Arkwright House: ‘a piece of social history’

This is the final instalment from the short dissertation that Preston Polytechnic journalism student Nick Clark wrote in 1980, just before Arkwright House was reopened after a major renovation.

If Nick returned to Preston from his home in Idaho today I think he would appalled to witness the way the building has returned to the condition it was in before campaigners rescued it from demolition in the 1970s.

Read Nick’s full article here: https://prestonhistory.com/…/arkwright-house-saved-and…/

Arkwright House in the 1980s, shortly after the renovation was completed
Arkwright House in the 1980s, shortly after the renovation was completed

From Nick’s dissertation:

Although not every old building can be preserved, there are several reasons why Arkwright House should have been saved, not all of them to do with Arkwright. The building is a brick-built history book. A Georgian gentlemanโ€™s house, Victorian shop, and now a modern annexe stand together on a site about the size of a tennis court.

Arkwright House is a piece of social history. All kinds of people have been associated with it, the Georgian headmaster, the Victorian drunk, the temperance reformer and the modern day vandal, as well as Arkwright himself.

In the future, the building will be very useful to the community, serving as a heritage and exhibition centre, meeting place and lecture rooms. It should form the beginning of an improvement of the Avenham area. If tourists are to visit the house, it would be best for Avenham to be tidied up.

A fitting memorial to Richard Arkwright

At last, Preston has a memorial to Richard Arkwright. It is ironic to read the following passage from Hardwickโ€™s History of Preston (1857): โ€œIt is somewhat singular that every effort which has yet been made, with the view to the erection of a suitable memorial in his (Arkwrightโ€™s) native town has met with very little sympathy.โ€

Considering the condition of Arkwright House in the early 1970โ€™s, Preston Borough Council can be understood for wanting to demolish it. They were very helpful when the renovation project had got underway. It could be said, however, that the council ought to have made regular checks on the condition of the house over the years.

Obviously the main reason for the property having deteriorated was that it was in private hands. An elderly widow probably could not afford to carry out extensive repairs to the building. It also seems that the true importance of Arkwright House was not recognised until it was almost too late.

Arkwright House, Stoneygate, Preston will be open to the public from July 1980. It may well make a profit, something which would have pleased the business-minded Arkwright if he were alive today.


Arkwright House today
Arkwright House today. Image: Luke Samuel


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