Thomas Tomlinson – tanner (?1759-1833)

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, according to the Preston historian Anthony Hewitson, Thomas Tomlinson, a native of Skipton, settled in Preston. These facts are known only from a brief note in Hewitson’s book on the Preston court leet records, and Hewitson does not supply a source for his information.1 He could be the Thoms. Tomlinson recorded as baptised 15 April 1759 in Skipton, the son of William and Mary Tomlinson.2

What is known from documentary sources is that in 1787 he married Ann ‘Nancy’ Holyday at St John’s parish church in Preston. They had four children: William, Mary, Robert and Thomas junior.3 Thomas senior died in 1833 and was buried at St John’s, Preston.4

His will, signed in 1830, provides information about his life in Preston over the next four decades. By that date, he had three living children: William, Robert and Thomas (daughter Mary, wife of Preston solicitor Peter Haydock had predeceased him). In the will, he is described as a tanner.5

His bequests included £600 to his youngest son, Thomas; an annuity of one pound a week to his second son, Robert, who is described as an ironmonger living in London; and annuity of £70 a year to his wife, who would continue to live in her home; and bequests to the children of his deceased sister, Mary.

He left all his real estate to his eldest son, William. Detailed in the will were a house and shop on Cheapside and a tan yard, tan pits and building land at the bottom of Pleasant Street, near Frenchwood.

Thomas is found in the Preston court leet records serving on the jury from 1800 until 1812, taking the office of mayor’s bailiff in 1807.6

An 1825 trade directory has a Thomas Tomlinson living at Pleasant Cottage and his trade is given as tanner. This was probably near his Frenchwood Tannery, which was at the bottom of Pleasant Street.7 The 1832 Preston poll book lists a Thomas Tomlinson, tanner, living at Avenham Cottage. Also living at the property was a William Tomlinson, currier, who would have been his son.8


  1. Anthony Hewitson, Preston Court Leet Records: Extracts and Notes (Preston: George Toulmin & Sons, 1905), 33. ↩︎
  2. ‘England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 – Ancestry.Co.Uk’, Original data: England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013., n.d. ↩︎
  3. ‘Lancashire OnLine Parish Clerk Project’, n.d., http://www.lan-opc.org.uk/. ↩︎
  4. ‘Lancashire OnLine Parish Clerk Project’. ↩︎
  5. ‘Tomlinson, Thomas’ (24 April 1833), R 171/44, Lancashire Archives. ↩︎
  6. David Berry, ed., ‘Preston Court Leet Records’, n.d., https://www.wyrearchaeology.org.uk/index.php/areas-of-interest/preston?view=article&id=162. ↩︎
  7. Edward Baines, History, Directory, and Gazetteer, of the County Palatine of Lancaster: With a Variety of Commercial & Statistical Information … Illustrated by Maps and Plans, vol. 2 (W. Wales & Company, 1825). ↩︎
  8. ‘Preston Poll Book P112’, Ancestry.com. UK, Poll Books and Electoral Registers, 1538-1893 [database on-line]. Original data: London, England, UK and London Poll Books. London, England: London Metropolitan Archives and Guildhall Library., 1832. ↩︎

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