Arkwright House’s ‘brave new future’

A student on the journalism course at the former Preston Polytechnic, Nick Larkin, published a short dissertation on Arkwright House in 1980. Its publication coincided with the building’s grand reopening after major renovation work.

I’ll post extracts here and then add the full dissertation to the Preston History Library.

This is Nick’s introduction

Arkwright House is a three-storey Georgian building in a street named Stoneygate in Avenham, a run-down area of Preston, Lancashire.

In this house in 1768, Richard Arkwright developed an invention which revolutionized the cotton trade, played a major part in the Industrial Revolution and, because it gave rise to a factory system of production, changed the lives of countless millions of people all over the world.

Today, the house stands newly renovated, waiting to be opened to the public in July 1980. Yet only three years ago, Arkwright house was empty and in a decayed state, under threat of demolition.

In this project I have tried to find out why a building of such historic significance was allowed to deteriorate. I have also looked at its history, how it was saved and its future.

And this is from a chapter titled ‘Arkwright House: Its Past, Present and Future’:

From its building to its decay

Arkwright House was built by public subscription in 1728 as the residence for the headmaster of Preston Grammar School. Throughout the 18th and early 19th centuries the school headmasters were also the vicars of nearby St. George’s Church, and the house was known as St. George’s Vicarage.

In 1768, Arkwright and Kay rented a room in the building so that they could develop the water frame without arousing the suspicions of local handloom weavers and spinners, who saw new inventions in the textile industry as a threat to their livelihood. Some people living nearby believed that the whirring of machinery which could be heard coming from the house was the sound of the devil tuning his bagpipes.

During 1857, the Borough of Preston sold the house and recently added shops to a Mr. Richard Threlfall for ยฃ1090 and the building became a public house, the ‘Arkwright Arms’, with a room dedicated to Arkwright.

The Temperance Movement bought the ‘Arkwright Arms’ in 1892 and converted it into a model lodging house, which it remained until the 1940’s.

In 1950, the art director of Preston’s Harris museum, Mr Sydney Paviere, tried unsuccessfully to persuade cotton firms to buy the premises and turn them into a textile museum. Arkwright House then became workshops and fell into disrepair.

Nick Larkin now lives in Idaho Falls, Idaho, and works as a freelance journalist.

Coming next: Saved at the eleventh hour.

Arkwright House, Preston, July 4, 1980.

Arkwright House, Preston, July 4, 1980. Opening ceremony performed by H.R.H. Princess Alexandra. Image courtesy and copyright of The Lancashire Evening Post.


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