PENNINGTON
Pininton, Pynynton, 1246, 1360; Penynton,
1305; Pynyngton, 1351, 1442; Penyngton, 1443.
There is no village of Pennington; the whole of
the township is now within the town of Leigh. It
contains an area of 1,482 acres, much of which does
not exceed in elevation 75 ft. above mean sea level,
rising somewhat higher to the north of Pennington
Brook, which traverses the township from west to
east, and reaching an elevation of a little over 100 ft.
on the south-west near Aspull Common. A considerable area of meadow land by the brook is liable
to flood. The highroad from Leigh to Newton-in-Makerfield runs by Pennington Hall and Aspull
Common. Pennington Station, formerly called
Bradshaw Leach Station, on the Bolton, Leigh and
Kenyon branch of the London and North-Western
Railway, is near the Lowton end of the township,
and on the highroad. It is the junction of the
Kenyon, Leigh, and Tyldesley branch of the same
railway. The duke of Bridgewater's, now the
Manchester Ship Canal Co.'s, canal traverses the
township for a short distance on the south side of
Leigh. The geological formation consists entirely of
the pebble beds of the bunter series of the new red
sandstone, with a considerable area of alluvium in
the low ground by Pennington Brook. The population in 1901 numbered 9,977 persons. The
Local Government Act, 1858, was adopted by the
township in 1863. (fn. 1) By the 38 and 39 Victoria,
cap. ccxi, the district was merged in that of Leigh.
Part of the township together with a portion of the
township of Westleigh was formed in 1854 into an
ecclesiastical parish. By a Local Government Order (fn. 2)
in 1894 the civil parish of Pennington was included
in that of Leigh. The principal employments are
those of coal-mining, cotton-spinning and weaving,
and engineering. (fn. 3) The principal landowners are
Lord Lilford and Mr. C. G. Milnes-Gaskell, of
Wakefield.
MANOR
Before the Conquest and after, the
manor of PENNINGTON was dependent
upon the chief manor of Warrington, and
was held by the yearly rent of 11s., thus retaining
some semblance of the earlier drengage tenure
observed in the adjoining township of Bedford. Both
townships were in the possession of the Bedford
family at the commencement of the thirteenth
century—the dawn of documentary records in this
parish. At an early date the manor, like that of
Bedford, passed to the family of Kighley, as evidenced
by a charter of Sir Henry de Kighley, knt., dated at
Cropwell Butler in the year 1293, granting to Sir
William le Boteler of Warrington, his chief lord, all
his right in the homage, wardships, rent, and other
services of Adam de Pennington, his tenant of the
manor of Pennington. (fn. 4) The superior manor was
thus merged in the barony of which it was held, and
the descent of the mesne manor remains to be
described.
Between 1200 and 1221 Simon de Bedford gave
the manor to Margery daughter of Richard de
Pennington, William le Boteler, the chief lord, (fn. 5)
and Richard de Pennington, father of Margery, confirming the gift. (fn. 6) Shortly afterwards Margery gave
to Cockersand Abbey land bounded as follows:—'From Aldemulneford to the highway coming from
Beneford, following the highway towards Leigh church
to a ditch, descending the ditch to Goldelache and so
to the stream, and by the stream to Aldemulneford.' (fn. 7)
Richard de Pennington, either the father or the son
of Margery, but probably the former, also gave land
by Westleigh church, namely 'from the churchyard
going down beside the church croft to Gildalache and
by a white thorn to the highway leading from
Bedford, thence by that way and by the churchyard
ditch to the first boundary.' (fn. 8) Margery married
Hugh son of William de Radcliffe (living 1206), who
had received from his father 'all Hartshead, to wit
2 carucates of land' in Morley wapentake, co. York. (fn. 9)
Margery bore to her husband two sons, Richard and
William, who made a partition of their inheritance in
1246, after their mother's death, by which Richard
became possessed of the manor of Pennington. (fn. 10)
In 1293 Adam, who appears to have been son of
the last-named, (fn. 11) gave half the manor to Roger son of
Richard de Bradshagh, in marriage with Joan his
daughter, excepting 4 oxgangs of land within certain
bounds beginning at Kymbil-lache unto Pennington
water, and so between the metes of Bedford and
Pennington to the bounds of Culcheth, and from
thence to the bounds of Kenyon, thence to the
bounds of Lowton, thence to Pennington Moss,
thence to the 'rynyorde' (fn. 12) of Pininton, and thence
by Thomas Beneson's Croft, Kymbil, the Mulne Hey
and the 'He' (Hey) to the Wallelache, thence to the
old Kirkegate, thence to the land of Master Henry de
Legth unto the metes of Bedford, and so to Pennington 'He.' (fn. 13) Afterwards he gave to Roger and Joan
these 4 oxgangs, of which Roger de Byckershagh held
2 oxgangs, Henry the tailor and Thomas the reeve
each one oxgang, to hold 'tol-fre and hopre-fre' in
all his mills in Pennington. (fn. 14) In 1299 Adam de
Pennington gave lands here to his bastard sons by
Elota Crakebone, who were then under age, namely,
to Adam 6 messuages, 18 acres of land and 10 acres
of wood, to Richard 2 messuages, 60 acres of land
and 60 acres of wood. (fn. 15) In 1301 Hugh is mentioned as elder brother of Richard and Adam. (fn. 16) In
1299 Roger son of Agnes de Westleigh, Henry de
Leigh, William son of Richard de Bradshagh, Richard
son of Richard de Chaydoke, and Robert Crakebane
were free tenants of the manor—the total number
being seventeen in all—and there were then only
170 acres of waste in the manor, of which Adam de
Pennington held 30 acres in defence every year
between Michaelmas and Martinmas, and he and his
ancestors had also held in defence from the feast of
the Circumcision until the Ascension 66 acres of
wood on account of the eyries of their falcons. The
remainder was insufficient for the free tenants, (fn. 17) and
in consequence Roger de Bradshagh and Joan gave to
Henry de Leigh a plat of land called the Aubres Hey
and 3 acres in Richard's field in exchange for common
of pasture in Dullinghurst, Pennington Moss, and
Dullinghurst Carrs. (fn. 18)
Adam de Pennington died about 1309, leaving
issue by his wife Joan, afterwards wife of Richard son
of Alexander de Pilkington, (fn. 19) an only daughter Joan,
wife of Roger son of Richard de Bradshagh of
Pennington, which Richard was probably a younger
brother of Roger de Bradshagh of Westleigh. Roger
and Richard may perhaps be identified as younger
brothers of Henry de Bradshagh of Bradshaw, son and
heir of Ughtred de Bradshagh, lord of Bradshagh in
1253. (fn. 20) Between 1320 and 1330 the lords of the
manor were Richard son and heir of Roger de
Bradshagh and Joan his mother, relict of Roger. (fn. 21)
From 1330 to 1336 Richard de Bradshagh, Richard
de Pennington, and Adam de Pennington were the
principal landowners. (fn. 22) In 1338 in an exchange of
lands between the lord of the manor and Richard son
of William de Pennington, these names occur:
Etheriston, the Merlache, Stockheye, the Kattysbutts,
the Tunfilde, Hosforland or Hoffurlong, the Demyshevid and Mauributts. (fn. 23) Richard de Bradshagh also
made a number of exchanges of land with Richard de
Bradshagh of Westleigh and Roger his son, in places
called West Croft, Clay Acres, Prestes Croft, and
Richard's Field. (fn. 24) By his first wife, Christiana, he
had issue Richard, Roger, and Thomas; (fn. 25) by his
second wife, Cecily daughter and coheir of Richard
de Lathom of Parbold, a son Thomas, a minor in
1352–5. (fn. 26)
In 1351 Richard de Bradshagh the elder granted
the moiety of the manor after his decease to Alice,
daughter of his son Richard de Bradshagh the
younger. (fn. 27) Before the end of 1357 Alice had become
the wife of Sir Richard le Mascy (fn. 28) of Tatton, knt., who
died without male issue, and was succeeded in the
family estates by his younger brother, John, (fn. 29) but
having one daughter Elizabeth, this manor descended
to her jure matris. She was twice married, her first
husband—whose name is not recorded—dying before
1403, in which year, describing herself as Elizabeth le
Mascy, daughter of Sir Richard le Mascy, knt., she
gave in her widowhood to feoffees her manor of
Pennington, (fn. 30) which the feoffees delivered to her and
her second husband, Richard de Werburton, of
Burghes in Coggeshall, county Chester, in 1414, (fn. 31) and
five years later granted four messuages in the vill of
Pennington to William le Mascy, son of Hamon le
Mascy of Rixton and Pernell (Petronilla) his wife,
daughter of Richard de Werburton, and their issue,
failing which to William le Mascy for life, with
remainder to the heirs of Pernell. (fn. 32)
Elizabeth Werburton was still living in 1432,
when she gave to her daughter Pernell a yearly rent
of £10 to be taken from her manor of Pennington,
or elsewhere in the county of Lancaster. (fn. 33) By dispensation issued by Pope John XXIII in 1415,
Pernell married her cousin William, eldest son and
heir of Hamon or Hamlet Mascy of Rixton, with
whom she was related in the fourth degree. (fn. 34) They
had issue, Hamlet, who died in 1462, (fn. 35) by whom the
manor appears to have been mortgaged to Roger
Starkey, who, describing himself as of Pennington, in
1467 granted his manor of Pennington to James
Starkey, clerk, in trust. (fn. 36) In 1479 Roger Starkey
gave to Hamlet Mascy of Rixton the messuages and
lands here which Cecily Urmston and Margaret
Gnype held for a term of years. (fn. 37) Hamlet, son of
Hamlet Mascy, succeeded his father in 1462 and died
in 1502. (fn. 38) There is no evidence that he had other
issue besides Margaret, the wife of John Holcroft of
Holcroft, and Alice, the wife of Robert Worsley of
Booths, esq., who predeceased his father. John
Starkey, who is believed to have been son and heir
of Roger Starkey named above, (fn. 39) was associated with
Holcroft and Worsley in 1506, when they acknowledged that they held their lands in Pennington of
Sir Thomas Butler, knt., by the seventh part of a
knight's fee, for which they did homage the same
year. (fn. 40) Notwithstanding this, John Mascy of Rixton,
brother and heir of Hamlet, at his death in 1513,
was described as holding lands here of Sir Thomas
Butler, knt., by the seventh part of a knight's fee
and 3s. 10d. yearly rent. (fn. 41) It is probable that John
Starkey acquired his estate here through his father,
and not by marriage with a supposed third daughter
of Hamlet Mascy. In a deed of 1554–5 George
Starkey, son and heir of John, and Sir John Holcroft,
son and heir of John Holcroft, esq., are described as
holding their lands here in coparcenary. (fn. 42)
By this time the reputed manor appears to have
lapsed, and the nominal lords had become mere freeholders of the barony of Warrington. In 1523
Sir William Stanley of Hooton, knt., George Starkey
(son and heir of John Starkey), gent., Richard Holcroft, esq., and Nicholas Renacres were free tenants
here. (fn. 43) In 1548 they were Rowland Stanley, esq.,
paying 4s. 10d. free rent, George Starkey 3s. 1d.,
Sir John Holcroft, knt., 3s. 1d., and Richard Renacres
1d. (fn. 44) In 1546 Sir Robert Worsley, knt., conveyed his
interest and estate to John Holcroft, esq., (fn. 45) and in
1549 Sir Thomas Butler, knt., possibly as trustee,
conveyed to Holcroft twelve messuages, 220 acres of
land, meadow, and pasture here, (fn. 46) part of which premises, including the manor, or rather the moiety of
it, passed by the marriage of Alice daughter and heir
of John Holcroft, esq., to Sir Edward Fitton, of
Gawsworth, knt., who passed them by fine in 1591 to
his uncle Francis Fitton, (fn. 47) and the remainder was conveyed in 1577 by Hamlet Holcroft, third son of
Sir John Holcroft the elder, knt., to William Sherington, gent., and Gilbert Sherington. (fn. 48) In 1632
Thomas Charnock of Astley sold to Richard Blower
and Francis Sherington for £1,000 the 'manor or
lordship of Westleigh and Pennington.' (fn. 49) In 1641
Blower sold to John Sorocold of Lowton, gent., for
£730 one moiety of the reputed manor of Westleigh
and Pennington, of which Sorocold and Francis
Sherington of Booths made a division in 1643. (fn. 50)
Francis Sherington's share was purchased in 1685 by
Alexander Radcliffe, esq., (fn. 51) whose estate in this township was rated that year as of the yearly value of £20. (fn. 52)
Alexander Radcliffe, (fn. 53) grandson of the last-named, died
in 1718, and soon afterwards Helen Radcliffe, his
mother and devisee, appears to have sold the estate to
Edward Byrom of Manchester, who was assessed to
land tax in 1720 for tenements here called the Heylds,
the Meadows, and the Brickhill
Fields. (fn. 54) His nephew Edward
Byrom dispersed the estate
about 1770.
The Starkeys' part of the
manor descended from George
Starkey, who was living in
1557, (fn. 55) to James Starkey, his
son and heir, who in 1576
joined with John, his son and
heir apparent, in a conveyance
of the Pennington estates to
trustees. (fn. 56) James the father
died in 1579, and his son in
1597. George, son and heir of John the younger, was
seventeen years of age at his father's death. (fn. 57) Upon
attaining his majority he alienated his estate to Thomas
Ireland of Bewsey, esq., afterwards knt. After the
death of Sir Thomas Ireland (fn. 58) the estate descended to
his eldest son Thomas, who conveyed it to his brother
George Ireland, at whose death in 1632 it descended
to his daughter and sole heir, Margaret the wife of
Peniston Whalley, esq. (fn. 59) She and her husband joined
in 1652 in a conveyance to Richard Bradshaw of
Chester and Pennington, esq., (fn. 60) fourth son of Roger
Bradshaw, then late of Aspull, esq., of the manor of
Pennington, 40 messuages, a horse-mill and dovecote,
450 acres of land, meadow and pasture, 9s. 6d. free
rent in Pennington, Hindley, and Leigh, with markets
and fairs in Leigh. (fn. 61)

Starkey. Argent, a stork sable membered gules; a mullet for difference.
In 1701 John Bradshaw, grandson of Richard,
conveyed the manor to trustees (fn. 62) for the use of his
daughter and heiress Margaret, who married in 1717
George Farington of Worden, (fn. 63) who with his wife in
1723 conveyed it to trustees, (fn. 64) by whom Pennington
Hall, Bradshaw Leach, and other tenements were sold
in 1726 to James Hilton (fn. 65) of Pennington, mercer, for
£4,550. (fn. 66) His son Samuel Hilton, on his marriage
with Miss Mary Clowes of Smedley, daughter of
Samuel Clowes, then of Chaddock in Tyldesley,
rebuilt the hall. (fn. 67) In 1808 Samuel Chetham Hilton,
grandson of the last-named Samuel, sold the hall and
estate to Benjamin Gaskell, of Thornes House, near
Wakefield, (fn. 68) grandfather of the present owner, Mr.
Charles George Milnes-Gaskell, of Thornes House,
Yorkshire, and Wenlock Abbey, Salop. The manor
of Pennington was sold by George Farington's trustees
about 1726 to Richard Atherton of Atherton, and
has descended with the manor of Atherton and
other estates to John Powys, fifth baron Lilford.
No courts have been held for this manor for many
years past.
Apart from the manor the Bradshaghs held a small
estate here by knight's service, which did not descend
with the manor. Sir William Bradshagh of Blackrod
and Westleigh at his death in 1415 held lands here of
the heirs of Sir William Butler, chr., by knight's service
and 12d. per annum. (fn. 69) Sir William Harrington, knt.,
grandson of the last-named held the same estate at
his death in 1440. (fn. 70) Anne, daughter and coheir
of Sir James Harrington, knt., son of the last-named,
married Sir William Stanley, knt., of Hooton and
Storeton, Chester, (fn. 71) who was a suitor at the court
held at Warrington in 1523 for this land. (fn. 72) Rowland
Stanley, his grandson, held his lands here for 4s. 10d.
per annum in 1548, (fn. 73) and sold them in 1560 with
the mesne manor of Westleigh Old Hall to Sir
William Norris, knt. (fn. 74) In 1565 Norris sold twelve
messuages and 200 acres of land here and in Westleigh to Thomas Charnock, esq., whose grandson sold
them in 1632 to Sherington and Blower as already
stated. (fn. 75)
The Atherton family acquired lands here at an
early date, but they were sold in 1547 to Lawrence
Asshawe of Shaw Hall, (fn. 76) and passed with his Bedford
estate. (fn. 77)
The family of Renacres were long in possession or
a small freehold estate which Nicholas Renacres held
in 1514 (fn. 78) and 1523, (fn. 79) and Richard in 1548, by a
yearly free rent of 1d. (fn. 80) In 1565 Richard son and
heir of the last-named, acknowledged that he held
his lands here of Thomas Butler, esq., by knight's
service. (fn. 81) Richard Renacres of Pennington, gent.,
Joan his wife and John their son were parties to a
fine of lands held here in 1586. (fn. 82) Perhaps from this
family descended John Ranicars of Bedford, gent.,
who acquired the Old Hal of Westleigh in right of
his wife Ellen, daughter and heir of Edward Green. (fn. 83)
A venerable Elizabethan edifice, formerly known
as the Pyle or PEEL, in Pennington, and now as
Urmstons in the Meadows, or
i'th' Meadows, was formerly
the home of a branch of
the Urmston family. In 1589
Richard Norris of West Derby,
gent., leased a messuage in
Pennington to Richard Urmston
of the Pyle in Pennington,
yeoman, Jane his wife, and
Richard his son. (fn. 84) This estate,
with another known as Davenports, now Davenport House,
was purchased by John Gwillym
sometime before 1689, the last-named from Samuel Byrom.
He died before 1692, when his property was administered by his executors, and in 1700 by the guardians
of his daughter Jane, who married John Greaves of
Manchester. (fn. 85) Their son Edward Greaves of Culcheth,
Newton Heath, was in possession in 1784. (fn. 86) It is
now the property of Mr. Milnes-Gaskell. (fn. 87)

Gaskell. Gules, a saltire vair between two annulets in pale and as many lions passant in fesse or.
The family of Pemberton held a considerable
estate here known as ETHERSTON HALL
(fn. 88) at the
beginning of the fifteenth century. In 1415 the
feoffees of Richard Pemberton, of Tunstead in
Pemberton, gave to his relict, Alice, for her life, all his
messuages in Pennington and the reversion of other
messuages which Joan the wife of Richard Pilkington
held in dower after the death of Adam Pennington,
formerly her husband, the reversion to Hugh son of
Thomas son of the said Richard Pemberton and his
heirs male, with remainders to Thurstan brother of
Hugh. (fn. 89) Richard Pemberton's
estate consisted of lands called
Ethereston, the Thornes, the
Crembill and Flaxfeld, a meadow called the Haghesmede,
other lands called Farthill, the
Foldes, an acre of meadow
called the Harshokes, a croft
called Shotycroft, a plat called
the Stokemede, all which he
held at the time of his death
early in 1415 of William
Boteler, chr., of Warrington by
knight's service. (fn. 90) There is
reason to believe that these
lands had formed part of the demesne of Pennington and had descended to the Pembertons by
marriage with a kinswoman of Adam de Pennington. (fn. 91) George Pemberton held the estate of Sir
Thomas Butler in the latter part of the reign of
Henry VIII, (fn. 92) but it did not long descend in his
family, passing to the Leylands of Morleys, of whom
Sir William Leyland, knt., died in 1547, seised of
lands and tenements here, which he held 'of the
heirs of Adam de Pennington.' (fn. 93) Subsequently it
descended with the estates of the Tyldesleys of
Morleys. Early in the last century it was the
property of Thomas Jones, who rebuilt the hall in
1826, and by his executors was sold to the Trustees
of Clarke and Marshall's Charity in Manchester, who
are the present owners. (fn. 94)

Pemberton. Argent, a chevron between three buckets sable, hooped or.
William Bolton, innkeeper, Anne Eaton, of Southworth, Robert Greenough, Margaret Hodgkinson, and
John Urmston registered estates as 'Papists' in
1717. (fn. 95)
In 1787 James Hilton owned nearly one-fourth of
the township. (fn. 96)
Christ Church, erected in 1854, is a building of
stone in the perpendicular style, consisting of chancel,
nave, aisles, south porch, and an embattled western
tower containing one bell. The registers date from
the year 1854. The living is a vicarage of the net
yearly value of £300 with a residence, in the gift of
the Simeon trustees.
The Roman Catholic church of the Sacred Heart,
opened in 1904, is in Windermere Road.
CHARITIES
Richard Bradshaw bequeathed £5
by his will in 1681 for the relief of
the poor. James and Randell Wright
in 1679 gave £40 to trustees to be devoted to the
maintenance of the schoolmaster in Leigh Grammar
School for teaching two poor children from Pennington,
and for buying linen cloth for distribution amongst
the poor of the township. In 1723 Henry Bolton
bequeathed £110 to pay the vicar 10s. yearly for a
sermon on St. Bartholomew's Day, and to distribute
£5 yearly amongst twenty necessitous persons of the
township. (fn. 97)