How Ashton spread its wings

In a post a couple of days ago on the development of the Plungington and Maudland estates, ‘Preston spreads its wings northwards’, I mentioned work that Sue Latimer carried out on the development of Ashton, which she has turned into a UCLan dissertation. A commenter asked on the Preston History Facebook group if the dissertation was available anywhere. I checked with Sue who tells me that it will eventually be available on line (I’ll ask her to be sure to let us know when it is). The commenter, who lives in Ashton, also expressed his disappointment at missing the guided tour of the Ashton Freehold estate that Sue gave as part of the Heritage Open Days last year. Sue tells me she will doing it again as part of this year’s events, and she’s added on two more walks this year.

The first, Ashton Freehold – the Route to a New Suburb, is on 7 September and this is from the description:

‘Ashton Freehold is a distinctive Victorian suburb, built just outside Preston’s boundaries as a completely new development. Discover the origins and early development of the suburb, revealed by the evidence of the streets and the buildings. Its history includes temperance, politics, crops of potatoes, and the foundation of the town of Fleetwood. Find out if a newspaper columnist was correct to describe Ashton as “strawberries and villas”.’

The second, Ashton Freehold Networks – Sisters, Servants and Soap, is on 8 September:

‘The suburb was created in 1860 by Ashton Freehold Land Society. Its members included Preston tradesmen and shopkeepers who had prospered enough to consider investing personally and financially in a plot of land outside the town. Many built houses on their land sooner or later, though the estate was a building site for decades. It must have been a brave move to make the step to suburban life, so it’s not surprising that previous connections offered mutual support for residents and owners.
The tour will reveal the stories of five sisters whose links were hidden by marriage, and how a housemaid and a shop assistant could afford to be householders on Ashton Freehold. Religion connected soap manufacturers to a coal merchant, and the owner of a large cotton mill to a grocer. And Preston neighbours became fellow Ashton residents.’

The third, Ashton Freehold Connected – Sewers, Services and Supplies, is on 10 September:

‘This tour offers a very particular look at the suburb created by Ashton Freehold Land Society in 1860. For the first twenty years, until urban Ashton became part of Preston, the members and residents were responsible for organising most of the services we take for granted nowadays. From securing a gas supply to streetlighting, nothing was straightforward.
Much of the infrastructure is hidden, but there are clues if you know where to look – from drain covers to mysterious metal posts.’

The walks are limited to twelve per tour. Booking opens on 24 August at 8am, so I suggest you get the date in your diaries to avoid disappointment. More information on the walks and the other Open Day events planned in Preston this year can be found here: https://www.heritageopendays.org.uk/…/search-2024…

Ashton Freehold Preston 1840s
Ashton in the 1840s: https://maps.nls.uk/view/102343946
Ashton Freehold Preston 1892
Ashton in the 1890s: https://maps.nls.uk/view/126517586


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