Who Was Who in Preston in 1903

A few days back, Ashley Warren Preston posted a link in the Preston History Facebook group to a book he had discovered online: ‘Lancashire at the Opening of the Twentieth Century’, by a chap called W. Burnett Tracy. It’s a very useful find since it contains hundreds of biographies of the great and good of Lancashire at the time the book was published in 1903. Not a single woman warranted a biography.

Among those biographies are several for individuals who were born in Preston or made their home there.

I combed the entries and found fifty-nine that had a Preston connection. I’ve included a handful here to give an idea of what they contain and there’s a link below to a longer article on my website, where all the Preston biographies can be found. They provide a sort of Who Was Who of Preston at the end of the Victorian era.

The list includes William Francis Anderton of Haighton House, who, I think, gave his name to the Squire Anderton Wood on his estate. Others featured are the rector of English Martyrs’ Church and the ministers of a number of Anglican churches, but not the vicar of Preston. There are several doctors, most found in Winckley Square including James Rigby and Robert Brown.

Not surprisingly, the biggest concentration of addresses is in Winckley Square and the neighbouring streets, including another doctor, James Nichol who was living in Ribblesdale Place. Close by at 10 Bairstow Street lived William Ord, for many years chairman of Preston North End.

Find their biographies here: the Burnett Tracy Preston biographies


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