Patti Mayor โ€“ an artist rediscovered at 87

With Prestonโ€™s suffragettes very much in the news at the moment with the first public meeting of the Friends of Edith Rigby this week, I thought the following transcript of an article that appeared in the Lancashire Evening Post in 1959 might be of interest. It features one of those suffragettes, the artist Patti Mayor, … Continue reading Patti Mayor โ€“ an artist rediscovered at 87

Patti Mayor โ€“ Preston suffragette and artist

A letter written by Preston suffragette Grace Alderman that featured in a recent post mentioned one of her fellow suffragettes, Patti Mayor, the artist who painted the โ€˜The Half-Timerโ€™ portrait. This was a study of a twelve-year-old Preston mill worker, Annie Hall. The portrait, taken from its frame, was carried through London by Patti at … Continue reading Patti Mayor โ€“ Preston suffragette and artist

Missing from Preston’s Harris Library

Thirty years ago this month, Keith Johnson published his โ€˜People of Old Prestonโ€™, a well-written and well-researched account of twenty-three men and women from nineteenth-century Preston. When Keith was writing his book there was no online access to sources for local historians and no e-books. Readers had to buy their books in print, or pop … Continue reading Missing from Preston’s Harris Library

Winckley Square guided walks

The Friends of Winckley Square Gardens have announced their Spring programme of guided walks, and here are details of the first, Notable Former Residents, taken from their Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/friendsofwinckleysquaregardens). Go to the page for details of other walks in the programme. Join Peter Wilkinson to hear the stories of the former residents โ€“ famous … Continue reading Winckley Square guided walks

On this day … 30 November 1878

The Preston Chronicle carried a report of the visit to Preston of Henry Morton Stanley, the journalist/explorer who tracked down David Livingstone in Africa and reputedly greeted him with his famous, โ€˜Dr Livingstone, I presumeโ€™. Stanley was on a lecture tour of Britain describing his expeditions to the โ€˜Dark Continentโ€™, and this is how the … Continue reading On this day … 30 November 1878

On this day … 29 November 1856

The Preston Guardian carried a report on the discoveries made by archaeologists at Castle Hill, Penwortham. The discoveries are given a lengthy treatment in Charles Hardwickโ€™s History of Preston, not surprisingly since he was the person directing the amateur archaeologists who carried out the dig. The suggestions they proposed for the origin of the site, … Continue reading On this day … 29 November 1856

On this day … 25 November 1876

The Preston Chronicle published its response to the new Elementary Education Act which introduced compulsory education. In Preston, a school attendance committee was appointed to make sure parents complied. The Chronicle welcomed the act because: โ€˜There are thousands of children in the town totally neglected, living like little savages, so far as education is concerned. … Continue reading On this day … 25 November 1876