Filthy lodgings in Victorian Preston

In 1903, near the end of his life, a radical journalist named W. E. Adams wrote a two-volume autobiography that includes, in the first volume, a description of Preston in the middle of the 19th century.

Preston features in a chapter in which he describes taking to the road when a publishing venture in which he had been employed at Brantwood House overlooking Coniston collapsed. Brantwood was the future home of John Ruskin.

This was the Preston he encountered: โ€˜โ€ฆ the lodging-houses were so filthy that I preferred taking my chance at a tavern; but I had to sleep in the same room with two drunken market men.โ€™ He discovered that: โ€˜In the midst of poverty there is still a deeper degradationโ€”the degradation of drunkenness.โ€™

The collapse of the publishing venture had left him very short of funds, as he describes:

โ€˜I had a journey of two hundred and seventy-four miles before me, with only seventeen shillings in hand for the undertakingโ€”obviously too small a sum even for a railway ticket. How came this lack of funds? Well, wages were of no consequence to us, so long as we had enough to pay our way. We hadn’t come to Brantwood to make money, but to serve a cause.โ€™

This was in 1855 when trade was depressed and prospects were poor for an itinerant printer.:

โ€˜The number of tramps I meet on the roadโ€”some limping with sore feet, others bending beneath their burdens of careโ€”is positively alarming. Every other man one meets is almost sure to be in search of employment.

โ€˜But notwithstanding all this distress, the beer shops are not without customers. Men come and spend their last pennyโ€”in one particular case I saw at Preston leaving wife and family at home to starve. In the midst of poverty there is still a deeper degradationโ€”the degradation of drunkenness.”

โ€˜When this was the general condition of things, it was not wonderful that the letters of introduction with which I had been furnished availed nothing. Three of these letters were to gentlemen of the press or having influence with the pressโ€”Joseph Livesey, proprietor of the Preston Guardian, Edward Peacock, a director of the Manchester Examiner, and George Dawson, lecturer and preacher at Birmingham. Mr. Livesey and Mr. Peacock received me courteously; but work there was none.โ€™

He found warm friendship on the road, including a wandering fiddler:

โ€˜My friend the fiddler arranged for everything and paid for everything. We were going together to Preston next dayโ€”I bound for Manchester, he for Blackburn. For some modest refreshment at Garstang on the road he insisted on paying also.

โ€˜Nor did his consideration end there; for he took me to all the places I wanted to find in Prestonโ€”the printing-offices, the lodging-houses, etc.

โ€˜Here the lodging-houses were so filthy that I preferred taking my chance at a tavern; but I had to sleep in the same room with two drunken market men.โ€™

Brantwood House, Coniston
Brantwood House, Coniston: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brantwood

Source:ย https://minorvictorianwriters.org.uk/adams/index.htm…


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