Lambley
LAMBLEY, a parish, in the union of Haltwhistle,
W. division of Tindale ward, S. division of Northumberland, 4½ miles (S. W. by S.) from Haltwhistle;
containing 249 inhabitants. This place is of considerable
antiquity; and in the reign of John, a Benedictine nunnery, dedicated to God, St. Mary, and St. Patrick, was
founded here, either by that monarch or by Adam de
Tindale. In 1296 it was burnt by the Scots, who plundered and laid waste the neighbourhood; the establishment was subsequently restored, and continued to flourish
till the Dissolution, when its revenue was valued at
£5. 15. 8. The parish is situated on the South Tyne,
and comprises 2854a. 2r. 10p., of which 368 acres are
arable, 221 meadow, 175 woodland, and 1089 pasture,
with a tract of common containing 1000 acres by computation. The surface is rugged, and the scenery generally wild, but the banks of the river are well wooded,
and in some parts beautifully picturesque; the prevailing timber is oak, ash, elm, and sycamore. The soil is
commonly light, and the chief produce oats, barley, and
potatoes. The living is a donative, in the patronage of
R. L. Allgood, Esq. The church, repaired a few years
since by subscription, is an humble edifice, standing at
the south end of the village of Harpertown, and about a
quarter of a mile from the site of the monastery, which
occupied a charming seclusion, on a haugh, upon the
left bank of the Tyne. On Castle Hill, the site of an old
fortress, are vestiges of a deep moat; and lower down
the river, have been discovered some large coffins of oak,
black as jet.
Lambley (Holy Trinity)
LAMBLEY (Holy Trinity), a parish, in the union
of Basford, S. division of the wapentake of Thurgarton and of the county of Nottingham, 5¾ miles (N. E.)
from Nottingham; containing 983 inhabitants. It
comprises by measurement 2092 acres: the soil in some
parts is a reddish marl, resting on clay, and in others of
lighter quality; the surface is hilly. The village, which
is extensive, is situated in a deep vale, sheltered by
ranges of hills rising in the form of an amphitheatre.
The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at
£10. 16. 3.; net income, £476; patron, Samuel Oliver,
Esq. The church is a beautiful structure.
Lambourn (St. Michael)
LAMBOURN (St. Michael), a parish, in the union
of Hungerford, hundred of Lambourn, county of
Berks; containing, with the tythings of Blagrave,
Bockhampton, Eastbury, and Hadley, 2595 inhabitants,
of whom 388 are in Upper Lambourn tything, and 1333
in the town of Chipping-Lambourn, 5 miles (N.) from
Hungerford, and 68 (W.) from London. This place
formed part of the dower of Ealswitha, queen of Alfred
the Great, and continued in royal demesne under Edward the Confessor; after the Conquest it was given to
the baronial family of Fitzwarren, at whose instance a
market and three fairs were granted to it by Henry III.
The town is pleasantly situated in a hilly district; the
inhabitants are supplied with water from wells, and in
the centre of the town is an ancient cross, consisting of a
tall pillar, approached by a circular ascent of steps, and
surmounted by an ornamented capital, supposed to have
been originally the figure of a sphynx, but now nearly
obliterated. The market is on Friday; and fairs are
held on May 12th, October 14th, and December 4th,
chiefly for cattle. The parish comprises 14,425a. 3r. 4p.:
the soil is partly good corn land, and partly down land,
which, since the inclosure, has been under tillage; the
low grounds are watered by a river which takes its name
from the town, and which, during the summer, affords
an abundant supply, but during the winter months is
nearly dry. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's
books at £10. 11. 10½.; net income, £154; patron, the
Dean of St. Paul's: the impropriation belongs to Mrs.
Clark. The church is an ancient and handsome cruciform structure, in the early English style, with a square
embattled tower; and has two chantry chapels, in one
of which the inmates of some adjoining almshouses
assemble every morning for prayers. A church was
built and endowed at Lambourn-Woodlands, in 1837, by
the Misses Seymour, of Speen: the living is a perpetual
curacy, in the patronage of the Founders, who presented,
as first incumbent, the Rev. John Bacon, grandson of
the celebrated sculptor of that name. There is a place
of worship for Wesleyans. On the north side of the
parish church is an hospital, established in 1502, for ten
men; and some ancient almshouses, now called Place
Almshouses, were rebuilt in 1827.
Lambourn, or Lambourne (St. Mary and All Saints)
LAMBOURN, or Lambourne (St. Mary and All
Saints), a parish, in the union and hundred of Ongar,
S. division of Essex, 5½ miles (N. N. W.) from Romford; containing 904 inhabitants. It is intersected by
the river Roding, and comprises by measurement 2437
acres, of which 737 are arable, 1296 pasture, 118 wood,
229 forest, and 24 common; the soil is heavy, but the
substratum light, and rather inclining to chalk. The
living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £14,
and in the patronage of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge: the tithes have been commuted for £600, and
the glebe comprises 34 acres. The church, a neat rustic
building, consists of a nave and chancel, with a leaden
spire: in the chancel are three windows of stained glass,
and a fourth contains five pieces of curious and valuable
old painting; near the altar is a tablet to the memory
of Wynnyffe, who, nearly two centuries since, was rector
of Lambourn and Bishop of Lincoln. A chapel was
built in 1833, in the village of Abridge, where is also a
place of worship for Wesleyans. Spencer, who was a
soldier in the army of Pope Adrian in his wars against
the Duke of Milan, and who in 1370 was made Bishop
of Norwich, lived in the parish.
Lambrigg
LAMBRIGG, a township, in the parish, union, and
ward of Kendal, county of Westmorland, 6¾ miles
(E. N. E.) from Kendal; containing 143 inhabitants. A
vein of copper-ore was formerly worked.
Lambrook, East (St. James)
LAMBROOK, EAST (St. James), a chapelry, in
the parish of Kingsbury-Episcopi, union of Langport, E. division of the hundred of Kingsbury, W. division of Somerset, 6¼ miles (S. by E.) from Langport;
containing, with the hamlet of Middle Lambrook, 374
inhabitants. It is bounded on the east by the river
Parret. The living is a perpetual curacy, valued in the
king's books at £6. 6. 8.; net income, £157; patron,
the Vicar of Kingsbury-Episcopi. A neat parsonagehouse has lately been erected. There is a place of worship for Independents.
Lambrook, West
LAMBROOK, WEST, a tything, in the parish of
Kingsbury-Episcopi, union of Langport, E. division
of the hundred of Kingsbury, W. division of Somerset,
6¼ miles (S.) from Langport; with 192 inhabitants.
Lambton
LAMBTON, a township, in the parish and union of
Chester-le-Street, N. division of Easington ward
and of the county of Durham, 1½ mile (N. E.) from
Chester-le-Street; containing 120 inhabitants. This
township, which is situated to the north of Little Lumley, and skirted by the road from Chester-le-Street, over
the river Wear, to Houghton-le-Spring, comprises 634
acres of productive grass-land. Lambton Hall formerly
stood here, and was the residence of the Lambton family
until the death of William Lambton, Esq., at the close
of the eighteenth century. A considerable portion of
the beautiful park, five miles in circumference, which
surrounds the modern edifice of Lambton Castle, at
Harraton, extends into this township. Just within the
entrance to the park is the site of an ancient chapel,
and near it Worm Hill, of which tradition says that it
was once occupied by a formidable serpent, that was cut
to pieces by some hero of the Lambton family, cased in
armour set with razors for the purpose. The Durham
Junction railway passes to the south-east. Two brine
springs, from which salt is made, issue from the bottom
of two coal-pits in the township.
Lamerton (St. Peter)
LAMERTON (St. Peter), a parish, in the union of
Tavistock, hundred of Lifton, Tavistock and S. divisions of Devon, 2½ miles (N. W.) from Tavistock; containing 1288 inhabitants. The parish is situated on the
road from Tavistock to Launceston, and comprises 5488
acres, of which 1147 are common or waste. Manganese
is wrought extensively; slate is quarried for exportation,
and good building-stone is found in abundance. Collacombe, a mansion built in the reign of Elizabeth, and
since converted into a farmhouse, has a large transom
window, containing 3200 panes of glass. The living is
a vicarage, valued in the king's books at £13. 2. 1., and
in the gift of J. H. Tremayne, Esq.: the tithes have been
commuted for £397, and the glebe comprises 20 acres.
The church, which belonged to Tavistock Abbey, is a
handsome structure in the later English style, with a
lofty embattled tower, and contains an interesting monument to Thomas Tremayne and his wife, with their
eight sons and eight daughters. Divine service is also
performed in a licensed schoolroom, four miles from the
church, by a curate appointed by the vicar. There are
places of worship for Bible Christians; and national
schools supported by subscription. £20 per annum
were bequeathed to the poor by the late Arthur Tremayne, Esq., of Sydenham. Rowe, the poet, was a
native of the place.
Lamesley
LAMESLEY, a chapelry, in the parish and union of
Chester-le-Street, Middle division of Chester ward,
N. division of the county of Durham, 3½ miles (S.)
from Gateshead; containing 2262 inhabitants, of whom
1846 are in Lamesley township. This chapelry includes
the townships of Lamesley, Ravensworth, Kibblesworth,
and Hedley, and comprises by computation 6648 acres,
of which two-thirds are arable land; the surface is
undulated, the soil principally clay, and suited to the
growth of wheat, and the scenery pleasing and diversified. Ravensworth Vale, in which the castle of that
name stands, is greatly admired for its beauty, being
well wooded, and having the river Team flowing through
it. There are extensive coal-mines, and several quarries
for grindstones and for building purposes; ironstone
also is found in some parts contiguous to the coal. The
living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £138, which
includes £20 per annum, being a commutation for petty
tithes and Easter-offerings; patron and impropriator,
Lord Ravensworth. In 1843, a glebe-house was erected
in the Elizabethan style, on a site given by his lordship.
The chapel existed before 1286, the date of the foundation of the collegiate church of Chester, which possessed
the patronage till the Dissolution, and in which Lamesley
formed the second prebend: the edifice was rebuilt in
1759; a tower was added in 1821, and a vestry a few
years since. At Eighton-Banks are two small places of
worship for Wesleyans.
Lammas (St. Andrew)
LAMMAS (St. Andrew), a parish, in the union of
Aylsham, hundred of South Erpingham, E. division
of Norfolk, 3 miles (N. W. by N.) from Coltishall;
containing, with the merged parish of Little Hautbois,
299 inhabitants. These united parishes comprise by
estimation 829 acres, of which 647 are arable, 150 pasture, and the remainder woodland. The village and
church are picturesquely situated on the east bank of
the navigable river Bure, which bounds the parish on
the north and west. The living is a discharged rectory,
with that of Little Hautbois united, in the gift of the
Rev. W. H. Marsh: the tithes have been commuted
for £240, and the glebe consists of 36 acres. The church
is an ancient structure, in the early and later English
styles, with a square embattled tower; the font is handsomely sculptured, and in the chancel are neat monuments to the Marsh and Chandler families. There is a
place of worship for the Society of Friends. The church
of Little Hautbois has been destroyed many years.
Lamonby
LAMONBY, a township, in the parish of Skelton,
union of Penrith, Leath ward, E. division of Cumberland, 8½ miles (N. W. by W.) from Penrith; containing
246 inhabitants. Here is a quarry of firestone.
Lamorran (St. Moran)
LAMORRAN (St. Moran), a parish, in the union of
Truro, W. division of the hundred of Powder and of
the county of Cornwall, 4 miles (S. W. by W.) from
Tregony; containing 99 inhabitants. The parish is
bounded on the south by the navigable river Fal, and
indented by a creek of that river, to which it gives name.
The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £6,
and in the gift of the Earl of Falmouth: the tithes have
been commuted for £153, and the glebe comprises 42
acres, with a house. The late church was an ancient
edifice, situated on the border of Lamorran Creek, with
a detached tower mantled with ivy and concealed by
foliage; it was supposed to be part of a monastery or
cell which once existed here. The present edifice was
built on the same site, by the Earl of Falmouth, and
opened in August, 1845; the style of the old church
has been retained, with good effect.
Lamplugh (St. Michael)
LAMPLUGH (St. Michael), a parish, in the union
of Whitehaven, Allerdale ward above Derwent, W.
division of Cumberland, 9 miles (E. N. E.) from the
town of Whitehaven; containing, with the townships of
Kelton, Murton, and Winder, 645 inhabitants, of whom
190 are in the township of Lamplugh. The parish is
bounded on the east by Loweswater and Crummockwater, and comprises 4876a. 2r. 39p. of inclosed land,
and 1475 acres of common. Two branches of the river
Marron have their sources here. There are extensive
quarries of limestone, and some of freestone. The living
is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £10. 4. 7.,
and in the gift of John Lamplugh L. Raper, Esq.: the
tithes have been commuted for £300, and the glebe
comprises 2 acres. Near the ancient Hall is a mineral
spring, the water of which is powerfully astringent.
Lamport
LAMPORT, a hamlet, in the parish of Stowe,
poor-law union, hundred, and county of Buckingham;
containing 76 inhabitants.
Lamport (All Saints)
LAMPORT (All Saints), a parish, in the union of
Brixworth, hundred of Orlingbury, N. division of
the county of Northampton, 8¾ miles (N.) from Northampton; containing, with the hamlet of HangingHoughton and the chapelry of Faxton, 342 inhabitants.
The parish comprises by computation 4421 acres, of
which by far the greater portion is rich pasture; about
50 acres are strong wheat land, and about 400 red turnip
soil. The surface is varied; the village is situated on a
hill, commanding some pleasing views, but the greater
part of the parish is seated in a valley. There are some
quarries of stone for building and for road-making.
The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at
£48. 2. 6.; net income, £1085; patron, Sir J. Isham,
Bart. The tithes were commuted for corn-rents, under
an act of inclosure, in 1794; the glebe comprises 53
acres. The church is an ancient structure. At Faxton
is a chapel of ease. A school was endowed by Sir Edmund Isham, who in the year 1762 gave £1500 for this
purpose, and for the benefit of the poor; and there is a
fund of £66 per annum, arising from 41 acres of land,
assigned on the inclosure in lieu of other land purchased
with a bequest by Sir Justinian Isham in 1670, for apprenticing boys.
Lamyatt (St. Mary and St. John)
LAMYATT (St. Mary and St. John), a parish, in
the union of Shepton-Mallet, hundred of Whitestone, E. division of Somerset, 2¼ miles (W. by N.)
from Bruton; containing 255 inhabitants. It comprises
by measurement 1000 acres: there are quarries of stone
for building, and for the roads. The living is a rectory,
valued in the king's books at £12. 4. 2.; patron, the
Rev. J. G. Copleston: the tithes have been commuted
for £200, and the glebe comprises 43 acres. The church
is an ancient structure, in good repair.
Lancashire
LANCASHIRE, a maritime county, situated on the
western coast, and bounded on the north by Cumberland and Westmorland, on the east by Yorkshire, on the
south by Cheshire, and on the west by the Irish Sea.
It extends from 53° 20' to 54° 25' (N. Lat.), and from
2° 3' to 3° 13' (W. Lon.), and contains 1831 square
miles, or 1,171,840 statute acres. Within the limits of
the county are 289,184 houses inhabited, 23,639 uninhabited, and 3680 in progress of erection; and the
population amounts to 1,667,054, of whom 814,847 are
males, and 852,207 females.
The name of this county is a contraction of Lancastershire. Its early British inhabitants were the Setantii, a
tribe of the Brigantes. Under the Roman dominion it
was included in the province called Maxima Cæsariensis,
and was traversed by four great military roads, which
severally led through the county, from Carlisle to Kinderton in Cheshire; from Overborough to Slack, or Almondbury, in Yorkshire; from the Neb of the Nase, on
the right bank of the Ribble, eastward, and across Fulwood-moor, to Ribchester; and from the ford of the
Mersey, near Warrington, through Barton, Eccles, and
Manchester, to Ilkley. The Britons, under their renowned King Arthur, fought several battles with the
Saxons on the banks of the river Douglas, in this county;
which was, however, at last conquered, about the year
559, by the Saxon chieftain, Ella, and included in the
kingdom of Deira, over which that prince reigned. From
this period until the fifteenth century, we find little remarkable on record relative to Lancashire. It shared
in the general devastation of the northern part of England committed by the Conqueror; and in 1323, it suffered from an invasion of the Scots, under Robert
Bruce, who partly burned the town of Preston. In the
wars between the rival houses of York and Lancaster
the county was not the scene of any important event,
except that, after the defeat of the Lancastrian party in
the battle of Hexham, Henry VI. was concealed for a
year at Waddington Hall, where he was at length discovered and taken. In the reign of Henry VII., the
impostor, Lambert Simnel, with a body of Irish partisans, and two thousand Germans who had been sent to
his assistance by Margaret, widow of Charles the Bold,
Duke of Burgundy, landed at the Pile of Fouldrey, in
the bay of Morecambe, and thence proceeded to Coventry. In the reign of Henry VIII., when the "Pilgrims of Grace," as the rebels of the north were called,
were making their way southward, the malcontents of
Lancashire took up arms, but were speedily subdued by
the Earl of Shrewsbury, aided by the Earl of Derby.
During the great civil war in the reign of Charles I.,
no county was more frequently the scene of action than
this. In the commission of array issued by the crown,
James, Lord Strange, was appointed lord-lieutenant of
the counties of Lancashire and Cheshire: that nobleman
soon after had a severe skirmish with the inhabitants of
Manchester, for a magazine which they had formed;
and shortly afterwards, another skirmish ensued in the
same town, with some partisans of the parliament.
Strange then mustered the county in three different
places,—on the heaths by Bury; on the moor at Ormskirk; and on the moor at Preston; at each of which
not less than twenty thousand men were assembled.
Lord Molyneux also raised a regiment in the royal cause;
while many of the other most influential men were actively engaged in the parliamentarian interest. The
forces thus collected soon dispersed; but Lord Strange,
who immediately after, by the decease of his father, became Earl of Derby, having been commanded by the
king to secure Manchester, raised some troops at his
own expense, and commenced the siege of that town on
the 26th of September, 1642, at the head of four thousand three hundred men. He withdrew, however, at
the end of the week following, in obedience to the commands of the king, whom he proceeded to join without
delay.
Early in 1643, Sir Thomas Fairfax repaired from
Yorkshire to Manchester, and there established his headquarters. On the 10th of February, Sir John Seaton,
major-general of the parliamentarian forces, marched
at the head of a body of troops from Manchester to
Preston, which was garrisoned by the king's troops, and
attacked that town with such vigour, that it was taken
after a combat of two hours; Lancaster, also, was secured, with but little resistance. Sir John Seaton then
marched to Wigan, where the Earl of Derby was strongly
intrenched; and taking that place after a gallant resistance, he compelled the earl to retreat to Blackburn.
From Wigan the victorious forces proceeded to Warrington, which they obtained possession of after a short but
resolutely-sustained siege. The united forces of the
Earl of Derby and Lord Molyneux retook the town of
Lancaster on the 10th of March; and three days after,
these lords advanced to Preston, which they carried by
assault; but Molyneux being obliged to join the king
at Oxford, the Earl of Derby, with his forces, was compelled immediately to retreat to his mansion of Lathom
House, which he had fortified. Early in the year 1644
commenced the memorable siege of that mansion, which
was attacked by the forces under Sir Thomas Fairfax,
and defended for three months by a strong garrison, inspirited by the heroic conduct of Charlotte Tremouille,
Countess of Derby, until relieved by Prince Rupert, who
pursued the parliamentarian army to Bolton. Here, the
prince being joined by the Earl of Derby from the Isle
of Man, Bolton was taken in a second furious assault,
led by the earl at the head of two hundred chosen
Lancashire men; when Colonel Rigby, the commander,
and a number of his troops, succeeded in escaping from
the town, and crossed the Yorkshire hills to Bradford.
The prince forthwith advanced to Liverpool, which surrendered after a vigorous siege of about three weeks.
He then hastened to York; but having been totally defeated, with the other generals of the royal party, at the
decisive battle of Marston-Moor, he drew off the wreck
of his army into Lancashire, where the strong holds he
had so recently captured were speedily re-taken. In the
summer of 1645, Lathom House was again besieged
by the parliamentarian forces, under the command of
General Egerton; and after a gallant defence by Colonel
Rawsthorn, the garrison was at length compelled to
yield to superior numbers.
In the year 1648, the north of England being invaded
by the Scottish army under the Duke of Hamilton, and
by another body of men which had been raised on the
borders under General Langdale, acting in concert and
on behalf of the royal cause, Cromwell was ordered by
the parliament to march into Lancashire to resist their
further progress. The orders were promptly obeyed;
and having joined the Lancashire forces which had been
assembled under the command of Colonel Ashton, he
advanced to Preston, where, on the evening of the 17th
of July, he was met by the opposing army, which had in
the mean time been joined by an Irish force under
General Monroe. An action immediately ensued, in
which, after a sanguinary conflict of four hours' duration in the fields, the Duke of Hamilton's troops began
to give way, and were charged through the streets of
Preston at the point of the bayonet; but beyond the
town they made a stand for the night: in this battle,
Cromwell states that the enemy lost one thousand men
killed, and four thousand prisoners. In the night of
the 18th the duke retreated with the remainder of his
army to Wigan, and the next day towards Warrington.
Being still pursued, his troops made a resolute stand at
a pass near Winwick, which they maintained for many
hours; but they were at last overcome by the courage
and discipline of the troops under Cromwell, when about
one thousand men were killed, and two thousand made
prisoners: the remainder were pursued to the town of
Warrington, where they passed the bridge, and where
General Bailey, to whom the Duke of Hamilton had
confided the command of this division of his army, was
compelled to surrender himself and all his officers and
soldiers prisoners of war. By this capitulation, four
thousand prisoners, with their arms, fell into the hands
of the victors, and the infantry of the Scottish army was
totally ruined: the remainder ultimately dispersed.
The issue of the campaign compelled Sir Thomas Tyldesley, a zealous supporter of the royal cause, to abandon
the siege of Lancaster Castle, in which he was at that
time engaged. King Charles II., with his Scottish forces,
marched through the county, in 1651, on his route to
Worcester; and the Earl of Derby, having collected at
Preston all the strength he could muster, consisting of
six hundred men, was proceeding to Worcester by way
of Wigan, when he was opposed in Wigan Lane by a
considerable force under Colonel Lilburne, and his
troops were totally routed: the earl himself escaped
with numerous wounds, but shortly afterwards fell into
the hands of the enemy, and was beheaded at Bolton.
In this year, also, Lancashire suffered much from pestilence. William III., on his way to Ireland, prior to the
celebrated battle of the Boyne, passed through the
southern part of Lancashire, and embarked at Liverpool, June 14th, 1690. In 1715, a body of the Scottish
insurgents on behalf of the Pretender entered the county
from the north, and having passed through KirkbyLonsdale and Lancaster, arrived at Preston on the 9th
of November, their whole force amounting to one thousand six hundred men; here, after some skirmishes of
minor importance, they finally surrendered to the king's
forces. In 1745, the army of the Young Pretender passed
through Lancashire, in its progress southward, being
joined in its route by small numbers of Lancashire men;
and again, in its precipitate retreat, it traversed the
county in the contrary direction.
Lancashire is in the province of York; and under the
ecclesiastical arrangements, pursuant to the act of the
6th and 7th of William IV., cap. 77, the deanery of Furness and Cartmel is placed in the diocese of Carlisle,
the deanery of Warrington in that of Chester, and the
remainder of the county in the new diocese of Manchester. The total number of civil parishes is 66. The
county is divided into the hundreds of Amounderness,
Blackburn (Higher and Lower), Leyland, Lonsdale
(north and south of the Sands), Salford, and West
Derby. It contains the borough, market, and sea-port
towns of Lancaster, Liverpool, and Preston; the city of
Manchester; the borough and market towns of Ashtonunder-Lyne, Blackburn, Bolton, Bury, Clitheroe, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Warrington, and Wigan; the
market and sea-port towns of Fleetwood, Poulton-inthe-Fylde, and Ulverston; and the market-towns of
Burnley, Cartmel, Chorley, Colne, Dalton, Garstang,
Haslingden, Hawkshead, Kirkham, Middleton, Ormskirk, Prescot, and Todmorden. Under the act of the
2nd of William IV., cap. 45, the county was divided
into two portions, called the Northern and Southern
divisions, each sending two representatives to parliament; and each of the 14 boroughs returns two members, except Ashton, Bury, Clitheroe, Rochdale, Salford,
and Warrington, which have but one member each.
The county is included in the Northern circuit: the
assizes for the southern division are held at the town
of Liverpool, and those for the northern at the town of
Lancaster.
Prior to and under the Norman dynasty, Lancashire
was probably distinguished as an honour, and was of
the superior order of seigniories. It was given by William the Conqueror to Roger de Poictou, who in turn
bestowed various parts of it upon his followers; but in
the Norman survey the lands between the Ribble and
the Mersey are described as the property of the king,
having been forfeited by the defection of that nobleman.
The Honour of Lancaster was restored to him by
William Rufus, in whose reign he again forfeited it by
rebellion; and this princely inheritance was transferred
to Stephen, Count of Blois, who, on ascending the throne,
bestowed it upon his son, William de Blois, Earl of Montaigne and Bolougne. On the death of this nobleman,
Richard I. assigned it to his brother John, afterwards
King of England. Henry III. first gave the honour and
estates to Ranulph, Earl of Chester, from whom they
descended to William de Ferrers, who had married
Agnes, one of the earl's daughters: they were forfeited
to the crown by Robert de Ferrers, grandson of William,
who had taken part with Simon de Montfort, Earl of
Leicester. Henry then presented them to his son Edmund; and from him they descended to Thomas, second
earl of Lancaster, who was beheaded at Pontefract for
rebellion in the reign of Edward II. In the first of
Edward III., the estates were granted to Henry, brother
of Thomas; and his son Henry was created Duke of
Lancaster in the 25th of this monarch's reign. John of
Gaunt, Edward's son, having married Blanche, daughter
of Henry, Duke of Lancaster, the title was revived in
his favour.
Edward III., in the year 1363, advanced the county
to the dignity of a palatinate, with all the powers and
privileges appertaining thereto, under the authority of
the duke; and the duchy has now for ages been annexed
to the crown. The county palatine and the duchy of
Lancaster, with regard to extent, are quite distinct, as
there are various estates forming part of the duchy in
twenty-five other counties in England. A considerable
share of ecclesiastical patronage is attached to the duchy,
as is also the appointment of sheriffs for the county.
The peculiar jurisdiction and proceedings of the courts
of law in the county palatine are the result of the privileges granted to its former dukes, who had, in fact,
sovereign authority within the limits of their dominion.
By the 27th of Henry VIII. the privileges of counties
palatine were abridged, and it was enacted that writs
and processes should be made in the name of the king.
All writs, however, must still be under the seal of the
respective franchises; and the judges who preside in
this county palatine have a special commission from the
duchy of Lancaster, and not the ordinary commission
under the great seal of England. The court of chancery
of the duchy has cognizance of matters of an equitable
nature, relating either to the county palatine or the
duchy, and of all questions of revenue and council
affecting the ducal possessions; it is also a court of
appeal from the chancery of the county palatine. The
court of chancery of the county palatine is an original
and independent court, as ancient as the 50th of Edward III. The court of common pleas is an original
superior court of record at common law, having jurisdiction over all real actions for lands, and in all actions
against corporations within the county, as well as over
all personal actions where the defendant resides in Lancashire, although the cause of action may have arisen
elsewhere.
The surface of the county is very irregular in form;
for, besides the deviousness of its boundaries on the land
side, its coast is indented by numerous bays and estuaries. The principal of these are, the estuary of the
river Mersey, to the south of the county; that of the
Ribble; the expanse of the bay of Morecambe, into which
open the estuaries of the Ken and the Leven; and the
estuary of the Dudden, lying west of the northernmost
part of the county. In the north-west portion of
Lancashire is the island of Walney, a long strip of land
separated from the tract called Low Furness by a narrow channel of the sea. Various other small islands
lie scattered within the vicinity of this, and eastward of
the southern part of it, the largest being Old Barrow,
near which are Ramsey Island and the island of Dova
Haw; and at the entrance of Pile harbour is the island
on which Fouldrey Castle stands, and which forms a
triangle with Roe Island, Sheep Island, and Foulney
Island. The main body of Lancashire is naturally divided
into two grand districts,—the high, mountainous, and
romantic tract of the northern and eastern parts, and
the low, level tract that spreads out to the south and
west; the line of division between which may be drawn
in a sinuous course, below the first rising grounds of
the high heathy tracts, from the south-eastern limit of
the county, by Oldham, Rochdale, Bury, Bolton, Chorley, Preston, Garstang, Lancaster, and Kellet, nearly to
Burton, on the northern boundary. The portions of
high craggy land situated in that part of the county
which lies furthest to the north-west, may be separated
from the more level tracts, by a line passing from
the boundary of the county just below Yealand, by
Warton, Lindreth, Silverdale, and Allithwaite, to Newland, Ulverston, and the line that forms the division
between High and Low Furness, passing above Dalton,
by Kirkby-Ireleth, to Dudden Sands.
For the clearer description of the surface and the
various soils, it is necessary to make the following
subdivisions, viz.: the hilly and high heathy division;
the steep fell, or High Furness division; the elevated
craggy limestone division; the valley-land division; the
Mersey, or southern division; the Ribble and Fylde
division; the Lune and flat limestone division; the Low
Furness division; and the moss, or peaty, division. The
First of these comprises different mountainous ridges
which rise in succession from the south-eastern boundary
of the county, near the town of Rochdale, and terminate
in the high rocky tract above Leck, near Kirkby-Lonsdale; extending in breadth from the great line of
division already marked out, to the confines of Yorkshire.
Throughout this extent the land is almost invariably of
the high moory freestone kind, and generally produces
a coarse black heath, excepting only where the vales
intervene. The Second division comprises the whole of
those romantic and rocky tracts called fells, situated
north of the Sands (the extensive flat tracts of the bay of
Morecambe, which are always dry at low water, and separate the northern division of the hundred of Lonsdale
from the rest of the county); extending, in one direction,
from the towns of Ulverston and Dalton to the river
Brathey; and in the other, from the river Dudden to
the river Winster at Bowland bridge. This tract is
moory in different places, but the heath where it occurs
is weak in its growth: the rock is in general of the blue,
or whinstone kind. The Third, or craggy limestone
division, is of much smaller extent, the principal part of
it lying in the north-western part of the county, and extending from a little above Warton and Yealand to the
point where it joins the sea-coast at Silverdale: there
are small tracts in the Furness districts, and at the two
Kellets, as well as at Chipping and Clitheroe towards
the eastern limits of the county. The Fourth division
includes the various valleys formed by the hills that
constitute the two first divisions: some of these are of
very considerable extent, others very narrow, the more
extensive valleys being those which border on the larger
and less impetuous rivers. The aggregate quantity of
this kind of land is very considerable, and the soil is
generally of excellent quality. The Mersey division comprises a fertile and level tract of land, and extends from
the northern bank of the Mersey to the southern border
of the Ribble, in one direction; and from the sea-coast
to considerably above the town of Oldham, in the other.
The Sixth division is of less extent than the preceding,
but little inferior in fertility; and stretches from the
northern bank of the Ribble to the southern border of the
Lune, and from Lytham and Bispham to near Inglewhite. The Seventh division is of small size, commencing at Sunderland Point, at the mouth of the Lune, and
running northward, in a narrow tract along the seacoast, as far as the before-mentioned high, craggy, limestone ridge, by Warton and Yealand: to the east of this
rises the ridge of high moory ground above Kellet. The
Eighth division comprises a small portion of land on
the northern side of the Sands, generally called Low
Furness: it extends from a little above Ulverston and
Dalton to the extreme southern point at Ramsyde, being
bounded on the east and west by the sea. In this
district may be included the several islands that lie to
the south. The Ninth and last division includes the
different peaty and boggy tracts called mosses. They
are found in both of the grand natural divisions of the
county, but they are most extensive in the flat district;
the two largest being Chat-moss, near Worsley, in the
southern part of the county, and Pilling-moss, much
farther north. In some situations these mossy tracts
have undergone great improvement, while in others they
remain nearly in their original state. The lands of the
first four of these divisions are chiefly in pasture, the
more high and mountainous parts being for sheep, the
declivities and vales for cattle and sheep. The next four
divisions are under various systems of cultivation, but
grass-land prevails, especially in the vicinities of the
towns and villages. The improved boggy tracts generally
become excellent land for either grass or grain. Besides
the districts above described, there are various tracts
of sandy marsh-land, lying on the borders of the seacoast, which are liable to occasional inundations by the
tide, and the principal of which are situated towards the
northern extremity of the county, being those near
Lancaster, the tract below Warton, the estuaries of the
Leven and Dudden, and the marsh-lands about Walney
Island.
The air of Lancashire, every where pure and salubrious,
is of course much more cold and piercing in the elevated mountainous tracts of the north and east, than
in the valleys formed by them, and in the lower districts
which shelve to the south and west, where it is generally
mild and genial. Great vicissitudes of heat and cold
are felt in the vicinity of the large mosses, in consequence of the evaporation of the moisture which is there
so long retained. In the most northern part of Lancashire, the breezes that come directly from the Irish Sea,
and those that have crossed the mountains of Cumberland, in the spring and summer months, are frequently
cold and chilling. A greater quantity of rain falls in
this county than in most others of the kingdom. The
seed time and harvest in the districts contiguous to the
mountains of the north and east are later than in the
southern and south-western tracts.
The principal soils are loams of various kinds, clay,
sand, and peat earth; chiefly resting on freestone, whinstone, or limestone rocks, fossil coal, marl, gravel, and
sand. It has been computed that a little more than
one-fourth of the surface is under tillage: the principal tracts of arable land lie towards the western border
of the county, including the Fylde, the banks of the
Lune, and Low Furness, most of which are excellent
wheat lands. On the eastern side of the county the
grain chiefly cultivated is oats, of which, indeed, large
quantities are grown in all the corn districts. The most
common crops are wheat, barley, oats, beans, and potatoes; but a greater proportion of oats than of any other
grain is produced, much oaten bread being consumed
by the population of the northern and eastern parts of
the county. Great attention is bestowed on the cultivation of potatoes, which are extensively grown in all
parts: onions are raised to a considerable extent in the
neighbourhood of Middleton, at Stretford, and near
Warrington. Very fine crops of clover are cultivated,
the seed being generally sown with wheat. By far the
larger part of the county is under grass, a vast quantity
of hay being requisite for the consumption of the horses
and cattle belonging to the inhabitants of the towns.
In the greater part of the county, and more especially
in the eastern and northern parts, are tracts of pasture
land of inferior and unimproved condition, on which
young stock are reared and kept. The most extensive
dairy pastures are on the strong soil north of the Ribble,
the produce of which is principally cheese, and in different parts of the Fylde: there are many small dairyfarms in the eastern part of the county, and in the
vicinity of all the large towns are numerous dairies for
supplying the inhabitants with milk. In the northern
and eastern parts are many mountainous and moory
tracts of land, which support vast numbers of sheep
throughout the greater part of the year: on Furness
fells it is reckoned that not less than 50,000 sheep are
kept during the summer months. Near all the principal
towns are plots of land applied to the growth of vegetables and fruit, more especially in the neighbourhood of
Liverpool, where the horticultural fields are very extensive, affording not only an ample supply for that town,
but a quantity of vegetables for the shipping; considerable quantities of dried herbs are shipped for the coast
of Africa. The quantity of waste mountain land is computed at about 62,000 acres; and that of the mosses
and marshes at about 36,000, of which 20,000 are contained in the mosses. The Woodlands are chiefly in the
more central part of the county, in the vicinity of Garstang, on the banks of the Wyre, the Ribble, the Lune,
and some other rivers, and in the parks of several of the
nobility and gentry. The principal coppice woods are
in the northern part, the land on which they grow
being generally steep and rocky, and unfit for any other
purpose; their chief produce is hoop-wood, charcoal,
props for the coal-mines, and oak-bark. Various plantations have been made in different parts: the aldertree is in great request in the manufacturing districts,
to hang cotton-yarn on to dry, the wood acquiring a
fine polish by use, and not splintering from exposure to
the weather; the bark is used in dyeing.
The chief mineral productions are coal, copper, lead,
and iron. The strata of Coal for the most part seem to
lie in three distinct parallel ranges, extending across
the county from south-west to north-east: in some
places they are at a very great depth, while in others
they approach close to the surface, and they also vary
greatly in thickness and quality, even in the different
shafts of the same colliery. Coal of a black, compact,
and marbly appearance, called "cannel coal," is found
chiefly at Haigh, near Wigan. The principal tract in
which Copper is found to any great extent, is among the
rugged barren mountains in the northernmost part of
High Furness, approaching the border of Cumberland,
where the ore obtained is of the yellow sort, and yields
comparatively but little metal. Lead-ore is chiefly found
in the north and east parts of the county, but it is
no where obtained in great quantities; there are also
some veins of black-lead. The only part where Iron-ore
is found in sufficient quantities to be worked is in the
liberty of Furness. The county produces an abundance
of slate, flagstones, limestone, and freestone. The blue
Slate quarries are very numerous, in the northern part
of High Furness: slate of a lighter colour and very inferior quality is raised at different places south of the
Sands, where flagstones are obtained. Quarries of
Freestone are wrought in most parts south of the Sands:
the best stones for sharpening scythes are found and
prepared at Rainford. Small tracts of Limestone exist
in different parts, and numerous quarries are worked.
The pre-eminence of the Lancashire manufactures
over those of the other districts in England where
the inhabitants are similarly engaged, has long been
known and acknowledged. These manufactures are
various; but that of cotton in its different branches
is by far the most important, and is one of the most
extensive in the world. Manchester is its grand centre,
and from that town it has spread over the adjoining
and more northern parts of the county, as well as into
the adjacent counties on the east and south. Soon after
the year 1328, about which time the emigrant clothiers
from Flanders were dispersed over England, Manchester
became famous for the manufacture of a species of
woollen goods, called "Manchester cottons." In the
reign of Henry VIII. the county had made some further
progress in manufactures and commerce; and at the
period of the national disturbances, in the reign of
Charles I., the manufactures of linen and cotton, as well
as the woollen-trade, were carried on here. Until the
year 1760, the sale of cotton goods had been almost
entirely for home consumption; but about that period,
considerable markets for this species of goods were
opened on the continents of Europe and America, and
the consequent urgent demand encouraged great and
valuable improvements in the machinery employed.
These improvements, the successfully-attained object of
which was to lessen the requisite quantity of manual
labour, on their first introduction gave rise to great
tumults, the inhabitants of the manufacturing districts
destroying the machinery, from the groundless fear that
they would be thrown out of employment. One of the
most recent inventions is the power-loom. A factory of
steam-looms was first erected in this district at Manchester, in 1806, with two others at Stockport (Cheshire),
and a fourth at West Houghton; since which period
they have been erected throughout the manufacturing
district generally. In some of the mills every process,
from the picking of the raw cotton to its conversion into
cloth, is performed; and on a scale of such magnitude,
that in a single factory is done as much work as would,
in the last age, have engaged an entire district. The
steam-looms are chiefly employed in the production of
printing cloth and shirting; but they also weave thicksets, fancy cords, dimities, cambrics, and quiltings,
besides silks, worsted, and woollen broad-cloths. Inkles,
tapes, and checks, with woollens, flannels, baizes, and
linens, all rank among the manufactures of the county,
and have each their proper seat. The silk-trade, which
formerly flourished to a considerable extent, but fell
into decay in consequence of the rapid growth of the
cotton business, has of late been revived, and is now
carried on with increased activity.
The spinning and manufacture of cotton prevail at
Manchester, Oldham, Colney, Burnley, Haslingden,
Preston, Accrington, Bury, Middleton, Ashton, Bolton,
Chorley, Blackburn, Heap, Wigan, Eccles, Bacup, Rochdale, &c.; calico-printing and bleaching at Manchester,
Blackburn, Bolton, Bury, Accrington, and Chorley.
Muslins are made at Manchester, Bolton, Chorley, and
Preston; and fustians at Manchester, Oldham, Bury,
Bolton, Warrington, and Heap. The manufacture of
woollen goods is extensively pursued at Manchester,
Bury, Bacup, Newchurch, Rochdale, and Heap; flannels
are made at Manchester, Rochdale, and Haslingden.
There are hat-manufactories at Manchester, Oldham,
Rochdale, Denton, Bolton, Audenshaw, Howley Hill,
Colne, and Wigan. Paper is made at Manchester,
Bolton, Farnworth, and Ashton. Lancaster, the county
town, possesses comparatively but little of the above
manufactures, its chief trade being in the manufacture
and exportation of mahogany furniture and upholstery.
At Warrington are large manufactories for pins, glass,
flies, and other articles; and a principal branch of
business is the making of sailcloth. At Ulverston and
Caton are establishments for the working of flax; and
at the former town some checks are manufactured.
There are iron-works and nail-manufactories in different
parts: the principal works of this kind are those for
smelting iron-ore, in that portion of the county which
lies north of Lancaster Sands; where also, on the banks
of the Leven, are powder-mills. Glass and earthenware
establishments are very numerous, the largest being at
St. Helen's; and in the south-western part of the
county, watches, watch-movements, and watchmakers'
tools are made to a considerable extent. It appears
from a parliamentary return dated 1847, that the total
number of persons employed in the cotton factories of
this important county, is 201,573; in the woollen factories, 7971; in the worsted factories, 340; in those for
flax, 2541; and for silk, 8367. The commerce of Lancashire, like its manufactures and in conjunction with
them, has risen with unexampled rapidity, and attained
an importance unequalled by that of any other county,
Middlesex alone excepted. A great part of its foreign
commerce, of which Liverpool is the grand medium, consists in the exportation of its manufactures, together
with the woollens and cutlery of Yorkshire, the produce
of the salt-mines of Cheshire, the earthenware of Staffordshire, and the hardware of Warwickshire; which
are poured into this great western emporium, and
thence forwarded to America and the West Indies,
Africa, and the East Indies, and to the Continent of
Europe. According to a return made to parliament, it
appears that the total annual value of real property in
the county assessed in the year ending April 5, 1843,
was £7,756,228, of which £4,777,536 were for houses,
£1,636,416 for lands, £39,728 for tithes, £593,515 for
railways, £71,590 for canals, £348,007 for mines, chiefly
of coal, and £21,038 for quarries; the remainder of the
sum being for other descriptions of property not comprised in the foregoing items.
The Forest or ancient Chase of Rossendale, containing 24 square miles, affords a remarkable instance of
the progress of improvement in the county. The former
existence of the wolf in the Forest is attested by the
names Wolfstones and Wolfenden attaching to places
within its limits. In the early part of the 16th century,
at which period Rossendale had already been disforested,
there were not more than 80 inhabitants; and it is
stated in a petition then presented to the crown, that if
the deer were entirely taken away, "the commonwealth
would be thereby increased." The inhabitants were accordingly encouraged by a grant of privileges; the lands
were apportioned into nineteen booths or vaccaries, which
were the foundations of townships, and the annual value
or " advanced rent " settled upon them by royal commission, and afterwards confirmed by James I., amounted to
£122. 13. 8. Upon the more general introduction of the
woollen fabric into the north of England, the foresters
of Rossendale did not long continue to direct the whole
of their energies to the cultivation of a yet sterile soil,
but entered with avidity into this branch of industry,
pursuing it with remarkable success; and about fifty
years ago the cotton manufacture, then introduced, became another source of employment, which has since
spread with still greater rapidity throughout the district,
causing a vast increase of population, now multiplied to
more than 20,000 souls. Manufacturers and merchants,
distinguished for enterprise and ability, have become
resident; and in every part of this wide and once barren
tract, flourishing establishments have sprung up, commodious and handsome dwellings have been erected, and
an amazing increase has taken place in the value of property. The land used exclusively for farming purposes,
now commands upwards of ten times the rent of a century ago; and farms formerly tenanted by persons now
living, are let by their present possessors for seven or
eight times the sums they themselves paid. In the
populous parts, building-ground is rented at £120 and
£130 an acre, or a larger amount than was paid for the
whole Forest, more than 15,000 acres in extent, in the
early part of the 17th century; and by a recent survey
for the county assessment, the annual rental of the
Forest is £50,035, being an increase of 41,000 per cent.
upon the survey confirmed by James I.; bearing out the
prediction of the petitioners already mentioned, that the
removal of the deer would benefit the commonwealth.
The rivers and streams in the county are very numerous: the Mersey, the Ribble, and the Lune or Loyne,
are the largest; and next in magnitude are the Irwell,
the Douglas, the Wyre, the Leven, the Crake, and the
Dudden, all of which to some extent are navigable.
Pursuant to an act of parliament obtained in 1720, the
Mersey was made navigable for barges of from 60 to 70
tons' burthen, by the aid of an artificial cut from the
south of Warrington to some distance above that town,
as far as the mouth of the Irwell, which river in like
manner is rendered navigable up to Manchester: the
tide flows up the Mersey as far as the vicinity of Warrington, where it is stopped by a weir. The Ribble is
navigable for vessels as high as Preston, up to which the
tide flows: in 1838 an act was passed for its improvement. The Lune is navigable for vessels to Lancaster,
but ships of great burthen cannot pass higher than
Glasson Point. The Douglas, in 1727, was made navigable from the Ribble as high as Wigan, under the provisions of an act obtained in 1719; and the navigation
was improved at a later date by the substitution, in a
part of its course, of an artificial cut for the natural
channel of the river. The Wyre is navigable for small
vessels up to Poulton. In the northern part of the
county are several sheets of water, of which Coniston
Lake is the largest; and there are others of smaller size,
commonly called "tarns."
The system of artificial inland navigation had its
origin in this county, in which it is very extensive. The
first attempts were in rendering navigable the rivers
above mentioned, after which an act was procured in
1755, for making Sankey brook navigable, and in 176l
another act, which provided for the extension of the
same line. The present navigation is called the Sankey
Canal, and runs entirely separate from the brook, except
at one spot about two miles below Sankey bridge, where
it crosses the stream on a level; at the distance of about
9¼ miles from its termination in the Mersey it divides
into three branches, to the extremity of the longest of
which the distance from the Mersey is 11¾ miles. In
1758 and 1759 the magnificent plans which have rendered the name of the Duke of Bridgewater so celebrated
in the history of canal navigation, began to unfold themselves, an act having been passed in the former year empowering that nobleman to construct a canal from
Worsley to Salford, and also to Hollin Ferry on the
Irwell; and another in the latter year, permitting him
to deviate from that line, and carry the canal from
Worsley across the river Irwell to Manchester. The
formation of this canal was the work of that eminent
self-taught engineer, James Brindley. The duke also
procured an act for the formation of a branch canal,
which extends from Longford bridge, in the township of
Stretford, to the river Mersey at Runcorn-Gap, a distance
of more than 29 miles, passing through part of Cheshire,
in a line parallel with the course of that river; and
another branch has been cut, from the main line at
Worsley to Leigh, pursuant to an act passed in 1795.
The Leeds and Liverpool Canal, upwards of 127 miles in
length, and one of the greatest works of the kind in the
kingdom, was commenced in 1770: there is a branch
from it to Wigan, which, when first completed, afforded
to Liverpool a new and plentiful supply of coal, and
caused a considerable exportation of that article from
the port. Different alterations and improvements have
been made in the canal, under the authority of various
acts of parliament, one of which, passed in 1794, gave
the company the power of navigating a part of the Lancaster Canal, then newly formed; and pursuant to an
act obtained in 1819, a navigable cut was made from the
canal near Wigan to the Duke of Bridgewater's canal at
Leigh. In 1791, an act was passed for the formation of
a canal to connect the towns of Manchester, Bolton, and
Bury, which, passing through a district abounding with
coal and other mineral productions, and the inhabitants
of which are extensively engaged in manufactures, has
become a great medium of traffic with Manchester: the
branches to Bolton and Bury commence at Little Lever.
The canal from Manchester to Ashton-under-Lyne, for
which an act was procured in 1792, has a branch from
Fairfield to the New Mill, near Oldham, from which a
cut reaches to Park colliery; and there is also a branch
from this canal to Stockport, in Cheshire. The Rochdale Canal was constructed with some short collateral
cuts, under an act passed in 1794, and connects the
Duke of Bridgewater's canal at Manchester with the
Calder navigation at Sowerby Bridge, near Halifax. In
the same year was obtained an act for constructing the
Huddersfield Canal, which has its western extremity at
the Ashton-under-Lyne canal, and its eastern at Sir
John Ramsden's canal to the Calder. The Kendal and
Lancaster Canal, for the formation of which an act was
procured in 1792, enters the county near Burton, and
after a very circuitous course crosses the Lune, a little
above Lancaster, by a magnificent aqueduct, whence it
proceeds to Garstang and Preston. The Ulverston Canal
is a short cut, about a mile and a half in length, from
that town to the navigable channel of the Leven.
The railways hold a still more important place
among the facilities of communication. The principal
of these is the Liverpool and Manchester railway, which,
beginning in the heart of Liverpool, passes eastward
across the county by Prescot, St. Helen's, Newton, and
Kenyon, to Manchester. Near Newton commence the
Liverpool and Birmingham railway, which runs southward
by Warrington, and the Wigan and Preston railway,
which runs northward: a line proceeds from Kenyon to
Leigh and Bolton; and at Manchester begins the line
called the Manchester and Birmingham (or Crewe), which
pursues a southern direction towards Stockport, in
Cheshire. These five lines all belong to one company.
Another company owns the Lancashire and Yorkshire or
Manchester and Leeds line, which passes by the towns of
Oldham, Middleton, Rochdale, and Todmorden, and has
branches to Ashton, to Bury, and to Burnley; the
Manchester and Bolton line; the Bolton and Preston
line, which runs by the town of Chorley; and a line
from Liverpool, by Wigan and Bolton, to Bury. The
principal other railways connected with the county, are,
the St. Helen's and Runcorn; the Manchester and Sheffield, which has a branch to Ashton; the East Lancashire, which connects the towns of Manchester, Bury,
Accrington, Blackburn, Burnley, and Colne; the Liverpool and Preston, which passes by Ormskirk; the Bolton
and Blackburn, proceeding by Turton, Over Darwen, and
Lower Darwen: the Blackburn and Preston; a line from
Blackburn, by Clitheroe, to Long Preston, in Yorkshire;
the Preston and Clitheroe; the Preston and Wyre, which
has branches to the watering-places of Lytham and
Blackpool, and terminates at the port of Fleetwood; the
Preston and Lancaster, passing by the town of Garstang;
the Lancaster and Carlisle, which quits the county near
Burton-in-Kendal, Westmorland; and the Furness railway, in the hundred of North Lonsdale.
The county contains antiquities of various ages.
Eight Roman stations, according to Whitaker, were
established during the administration of Julius Agricola
in Britain, viz., Ad Alaunam and Bremetonacæ, in the
north, which are conjectured to have been at Lancaster
and Burrow respectively; Portus Sistuntiorum, in the
west; Rerigonium and Coccium, about the centre, fixed by
some writers at Ribchester and at Wigan; Colonea in
the east, supposed to have been at Colne; and Veratinum and Mancunium in the south, the former at Warrington, and the latter at Manchester, from which place
several roads diverged. The number of Religious houses
prior to the Reformation was twenty-one, including three
hospitals and the college of Manchester: the principal
remains of conventual buildings are those at Whalley,
Cockersand, and Furness, the last of which rank among
the most interesting remains in the kingdom. Of ancient Castles, the chief are Clitheroe, Dalton, Gleaston,
Hoghton, Hornby, and Lancaster Castles, of which the
last is the most remarkable and entire, being now used
as the county gaol. Of ancient domestic architecture
there are numerous remains: Hulme Hall, on the bank
of the Irwell, near Manchester, and Speke Hall, on the
Mersey, near Liverpool, are the most curious specimens.
Among the more distinguished modern seats are Knowsley Hall, Ashton Hall, and Heaton House.
Lancaster (St. Mary)
LANCASTER (St. Mary),
a parish, comprising the borough, port, and markettown of Lancaster, having
separate jurisdiction, partly
in the hundred of Lonsdale south of the Sands,
and partly in that of
Amounderness, N. division of the county of Lancaster; the whole containing 24,149 inhabitants,
of whom 14,089 are in the
borough, 240 miles (N. N. W.) from London. This
place is supposed to have been the Ad Alaunam of the
Romans; and the discovery of coins, urns, fragments
of earthenware, calcined bones, votive altars, sepulchral
lamps, a bath, and other Roman antiquities, confirms
the fact of its having been a station of that people at
an early period of their occupation of our island. After
the departure of the Romans from Britain, it was destroyed by an incursion of the Picts and Scots, and
continued in a state of desolation till the time of
the Saxons, by whom it was restored, and from its
situation as a fortress near the river Lune, called Lunceastre, from which its present name is deduced. In
the seventh century, it had risen to such importance as
to be made the capital of the county, an honour which it
still retains; but it suffered so much injury during the
Danish incursions, that in the Norman survey, it is
noticed only as a vill, or berewic, included in the manor
of Halton. At the time of the Conquest it was given
by William to Roger de Poictou, who is supposed to
have enlarged and adapted for his baronial residence
the ancient castle. The western tower is said to have
been built by Adrian, in 124, and that facing the town
by the father of Constantine the Great, in 305; and
though these towers may not have been built by the
persons to whom they are attributed, yet they are unquestionably Roman. It is doubtless to this period we
must also assign the erection of the keep, which occupies a central position among this pile of buildings, and
which was raised higher in the reign of Elizabeth, at the
time of the threatened invasion of the island by the
Spanish Armada: at the south-west corner of the keep
is a small tower, known as John of Gaunt's Chair. The
beautiful gateway tower was erected by John, Earl of
Morton and Lancaster, who, after his accession to the
throne, gave audience to the French ambassadors and
received the homage of Alexander, King of Scotland
(whom he had subdued), in this castle. On the accession of John of Gaunt to the dukedom in the
year 1376, the county was constituted a palatinate.
Separate courts for this independent jurisdiction are
still opened at Lancaster; but they adjourn to Preston,
and business is chiefly transacted there and in the
duchy court at Westminster. In 1322 and 1389, the
town was burnt and plundered by the Scots; and in
the wars of the houses of York and Lancaster it was
nearly depopulated, in consequence of the resolute
adherence of the inhabitants to the cause of the Lancastrians. During the parliamentary war it suffered
severely; and in 1698, an accidental fire destroyed a
considerable portion of the town, which also, in the
rebellion of 1745, participated in the agitations that
then disturbed the peace of the kingdom.

Arms.
The town is built up the sides of a hill crowned with
the stately towers of the castle and parish church, and
on the southern bank of the river Lune. A light and
elegant stone bridge 549 feet in length, and of five
elliptical arches, was erected over the river by the
county in 1788, at a cost of £14,000, connecting the
town with the township of Skerton. This bridge was
built about 200 yards to the east of an ancient bridge,
which long stood in ruins, but the last arch of which
fell in 1846: the old bridge crossed the narrower part of
the river, near St. George's quay, on which is a noble
pile of warehouses. With the exception of a few, the
streets are narrow; but considerable improvement has
been made in the appearance of the town, and the houses,
built of freestone found in the neighbourhood, and
covered with slate, are in general handsome: in several
parts of the town are noble mansions, some once the
residence of nobility, and in the environs, which abound
with varied and interesting scenery, are elegant villas.
There are some baths, conveniently arranged, and provided with every requisite accommodation; and assemblies were till lately held in a suite of rooms well
adapted to the purpose. The Amicable Library, instituted in 1769, possesses nearly 5000 volumes; a
mechanics' library was opened in 1824, and there are
several public newsrooms. A society for promoting the
fine arts, by the purchase of paintings of the most eminent living artists, was established in 1820, but dissolved
in 1845; and in 1835, a Literary, Scientific, and Natural
History Society was founded, to which a museum is
attached. The theatre has been converted into a commodious building, containing a music-hall, also used
for the lectures of the Natural History Society, their
museum, and several dwelling-houses.
The port is subject to much inconvenience from the
difficulty of the navigation of the Lune, arising from the
accumulation of sand in its channel, and an elevation
in its bed, called Scaleford, probably the remains of
a Roman ford across the river, which renders it inaccessible to vessels of large burthen. The Lords of the
Admiralty, however, have recently granted £8000, to be
applied under the direction of Mr. David Stevenson,
the civil engineer, in deepening the channel of the Lune;
and the works for that purpose will be forthwith proceeded with. A dock was constructed about 1785, at
Glasson, nearly five miles down the river, capable of
sheltering merchantmen, which discharge their cargoes
by lighters at St. George's quay; and the facilities to
commerce will be further increased by the construction
of the Morecambe-Harbour railway and docks, three
miles distant. See Heysham and Glasson. The foreign
trade is chiefly with America, the West Indies, and the
Baltic; and there is a very considerable coasting-trade,
besides a trade carried on with Ireland and the Isle of
Man, in grain. The number of vessels belonging to the
port, in 1847, was 96, of the aggregate burthen of 6028
tons; and the receipts of the port (to which Ulverston,
Barrow, Walney, Ramsyde, &c, are out-stations),
amounted in 1846 to £31,068. The principal articles
imported are, spirits and wine, from France, the Mediterranean, &c.; tea, sugar, and coffee; and timber and
other wood from America and the Baltic. There is a
good salmon-fishery on the river Lune, which also
abounds with trout: the fishery extends from a place
called Denny Beck to Scaleford, a little below St.
George's quay; and prior to the Reformation belonged
time immemorially to the abbot of Furness, subject to a
claim to a third draught, in part of it, and to an alternate draught in all the other parts, by the prior of
Lancaster. A neat custom-house, with an Ionic portico,
was erected on the quay in 1764.
The chief manufactures are of mahogany furniture
and upholstery, cordage, sailcloth, and cotton goods, for
which last there are six factories; a silk-mill, and a
worsted-mill, are also in operation. The Lancaster Canal
opens a communication with the mining district, and
supplies the neighbourhood with coal and other necessaries: about a mile to the north-east it is carried over the
river Lune by an aqueduct of stone, consisting of five
semicircular arches, each 70 feet in the span, total
length 664 feet, erected under the direction of Mr. Rennie, at a cost of £50,000. The Lancaster and Preston
Railway, twenty miles in length, and constructed by
Mr. Locke, was commenced with a capital of £250,000
joint-stock, and £208,000 loan, and was opened to the
public in June, 1840. The Lancaster and Carlisle Railway, 70 miles in length, was opened in December, 1846.
Proceeding from Scotforth, south of the town, and by
the Penny-street station at Lancaster, the line runs
through a deep cutting to the Castle station in MeetingHouse lane, whence, by two embankments, it passes on
to the river Lune, which it crosses by a viaduct of three
laminated timber arches, each of 120 feet span; besides
these, there are a number of stone and brick arches of
53 feet span. This viaduct is remarkable for comprising along one of its sides a public footpath, which is
partitioned from the space appropriated to the locomotive vehicles, by a railing: the height of the viaduct
from the level ground to the rails is 53 feet, and the
length 780 feet. The Castle station is in the Elizabethan
style, and built of white freestone, from the designs of
Mr. Tite, under the direction of Mr. Hembrow. An act
was passed in 1846, for making a railway to Settle and
Skipton, in the West riding of York; and thus Lancaster will be connected with Bradford, Leeds, &c. The
market-days are Wednesday and Saturday; the fairs,
which are chiefly for cattle, cloth, cheese, and pedlery,
and continue for three days each, are on the 1st May,
5th July, and 10th October.
The first charter granted
to the borough was in the
4th of Richard I., by John,
Earl of Morton, afterwards
King John, who bestowed on
the burgesses similar liberties to those enjoyed at
Bristol. In the year 1199,
King John conferred upon
the town "all the liberties
which the burgesses of
Northampton had the day
that King Henry died,"
instead of those of Bristol; and this charter was confirmed by several subsequent sovereigns, one of whom,
Edward III., allowed the mayor and bailiffs the privilege of having the pleas and sessions held here to the
exclusion of every other place in the county. Other
charters were granted by James I. in 1604, and
Charles II. in 1665 and 1684; but they were suspended
by that obtained in the year 1819, under which the corporation consisted of a mayor, recorder, seven aldermen, twelve capital burgesses, twelve common councilmen, two bailiffs, a town-clerk and clerk of the peace,
and others. By the act of the 5th and 6th of William
IV., cap. 76, the government is now vested in a mayor,
six aldermen, and eighteen councillors, and the borough
is divided into three wards, being co-extensive with the
township of Lancaster, with the exception of the precincts of the castle. Eleven justices have been appointed
by the crown, who hold a petty-session several times in
the week. The corporation seal comprises the arms of
the town, with the inscription "Sigillum comune Burg.
sive Vill. Lancastrie." The freedom is obtained by birth,
and apprenticeship to a freeman. Among the privileges
may be reckoned an interest in the tract of ground called
Lancaster Marsh, consisting of 210 acres, inclosed in
1795, the rents of which are divided amongst eighty of
the oldest resident freeman, or their widows. The
borough first exercised the elective franchise in the 23rd
of Edward I., and continued to make returns till the
1st of Edward II.; it afterwards intermitted till the
reign of Edward VI., since which time it has regularly
sent two members to parliament. The parliamentary
boundary of the borough was extended under the Reform act: the mayor is returning officer. The court of
pleas and the assizes for the whole of the county
palatine were formerly held here, twice in the year,
before the judges on the Northern circuit; but the business of the assizes has been divided, and that for the
northern division only is now transacted in Lancaster.
The general quarter-sessions for the hundred of Lonsdale are held in the town, which is also the place of
election for the northern division of the shire. The
powers of the county-debt court of Lancaster, established
in 1847, extend over the greater part of the registrationdistrict of Lancaster.

Mayor's Seal.
The town-hall is a neat building, erected in 1781, at
an expense of £1300, and embellished with full-length
portraits of William Pitt and Admiral Lord Nelson,
painted by Mr. Lonsdale, a native of the town, and presented by him to the corporation; and with a portrait
of George III. and one of the Duke of York, presented
by Mr. Henderson, also a native of the town, in 1842.
The borough prison for the temporary confinement of
offenders, who are subsequently sent to Lancaster Castle,
occupies part of the town-hall. The remains of the
ancient castle are used as the county gaol, and additional buildings have been erected upon a very extensive
scale, at a cost of £140,000. The entrance, through a
gateway of beautiful design, over which is a statue of
John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, is flanked by octagonal towers, and leads into a spacious court-yard, inclosed with embattled walls strengthened with towers;
opposite to the entrance is the square keep, a building
of prodigious strength, to the north of which are the
shire-hall and courts, with the room for the grand jury,
and other apartments. The hall is of a semicireular form,
and commodionsly arranged for the business of the
assizes: the nisi prius court, in which are full-length portraits of Colonel Stanley and Mr. Blackburn, presented
by the late Sir Robert Peel, Bart., exhibits some architectural beauty; and in the crown court is a portrait of
George III., painted by Northcote, and presented to the
county by James Ackers, Esq., when high sheriff. The
Castle hill and terrace afford a fine promenade, commanding extensive views of the surrounding richlydiversified scenery, including the Lake mountains,
Black Combe, the peninsula of Furness, the Irish Channel, the bay of Morecambe, and Ingleborough mountain.
The parish comprises, partly by measurement and
partly by computation, 54,120 acres, whereof about
11,000 are arable, 18,000 pasture, 7000 meadow, 1120
wood, and the remainder uninclosed common. It includes the chapelries of Bleasdale, Caton with Littledale, Gressingham, Overton with Sunderland, Quernmoor, Stalmine with Staynal, and Over Wyersdale;
also the townships of Aldcliffe, Ashton with Stodday,
Bulk, Fulwood, Heaton with Oxcliffe, Middleton, Myerscough, Preesall with Hackensall, Poulton-le-Sands with
Bare and Torrisholme, Scotforth, Skerton, and part of
Thurnham. The living is a vicarage, valued in the
king's books at £41; net income, £1709; patron,
George Marton, Esq.; impropriators, the Duke of
Hamilton, the vicar, and others. The tithes have been
commuted under a private act. The church, to which
the privilege of sanctuary was anciently attached, was
originally erected by Roger de Poicton, who founded a
Benedictine priory here as a cell to the abbey of St.
Martin de Seez, in Normandy, which, on the suppression
of alien priories, was by Henry V. annexed to the abbey
of Sion, in Middlesex. The present edifice is in the later
English style, with a square tower, and contains some
fine specimens of screen-work and carvings in oak,
which are thought to have been brought from Cockersand Abbey, on its dissolution. This venerable pile has
just undergone a thorough repair; the interior walls
and pillars have been stone coloured, and the whole now
presents a very beautiful appearance: a fine east window
of stained glass was inserted in 1847, at a cost of £420.
In the churchyard is a reclining figure in Italian marble,
to the first wife of W. Talbot Rothwell, Esq., of Foxholes; the figure was carved in Italy, and the pedestal
by Knollys, of Manchester. St. John's church, built
by subscription in 1755, was thoroughly repaired in
1836, and in 1843 Miss Tomlinson left the interest of
£500 for incidental expenses: the living is a perpetual
curacy; net income, £203; patron, the Vicar of Lancaster. St. Ann's district church was erected in 1796, at
the expense of the Rev. Robert Housman: the living is
a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the Vicar; net
income, £155, with a house. St. Thomas's district
church was consecrated on the 14th June, 1841. Its
style is early English, and it forms a good specimen of
Mr. Edmund Sharpe's acknowledged skill, for, though
devoid of ornament, its proportions are symmetrical,
and its appearance both within and without strikingly
elegant; the edifice is of beautiful white freestone obtained
in the neighbourhood, and the cost of its erection was
about £3000. The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed
through the liberality of Mrs. Elizabeth Salisbury, in
whom the patronage is vested, with £1000, to which the
Governors of Queen Anne's Bounty have added £500.
In the rural parts of the parish are eleven separate incumbencies, nine of which are in the Vicar's gift. There
are places of worship for Baptists, the Society of Friends,
Independents, Wesleyans, Primitive Methodists, Presbyterians, and Roman Catholics.
The free grammar school, which stands below the
Castle terrace, existed prior to 1495, and was rebuilt in
1683: in 1615, Randall Carter bequeathed to it £10
per annum for an usher. The Blue-coat charity school
for boys, established in 1770, has been incorporated
with a national school for boys, for which a spacious
stone building was erected in 1817, by subscription, at
an expense of £1100, and which in that year was endowed by Mr. Matthew Pyper, one of the Society of
Friends, with £2000 Navy five per cent, annuities. A
national school built in 1820, a Lancasterian school, and
a charity school for girls established in 1772, are severally
supported by subscription. The purchase and enlargement of a building which bounds the east end of St.
Thomas's churchyard, have been effected for the institution of daily and Sunday schools for the children of that
district: the cost, including the purchase of an adjoining property as a master's residence, with a small garden,
and playground for the younger scholars, was about
£1600, and instruction is thus provided for 800 children;
boys, girls, and infants. To each of the dissenting
places of worship are also attached schools. Gardyner's
almshouses, founded in 1485, are appropriated to four
aged men. Penny's almshouses were founded by a bequest from William Penny, Esq., in 1720, and endowed
with land yielding a rent of about £340, for twelve aged
men or women; and eight houses were founded in 1790,
by Mrs. Anne Gillison, who endowed them with land
and money producing about £40 per annum, for unmarried women. There are numerous other bequests
for distribution, of which the most considerable is that
of William Heysham, M.P., who in 1725 left an estate
producing £256 per annum, for the benefit of eight poor
men; and several bequests are appropriated to the
relief of prisoners for debt confined in the castle. The
county lunatic asylum, on Lancaster Moor, established
in 1816, is a spacious quadrangular structure of stone,
with a handsome portico of the Doric order, and, with
the gardens and grounds, occupies 50 acres of land; it
was erected at an expense of £175,000, including the
furniture. A dispensary, instituted in 1781, is supported by subscription; and there is an infirmary. The
union workhouse, built on the moor in 1787, is healthily
situated. At Golgotha is a chalybeate spring. The
dukedom of Lancaster belongs to the Crown.