Thomas Tomlinson – tanner (?-1834)

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, Thomas Tomlinson, a native of Skipton according to the Preston historian Anthony Hewitson, settled in Preston. The only source for his Yorkshire roots is a brief note in Hewitson’s book on the Preston court leet records, and Hewitson does not tell us where he found his information. [1]

What is known from documentary sources is that in 1787 he married Ann ‘Nancy’ Holyday at St John’s, the Preston parish church. [2] They had four children: William, Mary, Robert and Thomas junior. Thomas died in 1833 and was buried at St George’s, Preston. [3]

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.

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 the domestic property; and bequests to the children of his deceased sister, Mary.

He left all his property 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. [4]

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. He was a Preston councillor, but no more has been found about his time on the council other than that he resigned his seat on the corporation in 1831. [5]

There are a number of mentions of Thomas Tomlinson in the early Preston directories between 1818 and 1825. These show that he had established shoe and leather business in Cheapside and had bought a tannery in Frenchwood, living close by in Pleasant Street (see Frenchwood Tannery for more details).

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. [6]

Thomas died the following year, and was buried and was buried 11 February.


[1] Anthony Hewitson, Preston Court Leet Records: Extracts and Notes (Preston: George Toulmin & Sons, 1905), 33.

[2] ‘St John, Preston, Marriages 1786 – 1791, Page 217, Entry 648. Source: LDS Film 94013’, 8 April 1787, https://www.lan-opc.org.uk/.

[3] ‘St John, Preston, Lancashire. Buried by: R Harris. Performed at: St Georges. Register: Burials 1832 – 1837, Page 19, Entry 148. Source: Original Register Held at Lancashire Archives’, 11 February 1833, https://www.lan-opc.org.uk/.

[4] ‘Tomlinson, Thomas’ (24 April 1833), R171/44, Lancashire Archives.

[5] David Berry, ed., ‘Preston Court Leet Records’, n.d., https://www.wyrearchaeology.org.uk/index.php/areas-of-interest/preston?view=article&id=162; Preston Chronicle P2, 1 October 1831, British Library Newspapers, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/Y3205332085/BNCN?sid=bookmark-BNCN&xid=dec48af7.

[6] ‘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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