Treasures at the Archives

One of the things that always strikes me when I visit Lancashire Archives is how I never see the people I used to encounter in the old Reference Library at the Harris.

I think there are two reasons for this.

The first is that the Harris is such a central building. Preston people grew up used to popping in for their library books and easily found their way to the reference library. They are much less familiar with the Archives, located a long way from the bus station on Bow Lane.

The other reason is that I think many people believe the Archives are simply a repository for dusty old documents, requiring special skills to access. Yet it has the largest collection of books on the history of Preston and a helpful staff to make sure you find what you are looking for.

And one of the overlooked Preston treasures at the Archives is the ephemera held in a number of boxes ranged on top of the bookcases. They are not easy to reach (I have to stand on tiptoe), but they are well worth opening to see what their contents reveal.

Preston’s first phone book?

As an example, one of the boxes contains what is possibly the first phone book for Preston, published as five pages in a Lancashire telephone directory. When the directory was published in 1885 there were just 203 Preston subscribers. It was less than ten years since Alexander Bell had patented his telephone.

Just two years later, Preston amateur scientists were experimenting with the new technology, and by the end of 1879, George Sharples, who combined the roles of electrician, telegraph engineer and chemist at his premises at No. 7, Fishergate, was advertising a โ€˜telephonic communication service between warehouses, mills, mansions, stables, etc., in Prestonโ€™.

The first line he put up was for Paul Butler and Son, from their corn warehouse, in Back Lane, to their Parr Croft corn mill, Moor Lane.

George Sharples published a list of the subscribers to his exchange in 1882, pictured below (thanks to Pete Wilkinson, the Preston Historical Society archivist for the information and for the image).

The townโ€™s cotton merchants were early adopters of the new technology, 32 of the lines connected their businesses and their homes in 1885. In those days, you only had to dial 99 to summon a fire engine from the fire station in Tithebarn Street (dial 150 for a policeman from Earl Street).

If you wanted a Hansom cab, you would ring 8 to get through to William Harding and Company, cab proprietors, in Lune Street.

Directories such as these are invaluable for social historians, and Preston is especially lucky in having a long run of trade directories stretching from the early years of the nineteenth century. You can find them all at the Archives.

Preston's first telephone directory 1882
1885 Lancashire telephone directory
Preston 1885 telephone directory 1
Preston 1885 telephone directory 2
Preston 1885 telephone directory 3
Preston 1885 telephone directory 4
Preston 1885 telephone directory 5

See also:
Experimenting with the telephone in 1870s Preston
Preston’s first telephone exchange


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