Paid for by a slave trade fortune

At the ceremony to mark the laying of the foundation stone for St Thomas’ Church in August 1837, the vicar of Preston, the Rev Roger Carus Wilson, paid fulsome tribute to the church’s benefactress:

‘… previous erections of this kind having made considerable demands upon the private means of this locality, I happened to hear that a benevolent gentlewoman, Miss Catherine Elizabeth Hyndman, had left a considerable sum of money in trust to be devoted to the erection of churches of the establishment. … The bequest consisted of two sums, of £21,833 and 26,624, or amounting together to little short of £50,000. On hearing of these circumstances, I made application on the behalf of my neighbourhood, and in May last I had the happiness to receive intelligence that my application, backed as it was with the obvious exigencies which suggested it, was successful.’ 

Miss Hyndman’s bequest provided £5,600 (other sources suggest it was £4,500) to pay for the building of the church. The Hyndman Trust set up to manage that bequest retained the right to nominate the minister for the church. 

What the vicar’s tribute did not mention was that Miss Hyndman’s bequest came from her inheritance of a half share in her family’s fortune from the West Indies slave trade. Nor was it mentioned in the various histories of the town. It is only in recent years that the extent to which the Anglican Church profited from the slave trade has come to light and the disclosures led to the closure of the Hyndman Trust two years ago, nearly two hundred years after it was set up.

In Preston, the first Anglican church that benefitted from slave trade money was St Peter’s, now the UCLan Arts Centre. The land on which the church is built was given by the inheritor of the fortune of the Atherton family of Preston, made from their sugar plantations in Jamaica. Atherton money also helped fund Preston’s first bank.

The family wealth of Carus Wilson’s successor as vicar, the Rev John Owen Parr, was also built on the slave trade. His grandfather was lord mayor of Liverpool and one of its principal slave traders: a Liverpool-registered slaver owned by the family and named Parr was the largest vessel in the British transatlantic fleet, built to accommodate 700 slaves.

Find the full article and more on the Anglican Church’s links with slavery here: Paid for by a slave trade fortune


I discovered the St Thomas links to slavery thanks to a recent post by Ashley Warren Preston on the Preston History Facebook group.


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