John Hunter Padel โ€“ pacifist schoolmaster andย psychoanalyst

John Hunter Padel was a leading British psychoanalyst and Shakespeare scholar in the last century who taught classics at Preston Grammar School during World War Two. Padel was a conscientious objector whose beliefs brought him into conflict with the authorities when conscription was introduced. See also: Prestonโ€™s World War 1 conscientious objectors Padel was born in … Continue reading John Hunter Padel โ€“ pacifist schoolmaster andย psychoanalyst

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

Surprising views and surprising friendships

โ€˜How can we bishops confide in an authority which listens to women?This is the beginning of decline and of moral disorder.โ€™ This insight into the thinking of the leaders of English Catholics in the nineteenth century is a snippet discovered among the correspondence of Cardinal Manning, archbishop of Westminster. Itโ€™s in a letter to Herbert … Continue reading Surprising views and surprising friendships

The Davis brothers โ€“ 18th-century organ builders

An article of possibly limited interest about an early nineteenth-century organ at Ampleforth College, the Catholic public school in Yorkshire, published in the collegeโ€™s journal fifty years ago, sheds interesting light on two brothers born in Preston in the eighteenth century. The article, by Fr Boniface Hunt, the priest at St Mary's Priory, Leyland, describes … Continue reading The Davis brothers โ€“ 18th-century organ builders

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 … 22 November 1716

Christopher Tootell, the priest at Fernyhalgh Chapel, and other local Catholics were ordered to present themselves at Preston to swear an oath of loyalty that would have included a disavowal of their faith. Such oaths were regularly used to bar Catholics and dissenters from public office. This meant, for example and as yesterdayโ€™s post noted, … Continue reading On this day … 22 November 1716