Clifton Place – Ashton’s ‘hidden paradise’

Among a collection of books and pamphlets on the history of Preston kindly donated to me by the journalist and historian Anthony Coppin was a typed A4 page written some fifty years ago telling the story of Clifton Place in the Ashton district of Preston. It describes the development of a terrace of eight houses that the author of the page describes as ‘Paradise’.

The houses were built on a meadow that had been owned by Sir Peter Hesketh Fleetwood, of Tulketh Hall, who was a Preston MP. The meadow was cut through by the Preston and Wyre Railway, which opened in 1840. The railway was subsidised by Sir Peter and linked to his new town and resort of Fleetwood; the houses occupy the top half of the meadow bisected by the railway.

The houses are still there today and they are still a secret, hidden paradise. So secret, in fact, that Clifton Place is not named on Google maps.

There is no name of author or date on the sheet, but there is reference to the coming of Central Lancashire New Town, which suggests a date in the early 1970s. The author writes:

‘… the Central Lancashire Development Corporation has plans to demolish No. 8 Clifton Place and to run a road through its garden and most of the remaining garden area, which of course constitutes its unique charm, to link up with projected development at Ingol.’

The road was built, it is Tom Benson Way, but No. 8 and the garden area were spared, although No. 8 did lose a side portion of its garden.

Full transcription and more photographs and maps

The entrance to Clifton Place, Preston
The entrance to Clifton Place, Ashton, Preston, today
Clifton Place Preston - drawing
The line drawing on the front of the Clifton Place sheet
Clifton Place Preston text
The text of the Clifton Place sheet

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