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

Sisters-in-law at odds in Edwardian Preston

Here is the final instalment from an article by Shirley Smith based on the autobiography of Phoebe Hesketh,ย What Can the Matter Be?ย Phoebe Hesketh is today well known for the biography of her famous aunt, the Preston suffragette Edith Rigby but her autobiographical account of life in Edwardian Preston also makes interesting reading Phoebeโ€™s Aunt Edith … Continue reading Sisters-in-law at odds in Edwardian Preston

Was this doctor a domestic tyrant?

Here is the fourth instalment from an article by Shirley Smith based on the autobiography of Phoebe Hesketh,ย What Can the Matter Be?ย Phoebe Hesketh is today well known for the biography of her famous aunt, the Preston suffragette Edith Rigby but her autobiographical account of life in Edwardian Preston also makes interesting reading. Phoebe Hesketh Phoebe … Continue reading Was this doctor a domestic tyrant?

Mourning etiquette in Edwardian Preston

This is the second instalment from an article by Shirley Smith based on the autobiography of Phoebe Hesketh,ย What Can the Matter Be?ย Phoebe Hesketh is today well known for the biography of her famous aunt, the Preston suffragette Edith Rigby but her autobiographical account of life in Edwardian Preston also makes interesting reading. Phoebe was born … Continue reading Mourning etiquette in Edwardian Preston

A chance find in an Oxford blog

Truth and fiction in the life ofthe Rev Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe I was gathering information on Preston clergy and came across a post that a Classics professor at Oxford University published on his blog about Edmund Stringfellow Radcliffe, a minister at St Leonardโ€™s, Walton-le-Dale. Iโ€™ve come across Radcliffe before. He features in a fictional autobiography … Continue reading A chance find in an Oxford blog