Does this pub name need to change?

A recent post on the Preston History Facebook page might be of interest. The news of the change of name of one of Preston’s oldest pubs was first posted by Ed Walker, the editor of the Blog Preston online newspaper. This is the follow-up post:


Ed Walker’s post about the proposed changing of the name of the Black-a-Moor’s Head pub on Lancaster Road to Lancaster Gate recalled a previous proposal to change its name.

Before going there, it should be noted that the Oxford English Dictionary now labels the word ‘offensive’. According to the dictionary, in 2002 ‘A barrister who called a solicitor’s clerk a “blackamoor” was found guilty of race discrimination and suspended for a year by a Bar disciplinary tribunal.’

Please bear that in mind before commenting. Comments judged offensive will be removed.

In 2005, when the then landlord proposed a name change, Aidan Turner-Bishop sprang to the defence of the old name in a letter to the Lancashire Evening Post:

‘Changing the name of the ancient Preston pub, the Black-a-Moor’s Head, may have a semi-racist side effect – because it will suppress part of the city’s Black history.

‘Long before immigration of the 1960s, Black people have lived in Preston. Roman Empire troops probably included Africans from Mauritania (the real origin of the ‘Moor’ word). In the 1840s, there was a lodging house near Turk’s Head Yard owned by Mohamed. Egyptian students – some probably Nubians – studied at the Harris Institute in the 1930s.

‘There were many African, Indian and West Indian men and women in the armed services in the World Wars – we honour them each November. US Black soldiers stayed in Bamber Bridge in the 1940s.

‘The word Blackamoor does not necessarily mean a slave. It dates from at least the 1500s, when most Africans in Britain would have come from North Africa – including Morocco.

‘It probably originates from the days of the Crusades and the contacts between Christian Europe and Islamic North Africa and Asia. The Moorish kingdom of Cordoba in Spain lasted until 1492.

‘Before any misinformed decision is made, I suggest that the landlord consults Black historians about this very ancient name. It’s true that Preston was involved in the slave trade, but its Black history is older than that period.’

Aidan Turner-Bishop died in 2023. He was always at the forefront of any campaign to save Preston’s heritage, notably leading the campaign to save Preston Bus Station.

The Black-a-Moor’s Head opened in 1831, when it was named The Blackmoor’s Head, before settling on the Black-a-Moor spelling. It reopens tomorrow as the Lancaster Gate.

For many years it featured the window pictured here, showing a proud-looking Moor, until it was replaced with plain glass. Does anyone know when it was replaced, and why?


Sources:
https://pubsinpreston.blogspot.com/2012/01/black-moors-head-lancaster-road.html
https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/2024/12/black-a-moor-pub-drops-name-and-sees-major-refit-to-become-lancaster-gate/


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

One thought on “Does this pub name need to change?

  1. I remember the stained glass window picture from when mu dad was the landlord from 1965 to 1972

Leave a Reply