Bob Dobson’s ‘A Preston Mixture’ goes online

Bob Dobson compiled ‘A Preston Mixture’ and published it in 2003. It includes articles by Bob himself and fourteen other local historians. The book has long been out of print, so I’ve prepared an online copy, made the text searchable, and made it available in the Preston History Library on this website: A Preston Mixture

The book is in pdf format and will open on laptops and desktop machines, but may have to be downloaded to read on mobile phones and tablets.

Bob gave me permission to republish it, but if any of the other writers would rather their articles in the book were not republished, they can contact me and I will remove them.

The book is a splendid and surprising achievement, for as anybody with any experience of getting local historians to collaborate on a joint project will know, it can be a bit like herding cats.

Bob’s books appeared under his Landy Publishing imprint. Here’s a bit of autobiography by Bob from the introduction to the book:

My earliest recollection (I’m an Accrington lad) is of being on the railway station as a train spotter in the 1950’s, followed by visits when a young policeman in the 1960’s, to the Quarter Sessions and the County Record Office. Retirement from the Lancashire Constabulary turned me into a publisher and I published two books by Stephen Sartin – “Preston a Century Ago” and “Preston Past and Present”.

My knowledge of, and fascination with, Lancashire’s capital, gradually increased and I started to collect material which I might use at some time in a book. I had already compiled and published “Mixture “books on Blackpool, Blackburn and Accrington.

The success of Stephen Sartin’s “Preston in Focus” which I published in 2002, spurred me into the work needed to put together a collection of pieces of prose, poetry and photographs, all having something to do with Preston’s past. I sought, and have received, contributions from local historians. I have spent many hours in my own research and have thoroughly enjoyed compiling this book. I hope Prestonians find it pleasurable.

I’ve added an image of the contents to give an idea of what’s to be discovered inside, which includes an excellent account of the history of popular entertainment in the town by David Hindle. He’s very good on the post-war flea pit cinemas.

Anybody interested in the town’s suffragette history will, I think, find quite a bit of new material in the article ‘Preston lassies mun have the vote’ by Greta Krypezyk-Oddy. It’s a short biography of the Preston artist and suffragette Patti Mayor.

I’ve also added images of the potted biographies of the contributors. They’re taken from the book and are now more than twenty years old.


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