The destruction of Preston’s historic townscape

I had an email this morning from Daniel Crowther, the urban planner heading the Restoring Preston Basin project, pointing me to a telling sentence in the Historic Town Assessment Report for Preston published by Lancashire County Council back in 2006: โ€˜โ€ฆ in the last hundred or so years Preston has vandalised its inheritance.โ€™ It adds: … Continue reading The destruction of Preston’s historic townscape

Reporting on Preston’s historic heritage

Ahead of a meeting organised next week to discuss ways of protecting Prestonโ€™s fast-disappearing architectural heritage, I posted information on the Preston History Facebook page about a detailed report into that heritage published back in 2006: the Preston Historic Assessment Report. It is a very useful 160-page account of the surviving and lost remains in … Continue reading Reporting on Preston’s historic heritage

Does this pub name need to change?

A recent post on the Preston History Facebook page might be of interest. The news of the change of name of one of Preston's oldest pubs was first posted by Ed Walker, the editor of the Blog Preston online newspaper. This is the follow-up post: Source: https://www.blogpreston.co.uk/2024/12/black-a-moor-pub-drops-name-and-sees-major-refit-to-become-lancaster-gate/ Ed Walkerโ€™s post about the proposed changing of … Continue reading Does this pub name need to change?

1930s Preston from the air

In the 1930s Arthur William Hobart, one of the first commercial aerial photographers, flew over Britain in his bi-plane taking hundreds of photographs that Historic England has now put on line:https://historicengland.org.uk/images-books/archive/collections/photographs/aw-hobart-air-pictures-portleven-collection/ The biggest concentration of those now on line are the ones he took while flying over Lancashire, including four from just south of Preston. … Continue reading 1930s Preston from the air

Paid for by a slave tradeย fortune

At the ceremony to mark the laying of the foundation stone for St Thomasโ€™ Church in August 1837, the vicar of Preston, the Rev Roger Carus Wilson, paid fulsome tribute to the churchโ€™s benefactress: โ€˜โ€ฆ previous erections of this kind having made considerable demands upon the private means of this locality, I happened to hear … Continue reading Paid for by a slave tradeย fortune