton in the nineteenth century, giving family names to streets, public houses and a mill in the area. The previous post identified several: Lutwidge Street, the Lutwidge Arms, Lutwidge Mill, Skeffington Road, the Skeffington Arms and Fletcher Road.

When Lutwidge Mill was demolished one of the streets that replaced it was named Lutwidge Avenue. Another family link gives Raikes Road as another Preston History group memeber reminded me in a comment on the previous post (see family tree).

All are in close proximity to Dodgson Road (see Google map), so I think that group member probably identified the source for the road name. Thereโ€™s also a later-built Dodgson Place running from it.

Lutwidge family street names map

The naming of Fletcher Road can be traced back to John Fletcher esquire who owned the Peel Hall estate at the time of the 1774 Lang Survey of Preston. There were intricate family connections between the various families that made up Prestonโ€™s landowning elite. Members of local families such as the Lutwidges, the Fletchers, the Rigbys, the Molyneuxs, the Winckleys and the Pattens frequently intermarried.

The Peel Hall estate was in Lutwidge hands in the nineteenth century and was inherited by C. R. Fletcher Lutwidge (pictured). His favoured Christian name links him to John Fletcher, and to Fletcher Road. In 1866 he was described as one of the principal landowners in the town, along with the Shaws, Stanleys and Tomlinsons.

His principal residence was in Tunbridge Wells, where he was several times mayor, and he also owned Holmrook Hall, the Lutwidge familyโ€™s country seat in Cumberland. He left estate valued at ยฃ118,615 (nearly ยฃ10 million in todayโ€™s money).

Fletcher Lutwidge
Fletcher Lutwidge (National Portrait Gallery)

While a young man he was occasionally a guest of his cousin Lewis Carroll. During one visit Fletcher helped his cousin construct a toy theatre:

โ€˜Lewis Carrollโ€™s continuing fascination with his marionette theatre was โ€ฆ shared by his cousin, Charles Robert Fletcher Lutwidge, who, being three years his junior, was twenty in 1855. On 9 July Carroll wrote in his diary of his activities helping at the new National School at Croft, adding “Fletcher has been here since Friday”. He refers to Fletcher again on 13 July: “Fletcher still here. During his stay he painted one scene, a palace interior, for the Marionette theatre. I am convinced now that calico is the best material for painting on.” For Fletcher this was valuable experience for his contribution to ADC productions at Cambridge.โ€™


Read more here: Lewis Carroll’s Preston connections


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