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’

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

When the Romans came to Walton-le-Dale

Oxford Archaeology has just put online its report on the excavations of the Roman site at Walton-le-Dale. Itโ€™s a lengthy document running to nearly 500 pages, and in addition there are two separate appendices. Walton-le-Dale is described as โ€˜โ€ฆ a highly unusual site. It clearly supplied the Roman military in the far north-western extent of … Continue reading When the Romans came to Walton-le-Dale

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