Preston’s Franciscan Friary history now online

Following on from yesterdayโ€™s post about the Roman settlement at Walton-le-Dale, here is a similar account of Prestonโ€™s medieval friary. โ€˜Brothers Minor: Lancashireโ€™s Lost Franciscans โ€“ Investigations at Preston Friary, 1991 and 2007โ€™ by Jeremy Bradley and Stephen Rowland is a detailed analysis (more than 100 pages) of the archaeological excavations that preceded the construction … Continue reading Preston’s Franciscan Friary history now online

Preston’s Castle Hotel through the centuries

I had an email recently from someone wanting information on one of Prestonโ€™s lost โ€˜gemsโ€™: the Castle Hotel which used to stand overlooking the Market Place. Itโ€™s been much written about by Prestonโ€™s historians, and has been dated to before 1623. The evidence for the 1623 date comes from the first edition of Peter Whittleโ€™s … Continue reading Preston’s Castle Hotel through the centuries

Leo Warren’s History of St Wilfrid’s, Preston

Among a collection of books and pamphlets relating to the history of Preston given to me by the Garstang historian and journalist Anthony Coppin was Leo Warrenโ€™s A Short History of St Wilfridโ€™s Church Preston published in 1972. It is indeed a short history, running to just 27 pages. Within that small compass, Leo Warren … Continue reading Leo Warren’s History of St Wilfrid’s, Preston

Simon Jenkins’ new book

Praise and a pillorying for the workof Preston's Building Design Partnership A new book by the leading architectural historian Simon Jenkins celebrates the survival of Preston Bus Station, the cityโ€™s Brutalist masterpiece. But Jenkins has some very unflattering comments about other work by the Building Design Partnership (BDP) and its former chairman, the late Keith … Continue reading Simon Jenkins’ new book

Clifton Place โ€“ Ashtonโ€™s โ€˜hidden paradiseโ€™

Among a collection of books and pamphlets on the history of Preston kindly donated to me by the journalist and historian Anthony Coppin was a typed A4 page written some fifty years ago telling the story of Clifton Place in the Ashton district of Preston. It describes the development of a terrace of eight houses … Continue reading Clifton Place โ€“ Ashtonโ€™s โ€˜hidden paradiseโ€™