Historic Preston buildings at risk

Historic England has published its annual Heritage at Risk register and these are the Preston buildings listed: St Walburgeโ€™s Church. A Grade 1 listed building. Condition: Poor; Vulnerability: High; Trend: Declining; Priority: D - Slow decay; solution agreed but not yet implemented.Read more here: https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1207341?section=official-list-entry St George the Martyr. A Grade 2* listed building. Condition: … Continue reading Historic Preston buildings at risk

When Tulketh Hall was a Quaker boarding school

I found the following in an account of the history of Preston Quakers that a member of one the townโ€™s oldest Quaker families wrote in 1931 (Dilworth Abbatt: 'Quaker Annals of Preston and the Fylde 1653-1900'): Tulketh Hall Academy, Preston From an advertisement in the Irish Friend, 1st of 6th mo. 1841:โ€” โ€œ22 v1 841Lower … Continue reading When Tulketh Hall was a Quaker boarding school

Preston history’s online presence grows

This is the post I put up on the Preston History Facebook group (https://www.facebook.com/groups/prestonhistory) to mark membership growing to more than 6,000. It is developing into an ever more lively forum for those interested in the history of the city: More and more of you areengaging with Prestonโ€™s history Membership of the Preston History Facebook … Continue reading Preston history’s online presence grows

Adult education in 19th-centuryย Preston

I recently came across a dissertation on the Preston Institution for the Diffusion of Knowledge that traces its history from its formation in 1828. The institution, established to provide adult education and a library in the town, became the Harris Institute in 1882. It passed through several stages to emerge as todayโ€™s University of Lancashire. … Continue reading Adult education in 19th-centuryย Preston

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 … Continue reading Arkwright House: ‘a piece of social history’

Remembering Preston’s jailed suffragettes

Today is the date on which the sufferings of jailed suffragettes are remembered as Prisonersโ€™ Day, as it has been since since 1926. Those remembered include several from Preston, most famously Edith Rigby. Emily Jane Cowan, a PhD student at Liverpool University, has written an article for this website about the Prisoners' Day commemoration. Here … Continue reading Remembering Preston’s jailed suffragettes

Renovation not restoration for Arkwright House

This is the third instalment from the short dissertation that Preston Polytechnic journalism student Nick Clark wrote in 1980, just before Arkwright House in the Avenham district of Preston was reopened after a major renovation. It was in this building that Richard Arkwright developed the water frame that was to transform Britain's and then the … Continue reading Renovation not restoration for Arkwright House

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 … Continue reading Arkwright House’s ‘brave new future’